Five names, zero doubt: Giannis anchors the league’s most lethal two-way force, Cade pilots the East’s top seed, Maxey never leaves the floor, Brown keeps Boston afloat, and Mitchell single-handedly rescues Cleveland’s offense—anything else is just noise.
1. Giannis Antetokounmpo – Bucks
Milwaukee’s record (17-24) is noisy; Giannis isn’t. He scores 28.8 pts in 29 flat minutes, leads the NBA in paint points despite 14 absences, and the Bucks morph into a 57-win-level juggernaut whenever he laces up Cleaning The Glass. Positionless ballot? He’s the East’s best player—full stop.
2. Cade Cunningham – Pistons
Detroit owns the East’s No. 1 seed and the league’s second-stingiest defense. Cunningham is the engine: 26.2 pts, 9.8 ast, on pace to join the 25-9 club for a second straight year while cutting turnovers and ramping up on-ball pressure (1.5 stl, 1.0 blk per 36). Only Jokić creates more points by assist NBA.com.
3. Tyrese Maxey – 76ers
Embiid and George have combined for 39 games; Maxey hasn’t missed a beat. He paces the NBA in minutes (39.4 mpg) and 30-ppg scorers in efficiency (52.6% 2-pt, 40.5% 3-pt, 87.7% FT). Philly is +2.7 per 100 with him, –3.8 without Cleaning The Glass—a 6.5-point swing larger than most MVP candidates’ net impact.
4. Jaylen Brown – Celtics
Tatum, Holiday, Porziņģis and Horford have logged 82 games total; Boston still sits second in the East. Brown’s usage (34.8%) trails only Giannis and Luka, yet his 49/37/79 split keeps company with historic high-usage seasons of Harden, Embiid and peak King Basketball-Reference. The Celtics’ offense ranks No. 2 in the league because he refuses to let it sink.
5. Donovan Mitchell – Cavaliers
Cleveland’s 64-win hangover is real—injuries, regression, roster turnover. Mitchell is the antidote: career-high 29.2 pts on 58.9% inside the arc and 38.7% from deep (10.1 3-pt att.). The Cavs score like a top-three offense when he plays and drop to bottom-five territory when he sits, a 13.3-point on/off gulf that ranks among the league’s starriest Cleaning The Glass.
Why Jalen Brunson Missed the Cut
Knicks fans will scream, but the ledger is unforgiving: New York is 7-12 since winning the NBA Cup, with the league’s 22nd-ranked defense in that span. Brunson remains elite offensively (28.2 pts, 6.1 ast, 48/39/85), yet every major one-number metric—EPM, LEBRON, VORP, BPM—slots Mitchell and Maxey ahead, while Brown edges him on usage-plus-efficiency and defensive versatility. In a four-man race for three spots, someone had to be the odd man out; Brunson’s recent team slide tipped the scale.
Bottom Line
These five aren’t just statistical leaders—they’re lifelines. Remove any of them and their franchises free-fall into the lottery. That combination of individual dominance and irreplaceable value is exactly what an All-Star starter is supposed to represent. See you in Indianapolis.
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