My ballot has not changed since December:
1. Kobe Bryant - His game is well-rounded, and although it would be unprecedented because the best teams usually have the MVP on their roster, his numbers do justify the belief he's the best offensive player in the NBA.
2. Chauncey Billups - Forget the player - I tell you the 3rd pick in the draft will have a career year of 19, 9, and 4 for the best team in the NBA after already winning the Finals MVP. He'll hit all the big shots for a team that is poised for its 4th consecutive Conference Finals, and 3rd straight NBA Finals Appearance while having the best regular season in a 49-year-old franchise. Does that not sound like a legitimate MVP candidate? Then stop looking for the flash and remembering that he was traded 4 times, playing for 6 different teams. He is having a career-year and the Pistons have been the best team in the league that season. Tim Duncan in 2003, Shaquille O'Neal in 2000, Michael Jordan in 1996, and Larry Bird in 1986 - Billups is the best player on the best team, and that usually equals MVP.
3. Steve Nash - He's the best passer and penetrator in the game, but he's a manador on defense, and as brilliant as he's been, it wasn't worthy of being mentioned as a two-time MVP when Shaquille O'Neal hasn't even done that.
4. Elton Brand - There's a difference between the best player on the team and a great player in the league and being the difference between winning and losing. The best player can be in place and the team still lose. Brand is the lesson on that this season.
5. Dirk Nowitzki - An outside candidate who has put together his best season, but has fallen out of favor because of his disappearance down the stretch of the season.
December 16, 2005 - That's when I originally wrote up this list (albeit without the comments).
Wade and Shaq are 6 and 7.