Luka Dončić’s MVP Race Hits a 64-Game Wall
Luka Dončić was exactly one game away from safety. Then, in the third quarter of a blowout loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday night, his left hamstring gave out. With the Los Angeles Lakers confirming Friday that the injury will sideline him for the remainder of the regular season, Dončić is frozen at 64 games played—one short of the NBA’s mandatory 65-game threshold for postseason awards.
A Brutal Exit in Oklahoma City
The injury wasn’t just a blow to the Lakers’ immediate standings; it was a mathematical disaster for Dončić’s individual legacy this season. While he is almost certain to secure the league scoring title, the 65-game rule threatens to strip him of eligibility for the Most Valuable Player (MVP) award and All-NBA honors. The impact was immediate: BetMGM Sportsbook and other betting platforms have already removed Dončić from their MVP options.

“Health is wealth. … We’ll see what happens,” teammate LeBron James remarked following the news.
The ‘Extraordinary’ Legal Battle for Eligibility
Dončić isn’t conceding. His agent, Bill Duffy of WME Basketball, is launching an “Extraordinary Circumstances Challenge.” This specific provision in the NBA’s participation policy allows players to appeal if it was “impracticable” for them to play due to extraordinary factors.
The strategy focuses on a specific window in December. Dončić missed two games—against Toronto and Boston—to travel to Slovenia for the birth of his second daughter, Olivia. By filing a grievance over those two missed games, Dončić’s team hopes an arbitrator will rule those absences as extraordinary, effectively pushing his official game count to 66 and restoring his eligibility for MVP and All-NBA voting.
Duffy emphasized that Dončić’s “record-breaking season deserves to be noted in the history books” regardless of the unfortunate timing of the hamstring injury.
CONTEXT: The NBA’s 65-Game Rule
Introduced to discourage “load management,” the rule mandates that players must appear in at least 65 regular-season games to be eligible for major end-of-season awards, including MVP and All-NBA selections. This creates a rigid barrier for stars who suffer mid-to-late season injuries or miss time for personal reasons.
A League-Wide Eligibility Crisis
Dončić is not the only superstar caught in this mathematical trap. Minnesota guard Anthony Edwards is also certain to miss the 65-game mark after being held out Thursday due to illness, capping his season at 64 games. The rule has already disqualified a staggering list of award-caliber talent this year, including Stephen Curry, Giannis Antetokounmpo, LeBron James, and Cade Cunningham.
If Dončić successfully navigates the loophole, it could set a massive precedent for how the league handles personal emergencies and family milestones in the face of the 65-game mandate.
The Bottom Line: Q&A
Does this affect the scoring title?
No. The scoring title is based on per-game averages, and Dončić remains the league leader.
Who decides the ‘Extraordinary Circumstances’ appeal?
An arbitrator will rule on the grievance after the regular season concludes.
What happens if the appeal fails?
Dončić will remain ineligible for MVP and All-NBA regardless of his statistical dominance.
Should the NBA prioritize a rigid game-count threshold over the actual performance of the league’s best players?
