At A Glance
- June Mar Fajardo and Scottie Thompson might be joining hands in carrying the country's colors in the ongoing 19th Asian Games but two found themselves in a tight battle in the crowded PBA Season 47 Most Valuable Player race.
June Mar Fajardo and Scottie Thompson might be joining hands in carrying the country’s colors in the ongoing 19th Asian Games but two found themselves in a tight battle in the crowded PBA Season 47 Most Valuable Player race.

Fajardo seemed to have the head start over his competitors statistics-wise with Thompson being his closest pursuer along with another Ginebra star in Christian Standhardinger and San Miguel Beer teammate CJ Perez.
The 6-foot-10 center, who already had six MVP plums tucked under his belt, paced the race after amassing 42.2 statistical points all throughout the three conferences. A distant second was Perez with 36.1 followed by Thompson with 35.5 and Standhardinger with 33.6.
Fajardo’s Best Player of the Conference award in the Philippine Cup along with SMB’s return to the all-Filipino throne further solidified his claim.
Thompson, however, is also making a case for himself after also bagging the BPC plum in the Commissioner’s Cup and helping the Barangay Ginebra win the mid-season conference against the Bay Area Dragons in an epic seven-game finals series.
Standhardinger, on the other hand, emerged as the best player in the Governors’ Cup although the Kings then settled for a bridesmaid finish against TNT while Perez had been a constant contender in all of the three BPC races.
The top four players are also included in the race for Mythical Team selection which included Maverick Ahanmisi, Kevin Alas, Aaron Black, Robert Bolick, Jayson Castro, Jio Jalalon, RR Pogoy and Mikey Williams for the guard spots
Forwards and bigs, meanwhile, have Calvin Abueva, Jamie Malonzo, Calvin Oftana, Jeron Teng, Arvin Tolentino and Don Trollano.
The Rookie of the Year derby, on the other hand, saw Blackwater’s Ato Ular (23.8) getting a slight advantage over fellow top rookies Justin Arana (22.7), Brandon Ganuelas-Rosser (22.1), Tyler Tio (19.8) and Gian Mamuyac