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Allen Iverson

MVP Season (2001) · 2001

6'0"
165 lbs
1996 · Pick 1 · Philadelphia 76ers
1996–2009
Philadelphia 76ersDenver NuggetsDetroit PistonsMemphis Grizzlies
Skill ScoreHow you win — in-game attributes
72/99
All-Star Caliber

Iverson's elite Scoring (94) and strong Stamina (88) define this era.

Legacy ScoreCareer dominance — record, titles, defenses
48/99
Established
MVPs (1) +8All-Star (11) +13All-NBA 1st (3) +6Scoring Champ (4) +6

Trophy Case

MVP

2001

Averaged 31.1 PPG, led the 76ers to the Finals as the smallest MVP ever

11×All-Star

2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010

11 selections — the smallest superstar dominated the showcase

2×All-Star MVP

2001, 2005

2 All-Star MVPs — brought the house down both times

4×Scoring Champion

1999, 2001, 2002, 2005

4 titles — the smallest scoring champion in modern NBA history

3×All-NBA First Team

1999, 2001, 2005

3 selections — pound-for-pound the toughest player of his era

The Story

Defining Moments

The Answer

Allen Iverson was 6 feet tall, 165 pounds, and he won the 2001 MVP. Let that sink in. He carried the 76ers to the Finals that year with no other All-Star on the roster. In Game 1, he dropped 48 points on the Lakers — the team that had Shaq and Kobe — and stepped over Tyronn Lue in what became one of basketball's most iconic images. Philly lost the series, but Iverson won that moment forever.

Cultural Impact

Culture Changer

Iverson didn't just change basketball. He changed the culture around basketball. The cornrows, the tattoos, the baggy clothes, the swagger — the NBA literally created a dress code because of him. He brought hip-hop culture to the league at a time when the league was running from it. Every player who walks into an arena today in designer fashion owes something to AI making it acceptable to be unapologetically yourself.

Character & Personality

Practice?

The "practice" press conference is one of the most replayed clips in sports history. Taken out of context, it made Iverson look lazy. In reality, his best friend had just been murdered, his team was falling apart, and he was dealing with injuries. He was frustrated, not indifferent. But the clip stuck, and it became shorthand for everything critics hated about him — which was mostly just that he refused to be who they wanted him to be.

In Their Own Words

We talkin' about practice. Not a game. Not a game. Not a game. We talkin' about practice.

Allen Iverson, press conference, May 7, 2002

The most famous press conference rant in NBA history. Iverson had just been eliminated from the playoffs and was asked about missing practice. The quote became a cultural meme, but the context was a man grieving his friend's death and exhausted from carrying a team alone.

iconic

Signature Moments

The Step-Over — 2001 Finals Game 1

June 6, 2001·vs vs Los Angeles Lakers

The Lakers were 15-0 in the playoffs. Unstoppable. Iverson scored 48 points, hit a late jumper over Tyronn Lue, then stood over his fallen body and stepped over him. The 76ers won Game 1. One man — 6 feet, 165 pounds — beating the most dominant team in basketball by sheer will.

The Lakers went 15-1 that postseason. The 1 was Iverson. The step-over is the most iconic image of defiance in NBA Finals history.

Practice? We Talkin' About Practice?

May 7, 2002·vs N/A

Iverson's press conference about practice became the most quoted sports press conference in history. "We talkin' about practice. Not a game. Not a game. Practice." What people forget: his best friend had just been murdered, and reporters were questioning his commitment.

It became a punchline, but in context it was a man in pain being asked trivial questions. The clip defined Iverson — misunderstood, raw, real.

The Crossover on Jordan

March 12, 1997·vs vs Chicago Bulls

Rookie Allen Iverson crossed over Michael Jordan — the greatest player alive — and hit a pull-up jumper in his face. Jordan stumbled. The crowd gasped. A 21-year-old kid from Georgetown had just made God look mortal.

The crossover that announced a new generation. Iverson didn't just beat Jordan on one play — he showed the league that the culture was shifting.

2001 MVP — Pound for Pound the Greatest

2000-2001 Season·vs vs Entire NBA

At 6-foot and 165 pounds, Iverson won the MVP, the scoring title (31.1 PPG), and dragged a mediocre 76ers roster to the NBA Finals. He played every minute like it was his last. No player his size had ever dominated the league like this.

The smallest MVP in NBA history. He proved that heart and skill could overcome every physical disadvantage.

Record-Breaking Performances

The games and seasons that rewrote history

48 Points in Finals Game 1 + The Stepover

2001-06-06·vs Los Angeles Lakersplayoff record
48 pts, 6 AST, 5 STL — only loss for the Lakers in the 2001 playoffs (15-1)

After hitting a jumper over Tyronn Lue, Iverson stepped over his fallen body — the most iconic image of his career. A 6-foot, 165-pound guard scored 48 against a team with Shaq, Kobe, and the best record in playoff history. The Lakers were supposed to be unbeatable. Iverson made them look human.

The Lakers were 11-0 in the playoffs and hadn't lost a game. Iverson handed them their only defeat of the entire postseason.

The 2001 76ers had no business being in the Finals. Iverson carried a mediocre roster through the East by himself. Game 1 was supposed to be a coronation for L.A. Instead, it became the night Iverson proved heart could beat talent.

Career Numbers

Playoff PPG

2nd all-time playoff scoring average behind Jordan

29.7

Assists Per Game

Elite playmaking for a scoring guard

6.2

Career Games

914

Career Points

25th all-time

24,368

Field Goal %

Volume scorer, efficiency through volume

.425

Points Per Game

Career average across 914 games

26.7

Rebounds Per Game

3.7

Steals Per Game

3x steals leader

2.2

Verified Feb 2026

Season Stats · MVP Season (2001)

Career Avg PtsBasketball Reference
26.7
Career High PtsBasketball Reference
60 pts vs Orlando Magic — February 12, 2005. At 6'0" and 165 lbs. Heart over height.
Legendary MomentNBA Archives
2001 Finals Game 1: 48 pts vs the unstoppable Lakers. Stepped over Tyronn Lue after hitting a jumper. The only game LA lost that entire postseason.
Legendary MomentNBA Archives
Crossed over Michael Jordan as a rookie, November 12, 1996. Hit the jumper in his face. MJ nodded. The torch was being passed to a new generation.
Legendary MomentNBA Archives
Four-time scoring champion at 6'0". Changed NBA culture — cornrows, arm sleeves, baggy shorts. The league literally changed its dress code because of him.

Engine Attributes

Defense60
Stamina88
Playmaking72
Inside Scoring82
Scoring94
Shot Creation62
Ball Security55
Versatility65
Skill Score
72/99
All-Star Caliber
Legacy
48/99
Established

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