
Julian Lopez did not reach the final, but the numbers make the case for him as the tournament's most valuable player. Across 6 games, no scorer in the field ranked ahead of him.
The line stands on its own: 9.5 points a game, 57 points in all, 10 threes, and Player-of-the-Game honors in 6 games. He led the Rangers in scoring throughout the run.
The signature outing came against the Canadian Wildcats - Bentley, where Lopez poured in 19 points behind 5 threes and took the Player-of-the-Game nod. Half his total threes arrived in that single game. Against the Perryton Bulls, he added 10 points with 2 threes and another Player-of-the-Game honor. He matched that against the Spearman Lynx, 10 points and 2 threes, with the same recognition from the coaches. The rest of the schedule kept the average steady, and the POG count climbed game by game.
The why is straightforward. Lopez finished first in the field in scoring. He led his own team. And he collected Player-of-the-Game honors in every one of his 6 games, a level of recognition no closing run can erase. The run was built on a field-best scoring total, a stack of made threes, and coach recognition across the bracket.
The Rangers fell short of the final, so the case rests on the individual rather than the trophy. By that measure it is clear. Six games, six Player-of-the-Game nods, the top scoring mark in the field, and the scoring lead on his own team. Lopez put together the best individual tournament regardless of where the Rangers finished, and the MVP award followed the evidence.
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