
Kollin Hooker earned MVP honors with the kind of consistency that piles up across a bracket. Over 6 games, he collected 6 Player-of-the-Game nods, one for each time out.
The line tells the story. Hooker averaged 12.2 points a game and finished with 73 points and 8 threes over those 6 games. He did it without his team reaching the final, which only sharpens the individual argument.
The signature stretch came against the Rangers. In one meeting he posted 13 points with 2 threes and took Player of the Game. In a second matchup with the Rangers, he again scored 13, this time with a single three, and claimed the honor once more. Against A.I.E, the pattern held: 13 points, one three, another Player of the Game. The rest of his games followed the same script, steady scoring that kept drawing coach recognition.
The case rests on the numbers. Hooker ranked 4th in the field in scoring, and he led his own team in points. Pair that with 6 Player-of-the-Game selections across 6 games and 8 threes on the run, and the resume is built on volume and recognition rather than a single outburst.
What makes it distinctive is where it ended. The West Texas Scorpions did not advance to the final, so Hooker's tournament was not crowned by a title. The MVP award instead points to the best individual run on the floor, regardless of where the team finished. Six games, six honors, a top-five scoring finish in the field, and the scoring lead on his own roster. That is the argument, and it stands on its own.
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