
Andrew Mathern finished as the tournament MVP, and the case starts with a number that nobody else matched: he ranked first in the field in scoring while GSA IGNITE 2034 won the championship.
Over 3 games, Mathern averaged 5.7 points and totaled 17, with 1 three along the way. He led his own team in scoring throughout the run, and he did it on the team that ended the tournament holding the trophy.
The signature outing came against MEAN GREEN 2034, where Mathern put up 8 points and earned Player of the Game honors. That was his lone POG of the event, and it landed in the matchup that defined the bracket. The two sides met again, and Mathern answered with 7 points and his only three of the tournament. Against AWESOME ELITE 2034 he chipped in 2 points, rounding out a line spread across three appearances.
The argument is built on placement more than volume. Mathern stood atop the field in scoring, carried the load for his own group, and collected a Player-of-the-Game nod in the game that mattered most. Those are the pieces of an MVP run: the top scoring mark in the division, the team-leading role, and coach recognition in the toughest matchup.
There is no need to reach for a tiebreaker here. The team that finished first had the player who scored the most, and they were the same story. Mathern closed his tournament with the championship and the individual line to match it, the kind of finish that settles the MVP question before it has to be asked.
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