
Luke Landry did not lead LIVON EYBL in scoring, and it hardly mattered. Across three games he earned Player of the Game twice and finished with a championship, the kind of run that settles an MVP argument without a single highlight reel needed.
The line was steady: 9.3 points a game, 28 points total, 3 threes over three games, and a title at the end of it. That average placed him third among scorers in the field, a notable mark for a player who was not even his own team's top option.
The signature work came against PA STORM. In one meeting he scored 12 points and walked off with Player of the Game honors. In another against the same opponent he added 10 points, this time with 2 threes, and claimed Player of the Game again. Two games, two coach nods, both against the same foe. The third outing, against AWESOME ELITE 2033, was quieter at 6 points and a single three, but it fit inside the same complete stretch.
The case for Landry rests on plain numbers. He ranked third in scoring across the whole field. He was recognized by coaches in two of his three games. He shot 3 threes across the run. He did all of it without carrying the scoring load on his own roster, which only sharpens the point about value beyond raw totals.
And then there is the finish. LIVON EYBL won the title, and Landry was the one named MVP. The run is the argument. Third in the field, two Player of the Game honors, and a championship to close it, all from a player content to be a piece of something that won.
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