
Randall Smith finished this tournament as its MVP, and the case is straightforward: he led the entire field in scoring while ATS Elite 2035 won the championship.
Over 4 games, Smith averaged 13.0 points and piled up 52 in all, doing it without a single three. He led his own team in scoring across the run, and the coaches kept returning to the same name on their ballots.
The signature stretch came against Redline. Smith dropped 17 points in one meeting and earned Player of the Game, then turned around and posted 15 in another, again walking off with the honor. Against ATL Bucks he added 14 more and collected a third Player-of-the-Game nod. Across the remaining game his scoring stayed steady enough to keep his average atop the field.
The why-them paragraph nearly writes itself. Smith ranked first in the tournament in scoring. He was his team's leading scorer. He claimed Player of the Game in 3 of his 4 outings, a level of bracket-wide recognition no one else matched. It was an MVP run built on a field-best average and three coach selections, all of it coming inside the paint and at the line rather than from beyond the arc.
The finish settles the argument. Some MVPs put up the best individual tournament on a team that fell short. Smith did not have to live with that asterisk. He led the field in scoring, carried his own roster, gathered the most Player-of-the-Game honors in the division, and did all of it on the team that hoisted the trophy. The run was the case, and ATS Elite 2035 closed it with the title.
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