
The MVP case for {player:7-boys-hoop-atlanta-orange-chase-kothari|Chase Kothari} starts with the simplest evidence: he was the top scorer in the entire field, and he collected a Player of the Game honor in every game he played.
Over 3 games, Kothari averaged 22.0 points and totaled 66, knocking down 7 threes along the way. His team did not reach the final, but the individual line stands on its own.
The run opened against the {player:7-boys-b4-academy-ace-dabel|Monroe County Wolves 7th}, where Kothari put up 27 points without a single three and walked away with Player of the Game. Against BRXND Basketball Club he scored 22 with 3 threes for another POG. He closed against Balling Eagles Blue with 17 points and 4 threes, a third straight Player of the Game nod.
The case for him is built on the numbers that hold up across the bracket. He ranked first in scoring across the field. He led his own team in scoring. And he earned three Player of the Game honors in three games, recognition from coaches in every matchup he played.
What makes the run distinctive is that it came without a deep team finish. Kothari did not lift a trophy, yet no other player in the tournament scored more or carried a more consistent stretch. The best individual tournament here belonged to the player whose team went home before the final, an MVP run measured by a field-best average, 66 total points, and three POG honors that no result could erase.
Rankings, stats, game recaps and more for youth travel basketball — all in one place.