Most Improved Player Award: Steph Curry not in Top 3

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Steph Curry finished in fourth place in the 2015-16 NBA Most Improved Player Award voting results, the NBA announced on Friday morning.

The Portland Trail Blazers’ CJ McCollum, who more than tripled his scoring average from the previous season, won the award. The 6-4 guard joins Kevin Duckworth (1987-88) and Zach Randolph (2003-04) as the only Trail Blazers to earn the award, which is designed to honor an up-and-coming player who has made a dramatic improvement from the previous season or seasons.

McCollum received 101 first-place votes and 559 total points from a panel of 130 sportswriters and broadcasters throughout the United States and Canada.  Kemba Walker of the Charlotte Hornets (seven first-place votes, 166 points) and Giannis Antetokounmpo of the Milwaukee Bucks (four first-place votes, 99 points) finished second and third, respectively.  Players were awarded five points for each first-place vote, three points for each second-place vote and one point for each third-place vote.

Curry garnered seven first-place votes, 13 second-place votes and nine third-place votes for a total of 83 points.

Curry -- who was the MVP last year after averaging 23.8 points and connecting on a then-NBA record 286 3-pointers -- increased his scoring output to 30.1 points per game and shattered his record by making 402 treys.

Draymond Green finished in seventh place with two first-place votes, 10 second-place votes and three third-place votes.

McCollum averaged a career-high 20.8 points (18th in the NBA) in his third season since being selected by the Trail Blazers with the 10th pick of NBA Draft 2013 presented by State Farm.  He raised his scoring average by 14 points from last season’s 6.8, the largest increase (minimum 40 games each season) since Tony Campbell improved by 17 points from 1988-89 (6.2) to 1989-90 (23.2).  McCollum established career highs in field goal percentage (44.8), three-point field goal percentage (41.7, eighth in the NBA), assists (4.3 apg) and rebounds (3.2 rpg), helping Portland make the playoffs for the third consecutive year.

Last season, McCollum appeared in 62 games (three starts) and averaged 15.7 minutes.  He scored in double figures 18 times and reached the 20-point mark three times.  This season, as one of four new starters for Portland, McCollum hit double figures in 79 of his 80 games, scored at least 20 points in 40 games and notched eight 30-point games.  McCollum ranked ninth in the NBA with 197 three-pointers made, and he teamed with Damian Lillard to form the league’s third-highest scoring duo (45.9 ppg).

For the complete voting breakdown, click here.

NBA media services contributed to this story

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