The AP NFL Most Valuable Player (MVP) is an annual award presented by the Associated Press (AP) to a player in the National Football League (NFL) adjudged to have been the most valuable in that year's regular season. While there have been many selectors of NFL MVPs in the past, today the MVP award presented by the AP is considered the de facto official NFL MVP award and the most prestigious. Since 2012, the NFL has held the annual NFL Honors ceremony to recognize the winner of each year's AP MVP award, along with other AP awards, such as the AP NFL Offensive Player of the Year and AP NFL Defensive Player of the Year. The most recent winner is quarterback Josh Allen of the Buffalo Bills.
Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen, 2024 recipient | |
| Awarded for | Most valuable player in the NFL |
|---|---|
| Presented by | Associated Press |
| History | |
| First award | 1957 |
| Most wins | Peyton Manning (5) |
| Most recent | Josh Allen (1) |
The AP has presented an award recognizing the NFL's top player since 1957. The award is voted upon by a panel of 50 sportswriters at the end of the regular season, before the playoffs, though the results are not announced to the public until the day before the Super Bowl. The sportswriters chosen regularly follow the NFL, and remain mostly consistent from year to year. They are chosen based on expertise and are independent of the league itself. Voters for the award have included Troy Aikman of Fox Sports; Cris Collinsworth and Tony Dungy of NBC Sports; and Herm Edwards of ESPN. Only two players in the history of the award have won it unanimously: New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady in 2010 and Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson in 2019.
Due to voters' tendency to favor offensive positions (mostly the quarterback and sometimes the running back), the award has been overwhelmingly dominated by offensive players; of the 54 undisputed winners, 54 played an offensive position: 50 quarterbacks and 4 running backs. Two defensive players have won the award: Alan Page in 1971 as a defensive tackle, and Lawrence Taylor as a linebacker in 1986. The sole special teams player to be named AP NFL MVP was Mark Moseley, who won as a placekicker in 1982.
Thirteen awardees also won the Super Bowl (or NFL Championship Game prior to 1966) in the same season. However, this did not occur from 1997 to 2021. During that span, nine AP NFL MVPs have led their team to the Super Bowl and were defeated each time. This has led to tongue-in-cheek claims in recent years that there is a "curse" preventing the awardee's team from winning the Super Bowl.
Six NFL franchises have not produced an MVP, the New York Jets, Houston Texans, Jacksonville Jaguars, Chicago/St. Louis/Phoenix/Arizona Cardinals, New Orleans Saints, and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
The Green Bay Packers have the most overall winners with ten; if including disputed awards (see below), the Colts would be tied with ten. The Green Bay Packers also have the most unique winners with five players winning the award.
Discrepancies
The AP has presented an award recognizing the NFL's top player since the 1957 season, although the pre-1961 awardees are recognized in the Official NFL Record and Fact Book as winning the AP's "NFL Most Outstanding Player" award, and the 1962 winner was recognized as the AP's "Player of the Year". The AP considers 1961 to be the first year in which it presented a "Most Valuable Player" award. Thus there are numerous inconsistencies among sources regarding each of the first four awards, and whether or not the winners are included in the overall list of AP MVP winners at all. The discrepancies include 1958's winner being either Jim Brown or Gino Marchetti; the 1959 winner as Johnny Unitas or Charlie Conerly; and whether or not Norm Van Brocklin shared the award in 1960 with Joe Schmidt.
MVP Super Bowl curse
In recent years, if a player that won the MVP makes it to the Super Bowl, the MVP often loses the Super Bowl in the year they won the MVP. That includes, Kurt Warner in 2001, Rich Gannon in 2002, Shaun Alexander in 2005, Tom Brady in 2007, Peyton Manning in 2009 and 2013, Cam Newton in 2015, Matt Ryan in 2016, and Tom Brady in 2017.
Eleven players have won the Super Bowl and MVP in the same season: Bart Starr in 1966, Terry Bradshaw in 1978, Mark Moseley in 1982, Lawrence Taylor in 1986, Joe Montana in 1989, Emmitt Smith in 1993, Steve Young in 1994, Brett Favre in 1996, Terrell Davis in 1998, Kurt Warner in 1999, and Patrick Mahomes in 2022. In these eleven cases, all but four regular season MVP winners were also the Super Bowl MVP for their respective games - with Moseley, Taylor, Favre and Davis not completing the duplicate MVP year. 23 years later, Patrick Mahomes broke the MVP Super Bowl curse at Super Bowl LVII.
Winners
| Legend | |
|---|---|
| Winner received all available votes or all available first-place votes | |
| Winner received at least 90% of available votes or of available first-place votes | |
| Season | Player | Position | Team | Votes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1957 | Jim Brown | Running back | Cleveland Browns | 14 of 36 (39%) | |
| 1958 | Jim Brown (2) | 22 of 41 (54%) | |||
| 1959 | Johnny Unitas | Quarterback | Baltimore Colts | 20 of 37 (54%) | |
| 1960 | Norm Van Brocklin | Philadelphia Eagles | Not released | ||
| 1961 | Paul Hornung | Running back | Green Bay Packers | ||
| 1962 | Jim Taylor | 19 of 40 (48%) | |||
| 1963 | Y. A. Tittle | Quarterback | New York Giants | 33 of 40 (83%) | |
| 1964 | Johnny Unitas (2) | Baltimore Colts | 32 of 40 (80%) | ||
| 1965 | Jim Brown (3) | Running back | Cleveland Browns | 34 of 42 (81%) | |
| 1966 | Bart Starr | Quarterback | Green Bay Packers | 19 of 40 (48%) | |
| 1967 | Johnny Unitas (3) | Baltimore Colts | 40 of 47 (81%) | ||
| 1968 | Earl Morrall | 33 of 46 (81%) | |||
| 1969 | Roman Gabriel | Los Angeles Rams | 21+1⁄3 of 48 (44%) | ||
| 1970 | John Brodie | San Francisco 49ers | 33 of 78 (42%) | ||
| 1971 | Alan Page | Defensive tackle | Minnesota Vikings | 16 of 60 (21%) | |
| 1972 | Larry Brown | Running back | Washington Redskins | 45 of 75 (40%) | |
| 1973 | O. J. Simpson | Buffalo Bills | 74 of 78 (95%) | ||
| 1974 | Ken Stabler | Quarterback | Oakland Raiders | 36 of 78 (46%) | |
| 1975 | Fran Tarkenton | Minnesota Vikings | Not released | ||
| 1976 | Bert Jones | Baltimore Colts | 41 of 84 (49%) | ||
| 1977 | Walter Payton | Running back | Chicago Bears | 57 of 84 (68%) | |
| 1978 | Terry Bradshaw | Quarterback | Pittsburgh Steelers | 36 of 84 (43%) | |
| 1979 | Earl Campbell | Running back | Houston Oilers | 34 of 84 (41%) | |
| 1980 | Brian Sipe | Quarterback | Cleveland Browns | 47 of 84 (56%) | |
| 1981 | Ken Anderson | Cincinnati Bengals | 46 of 84 (55%) | ||
| 1982 | Mark Moseley | Placekicker | Washington Redskins | 35 of 84 (42%) | |
| 1983 | Joe Theismann | Quarterback | 58 of 84 (69%) | ||
| 1984 | Dan Marino | Miami Dolphins | 52 of 84 (62%) | ||
| 1985 | Marcus Allen | Running back | Los Angeles Raiders | 33 of 84 (39%) | |
| 1986 | Lawrence Taylor | Linebacker | New York Giants | 41 of 84 (49%) | |
| 1987 | John Elway | Quarterback | Denver Broncos | 36 of 84 (43%) | |
| 1988 | Boomer Esiason | Cincinnati Bengals | 31 of 78 (40%) | ||
| 1989 | Joe Montana | San Francisco 49ers | 62 of 70 (89%) | ||
| 1990 | Joe Montana (2) | 26 of 80 (33%) | |||
| 1991 | Thurman Thomas | Running back | Buffalo Bills | 39 of 82 (48%) | |
| 1992 | Steve Young | Quarterback | San Francisco 49ers | 56 of 80 (70%) | |
| 1993 | Emmitt Smith | Running back | Dallas Cowboys | 26 of 81 (32%) | |
| 1994 | Steve Young (2) | Quarterback | San Francisco 49ers | 74 of 98 (75%) | |
| 1995 | Brett Favre | Green Bay Packers | 69 of 88 (78%) | ||
| 1996 | Brett Favre (2) | 52 of 93 (56%) | |||
| 1997 | Brett Favre (3) Barry Sanders | Quarterback Running back | Green Bay Packers Detroit Lions | 18 of 48 (38%) | |
| 1998 | Terrell Davis | Running back | Denver Broncos | 25 of 47 (53%) | |
| 1999 | Kurt Warner | Quarterback | St. Louis Rams | 33 of 50 (66%) | |
| 2000 | Marshall Faulk | Running back | 24 of 50 (48%) | ||
| 2001 | Kurt Warner (2) | Quarterback | 21+1⁄2 of 50 (43%) | ||
| 2002 | Rich Gannon | Oakland Raiders | 19 of 48 (40%) | ||
| 2003 | Peyton Manning Steve McNair | Indianapolis Colts Tennessee Titans | 16 of 50 (32%) | ||
| 2004 | Peyton Manning (2) | Indianapolis Colts | 47 of 48 (98%) | ||
| 2005 | Shaun Alexander | Running back | Seattle Seahawks | 19 of 50 (38%) | |
| 2006 | LaDainian Tomlinson | San Diego Chargers | 44 of 50 (88%) | ||
| 2007 | Tom Brady | Quarterback | New England Patriots | 49 of 50 (98%) | |
| 2008 | Peyton Manning (3) | Indianapolis Colts | 32 of 50 (64%) | ||
| 2009 | Peyton Manning (4) | 39+1⁄2 of 50 (79%) | |||
| 2010 | Tom Brady (2) | New England Patriots | 50 of 50 (100%) | ||
| 2011 | Aaron Rodgers | Green Bay Packers | 48 of 50 (96%) | ||
| 2012 | Adrian Peterson | Running back | Minnesota Vikings | 30+1⁄2 of 50 (61%) | |
| 2013 | Peyton Manning (5) | Quarterback | Denver Broncos | 49 of 50 (98%) | |
| 2014 | Aaron Rodgers (2) | Green Bay Packers | 31 of 50 (62%) | ||
| 2015 | Cam Newton | Carolina Panthers | 48 of 50 (96%) | ||
| 2016 | Matt Ryan | Atlanta Falcons | 25 of 50 (50%) | ||
| 2017 | Tom Brady (3) | New England Patriots | 40 of 50 (80%) | ||
| 2018 | Patrick Mahomes | Kansas City Chiefs | 41 of 50 (82%) | ||
| 2019 | Lamar Jackson | Baltimore Ravens | 50 of 50 (100%) | ||
| 2020 | Aaron Rodgers (3) | Green Bay Packers | 44 of 50 (88%) | ||
| 2021 | Aaron Rodgers (4) | 39 of 50 (78%) | |||
| 2022 | Patrick Mahomes (2) | Kansas City Chiefs | 48 of 50 (96%) | ||
| 2023 | Lamar Jackson (2) | Baltimore Ravens | 49 of 50 (98%) | ||
| 2024 | Josh Allen | Buffalo Bills | 27 of 50 (54%) |
Multiple-time winners
| Awards | Player | Team(s) | Years | Hall of Fame induction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | Peyton Manning | Indianapolis Colts | 2003, 2004, 2008, 2009 | 2021 |
| Denver Broncos | 2013 | |||
| 4 | Aaron Rodgers | Green Bay Packers | 2011, 2014, 2020, 2021 | Active |
| 3 | Jim Brown | Cleveland Browns | 1957, 1958, 1965 | 1971 |
| Johnny Unitas | Baltimore Colts | 1959, 1964, 1967 | 1979 | |
| Brett Favre | Green Bay Packers | 1995, 1996, 1997 | 2016 | |
| Tom Brady | New England Patriots | 2007, 2010, 2017 | Eligible in 2028 | |
| 2 | Joe Montana | San Francisco 49ers | 1989, 1990 | 2000 |
| Steve Young | 1992, 1994 | 2005 | ||
| Kurt Warner | St. Louis Rams | 1999, 2001 | 2017 | |
| Patrick Mahomes | Kansas City Chiefs | 2018, 2022 | Active | |
| Lamar Jackson | Baltimore Ravens | 2019, 2023 | Active |
See also
- List of NFL MVP awards
- AP NFL Offensive Player of the Year
- AP NFL Defensive Player of the Year
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