The AP NFL MVP finalists are Josh
Allen, Saquon Barkley, Joe Burrow, Jared Goff and Lamar Jackson
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[January 24, 2025]
By ROB MAADDI
Josh Allen, Saquon Barkley, Joe Burrow, Jared Goff and Lamar Jackson
are finalists for The Associated Press 2024 NFL Most Valuable Player
award.
Barkley, Burrow and Jackson also are finalists for Offensive Player
of the Year and Burrow is also in the running for Comeback Player of
the Year.
The winners will be announced at NFL Honors on Feb. 6. A nationwide
panel of 50 media members who regularly cover the league completed
voting before the playoffs began.
Here are the finalists, in alphabetical order, for the eight AP NFL
awards:
Most Valuable Player
Allen helped the Bills win their fifth straight AFC East title. He
threw for 3,731 yards, 28 TDs and had six picks for a 101.4 passer
rating. Allen ran for 531 yards and 12 scores.
Barkley ran for 2,005 yards, eighth-best in NFL history. He sat out
Philadelphia’s final regular-season game when he needed 101 yards to
break Eric Dickerson’s single-season record. Barkley helped the
Eagles win the NFC East and advance to the conference championship
game.
Burrow led the NFL with a career-high 4,918 yards passing and 43 TDs
but the Cincinnati Bengals finished 9-8 and missed the playoffs.
Goff threw for 4,629 yards, 37 TDs, nine interceptions and led
Detroit to the No. 1 seed in the NFC. The Lions were eliminated in
the divisional round by Washington.
Jackson, the reigning winner, is seeking his third MVP award after
leading the Ravens to an AFC North title. Jackson had career-highs
with 4,172 yards passing, 41 TDs to just four interceptions and a
119.6 passer rating, which led the NFL. He was a first-team All-Pro
for the third time and also ran for 915 yards and four TDs. The
Ravens were knocked out of the divisional round by Allen and the
Buffalo Bills.
Offensive Player of the Year
Barkley, Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase, Derrick Henry and Jackson are
finalists for the award.
Chase won the receiving triple crown, leading the league with 127
receptions, 1,708 yards and 17 TDs. The Bengals' star wide receiver
was a unanimous selection for All-Pro.
Henry, the 2020 Offensive Player of the Year, had 1,921 yards
rushing and 16 TDs in his first season with the Ravens.
Defensive Player of the Year
Eagles linebacker Zack Baun went from mostly playing special teams
for the Saints to earning All-Pro honors in his first season in
Philadelphia.
All-Pro edge rusher Myles Garrett, the reigning Defensive Player of
the Year, had 14 sacks for the Cleveland Browns.
Bengals All-Pro edge rusher Trey Hendrickson led the NFL with 17 1/2
sacks.
Broncos All-Pro cornerback Patrick Surtain II allowed just 37
receptions, had four picks and opposing quarterbacks had a 61.1
passer rating throwing against him
Steelers edge rusher T.J. Watt, the 2021 winner, had 11 1/2 sacks
and forced six fumbles.
Offensive Rookie of the Year
Raiders tight end Brock Bowers set a rookie record with 112
receptions and his 1,194 yards receiving were the most by a
first-year player at his position.
Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels led the team to an eight-win
improvement and has them one win away from a Super Bowl appearance.
He threw for 3,568 yards, 25 TDs and posted a 100.1 rating. Daniels
also ran for 891 yards and six scores.
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Philadelphia Eagles running back Saquon Barkley (26) runs the ball
for a touchdown during the second half of an NFL football NFC
divisional playoff game against the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday, Jan.
19, 2025, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Derik Hamilton, File)
Giants receiver Malik Nabers had 109 catches for
1,204 yards and seven TDs.
Broncos QB Bo Nix helped the team reach the playoffs for the first
time in nine years. He had 3,775 yards passing, 29 TDs, 12 picks and
ran for 430 yards and four scores.
Jaguars receiver Brian Thomas Jr. caught 87 passes for 1,282 yards
and 10 TDs.
Defensive Rookie of the Year
Eagles cornerback Cooper DeJean was among the highest-rated players
in the slot, holding opponents to 50 receptions. He had five pass
breakups and quarterbacks had an 82.2 passer rating against him.
Rams defensive tackle Braden Fiske led the team and all rookies with
8 1/2 sacks. He had 51 pressures, two forced fumbles and recoveries,
10 tackles for loss and 10 quarterback hits.
Eagles cornerback Quinyon Mitchell allowed 40 receptions, had nine
pass breakups and quarterbacks had an 87 passer rating against him.
Dolphins edge Chop Robinson had six sacks, 20 pressures and eight
tackles for loss.
Rams edge Jared Verse had 4 1/2 sacks but led all rookies in
quarterback hits (18), pressures (77) and hurries (56). He also had
11 tackles for loss.
Coach of the Year
Detroit’s Dan Campbell, Minnesota’s Kevin O’Connell, Denver’s Sean
Payton, Washington’s Dan Quinn and Kansas City’s Andy Reid are the
finalists.
Campbell guided the Lions (15-3) to the NFC's No. 1 seed. Connell
led the Vikings (14-4) to the playoffs despite the departure of Kirk
Cousins in free agency and losing rookie quarterback J.J. McCarthy
to a season-ending knee injury in training camp.
Payton helped the Broncos (10-8) overcome salary-cap woes stemming
from the decision to release Russell Wilson and ended a nine-year
playoff drought.
Quinn took over a 4-13 team and turned the Commanders into a 12-win
playoff team.
Reid had the Chiefs (16-2) back atop the AFC as the No. 1 seed in a
quest for a third straight Super Bowl victory.
Assistant Coach of the Year
Bills offensive coordinator Joe Brady, Eagles defensive coordinator
Vic Fangio, Vikings DC Brian Flores, Lions DC Aaron Glenn and Lions
OC Ben Johnson made the list.
Comeback Player of the Year
Burrow, Vikings quarterback Sam Darnold, Chargers running back J.K.
Dobbins, Patriots cornerback Christian Gonzalez and Bills safety
Damar Hamlin are the finalists.
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