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LeBron James has a favorite for the MVP award: Himself

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Are Harden and LeBron both deserving of MVPs? (3:03)

The Jump crew discusses the idea of splitting the NBA MVP award into best season and best player, enabling both James Harden and LeBron James to be recognized. (3:03)

MIAMI -- LeBron James has someone in mind for the MVP award this season.

Himself.

This is a season in which prohibitive MVP favorite James Harden has done phenomenal things with NBA-leading Houston, reigning MVP Russell Westbrook has been fantastic again for Oklahoma City, and Anthony Davis has found a new stratosphere to take his game, especially after New Orleans lost DeMarcus Cousins.

James raves about them all. But ...

"I would vote for me," James told The Associated Press. "The body of work, how I'm doing it, what's been happening with our team all year long, how we've got so many injuries and things of that nature, guys in and out, to be able to still keep this thing afloat, I definitely would vote me."

His numbers with the Cleveland Cavaliers this season compare favorably -- or exceed -- the five-season run between 2008-09 and 2012-13 when he won the MVP award four times. His averages then: 27.8 points, 7.6 rebounds and 7.3 assists on 52 percent shooting while playing 38 minutes per game.

This season's numbers are definitely MVP-worthy: 27.4 points, 9.1 assists and 8.6 rebounds on 55 percent shooting.

"He's continued to prove everybody wrong and find new levels," said Miami guard Dwyane Wade, James' longtime friend and two-time former teammate. "In his 15th season, to be 33 years of age and to be playing the way he's playing, as consistent as he's playing, that is as impressive as anything that anybody has ever done."

Averaging 27 points, nine assists and eight rebounds is an NBA rarity.

Oscar Robertson had numbers like those five times, in five consecutive seasons from 1960-61 through 1964-65 (he won his lone MVP award for the 1963-64 season). No one posted averages like that again until last year, when Harden and Westbrook both pulled it off.

Robertson, Harden and Westbrook were all 20-somethings when they had those numbers.

James is in position to join them. A fifth MVP wouldn't define him; he has long been a Hall of Fame lock.

"At this point in my career, I'm just trying to break the mold, break the narrative of guys in their 15th year ... I'm trying to do things that have never been done before," James said. "It's crazy because I'm not setting out to do it. It's just kind of happening organically. I'm just training my body and training my mind and going out and playing and seeing what happens."

The Cavaliers are in the mix to finish as high as No. 3 in the Eastern Conference, despite having had 21 different players on the roster, 24 different starting lineups and counting, and a slew of injuries, even with head coach Tyronn Lue falling ill and missing games.

"You can say what you want about LeBron, whether it's positive or it's negative. What's he's done, it's just amazing," Cavs acting head coach Larry Drew said. "At his age, him being able to play in every game, him being able to sustain and him being able to play with the consistency he has played with, game after game after game, speaks volumes. To me, he certainly deserves the MVP. He's been phenomenal every game."

The season has been rocky. James says he has been at his best anyway.

"I've said it," James said. "Obviously, I've had some unbelievable seasons before, but I've said it: This is the best I can go, just from a complete basketball player standpoint."

Information from The Associated Press was included in this report.