LOS ANGELES — Jamal Crawford of the Los Angeles Clippers won the NBA sixth man award on Thursday, becoming the oldest recipient and the first to do so with different teams.
The 34-year-old guard also was honored as the league's best player off the bench while with the Atlanta Hawks in 2009-10.
Crawford led the league's reserve players in scoring this season, averaging 18.6 points. He came off the bench in 45 of 69 games he played in, helping the Clippers to a 57-25 record, their best regular-season mark in franchise history.
The Clippers had a 31-14 record when Crawford came off the bench. The Clippers and Oklahoma City are 1-1 in their Western Conference semifinal.
"He won it because voters saw him doing other things for the team — playing defense, running the team at the point guard position when Chris Paul was out at times," Clippers coach Doc Rivers said last week, when The Associated Press first reported Crawford won. "He's been the perfect utility player for a team. He's been awesome."
Crawford set the single-season franchise record for 3-pointers made with 161. That surpassed his record from last season, his first in Los Angeles, when he was runner-up for the sixth man award.
Crawford received 57 first-place votes and 421 total points from a panel of 125 sports writers and broadcasters throughout the U.S. and Canada. He joined Kevin McHale, Ricky Pierce and Detlef Schrempf as two-time winners.
Taj Gibson of Chicago finished second with 395 points, and San Antonio's Manu Ginobili was third with 138.
Crawford had his best month in January, scoring in double figures in 15 of 16 games and helping the Clippers go 12-4 that month.
He missed 13 games in March and April because of injury.