For a league currently being dominated by a dynasty, the MVP race is surprisingly wide open. Bovada released its initial odds for the NBA’s MVP award last week, and a few surprising names were near the top. The odds have moved slightly since then, so let’s take a look at the current numbers:

NBA MVP Odds Player Odds Player Odds LeBron James +333 Anthony Davis +400 Giannis Antetokounmpo +450 James Harden +550 Kevin Durant +900 Kawhi Leonard +1100 Russell Westbrook +1400 Stephen Curry +1600 Joel Embiid +1600 Kyrie Irving +1600 Ben Simmons +2800 Damian Lillard +3500 Karl-Anthony Towns +5000 Donovan Mitchell +6600 John Wall +7500 DeMar DeRozan +8000 Nikola Jokic +10000 Victor Oladipo +10000 Chris Paul +10000 Jimmy Butler +10000 Paul George +12500 LaMarcus Aldridge +12500 Gordon Hayward +15000 Jayson Tatum +15000 DeMarcus Cousins +17000 Blake Griffin +22500 Kristaps Porzingis +27500 Devin Booker +27500 Kyle Lowry +32500 Lonzo Ball +45000

There are an equal number of Celtics with solid Vegas odds to win the MVP award as there are Warriors. Two sophomores, Ben Simmons and Donovan Mitchell, are not only in the running, but have decent chances. LeBron James leads with the shortest odds, but has a handful of players behind him who could realistically replace him at the top after the first month. Here are the four most interesting story lines from the MVP odds:

Don’t Sleep on Victor Oladipo

The most intriguing outsider is Dipo. His odds (+10,000) are worse than John Wall’s (+7,500), DeMar DeRozan’s (+8,000), and Karl-Anthony Towns’s (+5,000), but of that group, Oladipo came the closest to MVP contention last season. Finally making the jump that was expected a couple years ago, Oladipo handily won the Most Improved Player award and took the Pacers to a 5-seed in the East. Anthony Davis and Damian Lillard dominated the “it won’t happen, but it’s fun to talk about” MVP category in the latter half of the season, but Oladipo was worthy of at least a nod, too.

The Eastern Conference lost James, but will be more well rounded at the top: Boston is healthy [knocks on wood and the plate and screws removed from Gordon Hayward’s leg], Philadelphia is growing up, and Toronto is refurbished. Indiana is in the tier below that group, but could defy expectations again after having the smartest offseason in the conference. With more help around him, Oladipo could lead the way to a regular-season upset.

The Field Is Wide Open

LeBron being the MVP favorite (+333) is like a video game reverting to the default setting after pressing restart. But Los Angeles’s success is far less certain than Golden State’s or Houston’s, to such a degree that it will be an uphill battle for LeBron to win MVP. The Western Conference is even deeper than it was last season, and playoff success isn’t a lock for LeBron like it was when he played in the East. If anything, his odds say less about his chances, which are standard for LeBron at the start of every season, and more about the lack of another clear front-runner.

The top of the running is deep: Seven players (LeBron James, Anthony Davis, Giannis Antetokounmpo, James Harden, Kevin Durant, Kawhi Leonard, Russell Westbrook) appear before we even get to Steph Curry, who has the same odds (+1,600) as Kyrie Irving and Joel Embiid. Last season, Harden was an obvious “we owe ya one” candidate; KD was coming off a Finals MVP; LeBron was LeBron. The same is true of Durant and Bron entering 2018-19, but there isn’t an obvious standout like Harden was last year. As of now, the MVP story line is that there really isn’t a front-runner.

Boston’s Hierarchy Is TBD

Vegas has three eligible Celtics listed, and Al Horford still isn’t one of them. Again, Irving is +1,600, while Hayward and Jayson Tatum are even at +15,000. Neither forward strikes me as even a bubble MVP candidate. Hayward isn’t flashy, especially next to Irving, and won’t have the usage he did with Utah; Tatum isn’t Boston’s focal point (yet). Still, how Hayward and Tatum play off each other is one of most watch-worthy new on-court relationships. More than likely, one will emerge as the go-to. It might not be the one with the maximum contract.

The Year of Giannis Antetokounmpo

Outside of Kawhi sitting out most of the season, Giannis and the Bucks underperforming their skill level was 2017-18’s biggest disappointment. At the start of the season, Antetokounmpo was an MVP candidate alongside LeBron and Harden. But Milwaukee struggled, and Giannis’s ill-equipped surrounding cast wound up costing him any chance at building an MVP narrative.

Bringing in Mike Budenholzer, role-player whisperer, as head coach could change that. Antetokounmpo has consistently gotten better throughout his NBA career despite poor coaching; it’s scary (yet appropriate considering his length) to know that he still should have a bigger leap to make. What’s held him back so far could change soon, making his odds (+450, third best) his most believable yet.