PIEDMONT, California -- Draymond Green seemed like a safe bet to be MVP of the Golden State Warriors’ NBA championship parade for a third time this past June.

In 2015, the Michigan State product was the star of the Warriors’ first NBA title celebration in 40 years, trash-talking everyone from LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers to his own head coach, Steve Kerr, on the podium in Oakland. In 2017, Draymond returned with a t-shirt emblazoned with “Quickie”, with the "Q" written in the same font as the Cavs’ Quicken Loans Arena—a double dig at Cleveland over a 4-1 Finals flurry and at team owner Dan Gilbert, who founded Quicken Loans.

This year, though, Dray himself was upstaged—by a rookie named Jordan Bell.

While Golden State’s superstars enjoyed their latest triumph as if by rote, Jordan, who averaged 13.5 minutes per game during the Dubs’ four-game sweep of Cleveland in the 2018 Finals, lived it up like his first-ever playoff run would be his last. Jordan downed his bottle of Hennessy so fast, he leapt into the crowd—shirtless—in search of more swigs.