2016 NBA All-Star Game

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2016 NBA All Star Game
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1 2 3 4 Total
West 40 52 53 51 196
East 43 47 46 37 173
Date February 14, 2016
Arena Air Canada Centre and Ricoh Coliseum
City Toronto, Ontario
MVP Russell Westbrook
National anthem Nelly Furtado (Canadian)
Ne-Yo (American)
Referees
Halftime show Sting
Attendance 18,298
Network TSN and Sportsnet (Canada)
TNT and TBS (United States)
Announcers Marv Albert, Reggie Miller and Chris Webber
Kevin Harlan, Ernie Johnson, Reggie Miller, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Shaquille O'Neal and Kevin Hart (All-Star Saturday Night)
Matt Winer, Grant Hill and Chris Webber (Rising Stars Challenge)
NBA All-Star Game
2015 2017 >

The 2016 NBA All-Star Game was an exhibition basketball game that was played on Sunday, February 14, 2016. It was the 65th NBA All-Star Game. The Western Conference won 196–173 over the Eastern Conference, and Russell Westbrook was named the NBA All-Star Game Most Valuable Player (MVP). It was held at Air Canada Centre in Toronto, home of the Toronto Raptors. The Raptors were awarded the All-Star Game in an announcement on September 30, 2013. This was the first time that the game was held outside the United States.[1] TSN and Sportsnet televised the game nationally in Canada, while TNT and TBS televised the game nationally in the United States. This was also the 18th and final All-Star Game that Kobe Bryant participated in, as a result of his retirement after the 2015–16 season.

All-Star Game

Coaches

Although the Golden State Warriors had the best record in the Western Conference, no coach may coach two consecutive All-Star Games, therefore making Steve Kerr ineligible. San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich served as the Western Conference coach due to the Spurs having the second-best record in the West. The Cleveland Cavaliers had the best record in the Eastern Conference, but on January 22, the team fired head coach David Blatt and replaced him with Tyronn Lue. Lue was named the Eastern Conference head coach on January 27, even though he had only coached three games up to that point.

Tyronn Lue (left) and Gregg Popovich (right) were selected as the East and West head coach, respectively.

Rosters

The rosters for the All-Star Game were selected through a voting process. The starters are chosen by the fans. Two guards and three frontcourt players who received the highest vote are named the All-Star starters. NBA head coaches vote for the reserves for their respective conferences, none of which can be players on their own team. Each coach selects two guards, three frontcourt players and two wild cards, with each selected player ranked in order of preference within each category. If a multi-position player is to be selected, coaches are encouraged to vote for the player at the position that was "most advantageous for the All-Star team," regardless of where the player was listed on the All-Star ballot or the position he was listed in box scores.[2]

Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers topped the ballots this year with 1,891,614 votes, earning Bryant his 18th all-star appearance in his final season in the NBA, and also beating out the 2015 leading vote getter Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors, who was second this year in total votes with 1,604,325. This is the fourth time that Bryant has been the leading vote getter. The other players named to the Western Conference starting roster include Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thunder, named to their fifth and seventh All-Star Games respectively, and Kawhi Leonard of the San Antonio Spurs, who was named to his first career All-Star Game.[3]

LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers, with 1,089,206 votes, was the leading vote getter in the Eastern Conference, earning James his 12th career all-star nod. Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat was also named a starter to his 12th career All-Star Game, with a total of 941,466 votes. Rounding out the rest of the Eastern Conference starting lineup was Kyle Lowry of the Toronto Raptors (second all-star nod), Paul George of the Indiana Pacers (3rd all-star nod), and Carmelo Anthony of the New York Knicks, who was named to his ninth career All-Star Game.[3]

The West Reserves included Klay Thompson and Draymond Green of the Golden State Warriors, Chris Paul of the Los Angeles Clippers, James Harden of the Houston Rockets, Anthony Davis of the New Orleans Pelicans, DeMarcus Cousins of the Sacramento Kings, and LaMarcus Aldridge, who made the All-Star Game as a member of the San Antonio Spurs for the first time.

The East Reserves included John Wall of the Washington Wizards, DeMar DeRozan of the Toronto Raptors, Jimmy Butler of the Chicago Bulls, Isaiah Thomas of the Boston Celtics, Chris Bosh of the Miami Heat, Paul Millsap of the Atlanta Hawks, and Andre Drummond of the Detroit Pistons. Jimmy Butler and Chris Bosh ultimately had to sit out the All-Star Game due to a knee and calf injury, respectively. Pau Gasol of the Chicago Bulls and Al Horford of the Atlanta Hawks were named as Butler and Bosh's replacements.

^INJ Jimmy Butler was unable to participate due to a knee injury.[7]
^REP Pau Gasol was selected as Butler's replacement.[7]
^INJ2 Chris Bosh was unable to participate due to a calf injury.[8]
^REP2 Al Horford was selected as Bosh's replacement.[8]

Game

February 14, 2016
8:30 pm ET
Western Conference 196, Eastern Conference 173
Scoring by quarter: 40–43, 52–47, 53–46, 51–37
Pts: Russell Westbrook 31
Rebs: Russell Westbrook 8
Asts: Chris Paul 16
Pts: Paul George 41
Rebs: Andre Drummond 13
Asts: Kyle Lowry 10
Air Canada Centre, Toronto, Ontario
Attendance: 18,298
Referees:
  • Matt Boland
  • Zach Zarba
  • Dan Crawford

Russell Westbrook earned his second-straight MVP award in his first All-Star start as the West won 196–173 over the East.[9][3] He scored a team-high 31 points and added eight rebounds, five assists, and five steals in 22 minutes. Kobe Bryant, who planned to retire after the season, had 10 points, six rebounds, and seven assists in his final All-Star Game. The 369 total points in the game broke the previous year's record by 48, and both sides exceeded the prior team record of 163.[10]

Stephen Curry added 26 points for the West, and teammates Anthony Davis scored 24 on 12-of-13 shooting and Kevin Durant tallied 23. The East's Paul George scored 41, which tied Westbrook's total from 2015 and was one short of Wilt Chamberlain's record. LeBron James totaled 13 points for a career record of 291 to pass Bryant, who retired with 290.[10]

Westbrook became the first player in All-Star history to win consecutive MVPs outright. Bob Pettit is the other player to have won back-to-back awards, winning in 1958 and sharing it with Elgin Baylor in 1959.[9] West players offered to feed Bryant the ball in an attempt to get him a record fifth All-Star MVP, but he declined.[10][11][12]

All-Star Weekend

Celebrity Game

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The 2016 NBA Celebrity All-Star Game was played on February 12th, 2016 at the Ricoh Coliseum in Toronto, Ontario.[13][14]

The game was a matchup of Team Canada vs. Team USA, coached by Canadian rapper Drake, and 4-time Celebrity game MVP Kevin Hart, respectively. It featured 21 players, including actors Stephan James, Jason Sudeikis, Anthony Anderson, O'Shea Jackson, Jr., Joel David Moore, and Tom Cavanagh, and TV hosts Nick Cannon, Terrence Jenkins, and the Property Brothers. The game also included four NBA legends in Chauncey Billups, Muggsy Bogues, Tracy McGrady, and Rick Fox, as well as Elena Delle Donne and Tammy Sutton-Brown of the WNBA.[15][16]

Team Canada won 74-64 and Win Butler was named MVP of the game.

February 12
7:00 pm ET
Team USA 64, Team Canada 74
Scoring by quarter: 15–20, 13–17, 18–16, 18–21

Rising Stars Challenge

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^INJ1 Nerlens Noel was unable to participate due to injury.[18]
^REP1 Devin Booker was named as Noel's replacement.[18]
^INJ2 Nikola Mirotić was unable to participate due to injury.[19]
^REP2 Trey Lyles was named as Mirotić's replacement.[19]

February 12
9:00 pm ET
Team USA 157, Team World 154
Scoring by half: 88–79, 69–75
Pts: Zach LaVine 30
Rebs: LaVine, Towns 7
Asts: D'Angelo Russell 7
Pts: Porziņģis, Mudiay 30
Rebs: Dwight Powell 11
Asts: Emmanuel Mudiay 10
Air Canada Centre, Toronto, Ontario
Attendance: 18,298
Referees:
  • #72 J. T. Orr
  • #52 Scott Twardoski
  • #46 Ben Taylor

Team USA won 157–154 in the highest scoring game in Rising Stars Challenge history.[20] Zach LaVine was named MVP, leading all of the USA team with 30 points while also recording 7 rebounds and 4 assists. Jordan Clarkson, D'Angelo Russell, and Devin Booker all scored over 20 points, with Russell also recording 7 assists. Kristaps Porziņģis and Emmanuel Mudiay led the way for Team World with 30 points each, with Andrew Wiggins also scoring 29 points.

Skills Challenge

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Contestants[21][22]
Pos. Player Team Height Weight
G Patrick BeverleyINJ Houston Rockets 6–1 185
G Jordan Clarkson Los Angeles Lakers 6–5 194
G C. J. McCollum Portland Trail Blazers 6–4 200
G Isaiah Thomas Boston Celtics 5–9 185
G Emmanuel MudiayREP Denver Nuggets 6–5 200
C/F DeMarcus Cousins Sacramento Kings 6–11 270
F/C Anthony Davis New Orleans Pelicans 6–10 253
F Draymond Green Golden State Warriors 6–7 230
C Karl-Anthony Towns Minnesota Timberwolves 7–0 244

^INJ Patrick Beverley was unable to participate due to an ankle injury.[23]
^REP Emmanuel Mudiay was selected to replace Beverley.[23]

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                 
C. J. McCollum (Portland) O
Jordan Clarkson (L.A. Lakers) X
C. J. McCollum (Portland) X
Isaiah Thomas (Boston) O
Isaiah Thomas (Boston) O
Emmanuel Mudiay (Denver) X
Isaiah Thomas (Boston) X
Karl-Anthony Towns (Minnesota) O
Draymond Green (Golden State) X
Karl-Anthony Towns (Minnesota) O
Karl-Anthony Towns (Minnesota) O
DeMarcus Cousins (Sacramento) X
DeMarcus Cousins (Sacramento) O
Anthony Davis (New Orleans) X

Three-Point Contest

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Teammates Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson of the Golden State Warriors, known as the Splash Brothers, were the favorites to win the contest. The betting site, Bovada, listed the defending-champion Curry as the favorite to win with 10–11 odds, while Thompson was second at 9–2.[24] Contestant Devin Booker would be the youngest participant to ever compete in the Three-Point contest at 19 years old. Chris Bosh was announced as a first-time participant for the event, but he would be replaced by C. J. McCollum due to an injury before the event.

Contestants[25][26]
Pos. Player Team Height Weight First round Final round
G Klay Thompson Golden State Warriors 6–7 215 22 27
G Stephen Curry Golden State Warriors 6–3 190 21 23
G Devin Booker Phoenix Suns 6–6 206 20 (12) 16
G J. J. Redick Los Angeles Clippers 6–4 190 20 (9)
G James Harden Houston Rockets 6–5 220 20 (8)
G Kyle Lowry Toronto Raptors 6–0 205 15
G C. J. McCollumREP Portland Trail Blazers 6–4 200 14
G/F Khris Middleton Milwaukee Bucks 6–8 234 13
F/C Chris BoshINJ Miami Heat 6–11 235

^INJ Chris Bosh was unable to participate due to a calf injury.[27]
^REP C. J. McCollum was selected as Bosh's replacement.[27]

(#) – Indicates score from 30-second tiebreaker

Slam Dunk Contest

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Zach LaVine became the first back-to-back Slam Dunk Contest winner since Nate Robinson, edging out Aaron Gordon with four consecutive perfect scores in the final round.

Contestants[28][29]
Pos. Player Team Height Weight First round Final round[lower-alpha 1]
G Zach LaVine Minnesota Timberwolves 6–5 189 99 (50+49) 200 (50+50+50+50)
F Aaron Gordon Orlando Magic 6–9 220 94 (45+49) 197 (50+50+50+47)
C Andre Drummond Detroit Pistons 6–11 279 75 (36+39)
G Will Barton Denver Nuggets 6–6 175 74 (44+30)
  1. Includes two tiebreakers

References

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External links