A guide to pro basketball's most entertaining weekend
The National Basketball Association's All-Star Weekend is a gathering of the league's most able athletes, who ignore team ties to entertain basketball's enthusiastic fans. This year the events take place in New Orleans, a rebuilding city finding solace supporting the city's many successful sports teams. Here's our guide on what to expect in the many competitions in store for this weekend.
T-Mobile Rookie Challenge
Friday, Feb. 16, 2008
NBA tradition pits some of this year's best rookies against gifted sophomores who have one year of experience under their belts. Portland guard Brandon Roy, the reigning T-Mobile Rookie of the Year, will lead rising talent such as Boston guard Rajon Rondo, Memphis forward Rudy Gay and Cleveland guard Daniel Gibson for the sophomore team. The sophomores have a five-game win streak in this event, but they face a tough rookie team this year. The team consists of, among others, Seattle forwards Kevin Durant and Jeff Green, Milwaukee forward Yi Jianlian, Toronto forward Jamario Moon and Atlanta center Al Horford. Full rosters can be found here. Expect a high-offense, low-defense game as some of the league's youngest stars square off.
Playstation Skills Challenge
Saturday, Feb. 16, 2008
The Playstation Skills Challenge is a test of pure skills and agility. Four of the league's top ball handlers take their game to this full court obstacle course to show why they run offenses. Contestants are timed as they go through the following stations:1. Lay-up/dunk
2. Dribbling cones
3. Chest pass
4. Bounce pass
5. Top-of-the-key jumper
6. Long chest pass
7. Dribbling cones
8. Lay-up/dunk
Obeying regular NBA rules, competitors must navigate the course in the above order to qualify for advancement. The two players with the best times get through to the final round.
2008 Contestants
Dwyane Wade, G, Miami Heat; two-time defending champion.
Jason Kidd, G, New Jersey Nets
Chris Paul, G, New Orleans Hornets
Deron Williams, G, Utah Jazz
Haier Shooting Stars
Saturday, Feb. 16, 2008
Pro basketball cities send a NBA, WNBA, and retired NBA player to the Haier Shooting Stars Competition to bring glory back home in another offense-oriented show. Each of the four teams is timed as they shoot from six spots around the court:
1. Low-post
2. High-post
3. Center three-pointer
4. Baseline
5. Off center three-pointer
6. Half-court
Teams are required to designate a rotation for the first five shots so each player shoots from either one or two spots. The half-court shot can be taken by each player until made. The two teams with the fastest times advance to the final round to go head-to-head.
2008 Contestants
Team Detroit; Chauncy Billups (G, Detroit Pistons), Swin Cash (F, Detroit Shock), Bill Laimbeer (retired C, Detroit Pistons); defending champions.
Other teams to be determined.
Foot Locker Three-point Shootout
Saturday, Feb. 16, 2008
The NBA's top snipers gather to shoot the lights out from beyond the arc at the Foot Locker Three-point Shootout. Without any defense, any of the contenders can knock down the open three, but the spotlight of this contest turns up the pressure. Contestants take part in a two-round competition, shooting from five racks at different spots around the three-point line in a one minute timeframe. Each rack has four orange balls worth one point per made shot as well as a multi-colored "money" ball that goes for two points. The players with the top three scores after the first round will advance to the final round, where the rules are the same. The nerves are kicked up for the advancing competitor with the lowest score – he sets the bar by starting the final round.
2008 Contestants
Jason Kapono, F, Toronto Raptors; defending champion.
Kobe Bryant, G, Los Angeles Lakers
Daniel Gibson, G, Cleveland Cavaliers
Richard Hamilton, G, Detroit Pistons
Steve Nash, G, Phoenix Suns
Peja Stojakovic, F, New Orleans Hornets
Sprite Slam Dunk Contest
Saturday, Feb. 16, 2008
Sprite's Slam Dunk Contest is perennially the most watched event at All-Star Weekend, as four of the NBA's most gifted athletes put on a show of dazzling dunks. The competition features two rounds, each in which participants have the opportunity to try two different dunks for different scores. Each competitor is given two minutes to complete a dunk, after which two final attempts may be made before a low score is dished out. This year, fans are given the majority of control in picking which two contestants will advance from the first round. A panel of judges, typically consisting of slam-greats, also helps decide who moves on.The competition this year has been spiced up by internet previews available on YouTube showcasing the creativity of some competitors. Jamario Moon appears ready to leap from past the free-throw line, while the NBA denied Dwight Howard's request to have the contest rim raised to 12 feet for his dunks. Everyone is ready to defy gravity this weekend.
2008 Contestants
Gerald Green, F, Minnesota Timberwolves; defending champion.
Rudy Gay, F, Memphis Grizzlies
Dwight Howard, C, Orlando Magic
Jamario Moon, F, Toronto Raptors
NBA All-Star Game
Sunday, Feb. 17, 2008
Unlike the NFL's Pro Bowl, the NBA All-Star Game attracts a large audience that can appreciate the both the individual talents and team efforts in professional basketball. The NBA's best gather on the same court in a show never falling short of enough alley-oops, wild shots and no-look passes. Fans vote for the five starters for each conference, while the NBA's 30 coaches decide the reserves and commissioner David Stern replaces injured players with his own picks. The head coaches on the teams with the best records in each conference are selected to lead the two teams.
Guards Kobe Bryant and Allen Iverson will lead the back court for the Western Conference, while Iverson's Denver teammate Carmelo Anthony, San Antonio's Tim Duncan and Houston's Yao Ming form a formidable front court. Meanwhile, Miami's Dwayne Wade and New Jersey's Jason Kidd will run the East's offense as starters. The East's starting big men include center Dwight Howard and forwards LeBron James and Rasheed Wallace, who is replacing the injured Kevin Garnett. This year also features three first-time All-Stars in New Orleans' very own David West and Chris Paul as well as Brandon Roy of Portland. The full rosters can be found here.
Players rarely play defense until the fourth quarter, when each side plays as though a playoff seed is on the line. As a result, the All-Star Game generally ends with a huge amount of points scored; the last time a team scored fewer than 100 points was in 1973.
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