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The NBA announced the 2019 All-Star Game starters on Thursday night, with LeBron James, Stephen Curry, James Harden, Kevin Durant and Giannis Antetokounmpo headlining the group.
James and Antetokounmpo will serve as the All-Star captains. The full voting results are available on the NBA’s official site.
Bleacher Report @BleacherReport
The Western Conference All-Star starters have been announced
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Here are the five starters from the Eastern and Western Conferences:
Eastern Conference
- Backcourt: Kyrie Irving, G, Boston Celtics
- Backcourt: Kemba Walker, G, Charlotte Hornets
- Frontcourt: Giannis Antetokounmpo, F, Milwaukee Bucks
- Frontcourt: Kawhi Leonard, F, Toronto Raptors
- Frontcourt: Joel Embiid, C, Philadelphia 76ers
Western Conference
- Backcourt: Stephen Curry, G, Golden State Warriors
- Backcourt: James Harden, G, Houston Rockets
- Frontcourt: LeBron James, F, Los Angeles Lakers
- Frontcourt: Kevin Durant, F, Golden State Warriors
- Frontcourt: Paul George, F, Oklahoma City Thunder
James is headed to the All-Star Game for the 15th time, which ties him with Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett and Shaquille O’Neal for the third-most in NBA history. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar owns the record with 19 All-Star appearances. Assuming he stays healthy, James has a good chance of at least tying Abdul-Jabbar’s all-time mark.
Although LeBron was all but assured of a starting nod, the same couldn’t be said of his fellow West frontcourt players in what was a tight All-Star race. Kevin Durant, Anthony Davis, Nikola Jokic and Paul George were all fighting for what were essentially two spots. One could throw Rudy Gobert in that group as well since he sits ninth in ESPN.com’s real plus-minus.
Durant and George ultimately got the nod.
The margin between George and Davis was razor-thin, with the fan vote serving as the tiebreaker between the two. George received 3,122,346 votes from the fans, far surpassing Davis’ total of 2,520,728 votes.
Jim McCormick of ESPN noted how the Oklahoma City Thunder star has experienced quite an All-Star turnaround in one year:
Jimmy @_JimmyMcCormick
Paul George went from replacement All-Star selection last year to starter in likely the deepest conference we’ve ever seen
For the most part, Thursday’s reveal played out as expected.
Kemba Walker was the exception, though he was a deserving candidate to win a tight backcourt battle in the East. The Charlotte Hornets point guard is enjoying a career year, averaging 25.0 points and 5.7 assists while shooting 43.6 percent from the field.
The Hornets shared a video of Walker learning of his honor along with everybody else:
Charlotte Hornets @hornets
*CHILLS* Kemba Walker finds out he’s a #NBAAllStar starter in Charlotte! https://t.co/fPWKemjzRh
When the NBA released the first 2019 All-Star voting returns, fans couldn’t help but notice Luka Doncic and Derrick Rose sitting second among frontcourt and backcourt players, respectively, in the West. They maintained their spots in the final voting returns, and Doncic’s 4,242,980 votes were third-highest of any player.
Under the old format, the pair would be headed to the All-Star Game. However, the NBA tweaked the voting format in December 2016 to include NBA players and media members. The fan vote only counted for 50 percent, while players and writers received 25 percent apiece.
Because of that change, neither Doncic nor Rose had much of a chance to be an All-Star starter. That didn’t stop the Timberwolves from showing their disappointing with the final results:
Like last year, the NBA will hold an All-Star draft to fill out the respective teams. This time around, though, the league will broadcast the draft after holding the event behind closed doors in 2018. TNT will carry the All-Star draft on Feb. 7 at 7 p.m. ET.
Before that happens, the NBA will announce the All-Star reserves on Jan. 31.
from Top Viral News Blog http://bit.ly/2HxtIvd
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