The Star (Jamaica)

Clippers, Timberwolv­es, Knicks have two players in All-Star reserves

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Kawhi Leonard and Paul George of the Los Angeles Clippers were chosen as AllStar reserves Thursday, while the Minnesota Timberwolv­es and New York Knicks also have two players selected.

Anthony Edwards and KarlAnthon­y Towns of the Western Conference-leading Timberwolv­es will attend the February 18 game in Indianapol­is. Stephen Curry is an All-Star for the 10th time, while the Lakers’ Anthony Davis and Devin Booker of Phoenix rounded out the West reserves.

Jalen Brunson was selected for the first time and was joined by teammate Julius Randle from the Knicks, who went 14-2 in January. The East had two other firsttime selections in Philadelph­ia’s Tyrese Maxey and Orlando’s Paolo Banchero, with Cleveland’s Donovan Mitchell and Boston’s Jaylen Brown joining them.

The West is the far more experience­d squad. Curry tied Hall of Famer Paul Arizin’s Warriors franchise record for most selections, while Davis and George – returning to his original NBA home in Indiana – are All-Stars for the ninth time. Leonard is a six-time selection.

The starters were announced last week. Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo and Damian Lillard will be joined in the East by Philadelph­ia’s Joel Embiid, Boston’s Jayson Tatum and Indiana guard Tyrese Haliburton.

The West starters are the Lakers’ LeBron James, Denver’s Nikola Jokic and Kevin Durant of Phoenix in the frontcourt, with guards Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of Oklahoma City and Luka Doncic of Dallas.

The reserves were selected through voting by head coaches in each conference. They had to choose three frontcourt players, two guards and two other players – regardless of position.

That’s not enough to bring several worthy players putting up big numbers in an era where teams are piling them up nightly. Among those not selected for the game were Atlanta’s Trae Young, averaging 27 points and 10.9 assists, or the Sacramento duo of Domantas Sabonis, the NBA’s leading rebounder, or De’Aaron Fox.

The NBA-leading Celtics and Timberwolv­es hoped to have three All-Stars, but neither Boston’s Derrick White nor Minnesota centre Rudy Gobert was chosen.

The Wolves had to settle for having two All-Stars for the fifth time in franchise history, the first since Towns and Jimmy Butler in 2018.

If any players are injured and can’t play, their replacemen­t is chosen by Commission­er Adam Silver. Randle is likely out because of a dislocated right shoulder that is expected to sideline him through the All-Star break.

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