Daily Press (Sunday)

Many players don’t want all-star vote, so format needs to change

- By Tim Reynolds Associated Press

Once again, LeBron James and Giannis Antetokoun­mpo are All-Star captains.

Once again, the fans — mostly, anyway — got who they wanted as the game’s starters.

And once again, too many NBA players made a mockery of their vote to decide which colleagues should start the league’s showcase exhibition.

It’s time for the NBA to take the vote away from the players. It’s clear too many don’t want the job.

While fan voting pretty much set the tone for who will start Feb. 16 in Chicago, an AP analysis of the numbers shows that 380 players took part in the voting. The players, like the media and fans, voted for three frontcourt players and two guards apiece from the Eastern and Western Conference­s.

A look inside those numbers reveals a growing concern.

Antetokoun­mpo — the league’s reigning MVP — got the most player votes with 258. That means 67.9% of players who voted thought he was worthy of an All-Star start. More importantl­y, that means 32.1% of players who voted thought he should either come off the bench or not be an All-Star at all.

James didn’t appear on 38.2% of the player ballots. If there’s one thing that can be agreed upon, it’s Antetokoun­mpo and James have been among the three best forwards in their conference­s this season.

Sounds reasonable, but apparently it’s not obvious to their peers.

James and Antetokoun­mpo were the only two starters who got more than 50% of the vote from their player peers. Put another way: 52% of players didn’t think Anthony Davis should be a starter, 56% didn’t vote for Luka Doncic, 59% didn’t vote for Kawhi Leonard, 62% didn’t vote for James Harden, 67% didn’t vote for Joel Embiid, 70% didn’t vote for Kemba Walker, 72% didn’t vote for Pascal Siakam and a whopping 83% of players didn’t vote for Trae

Young.

If there can be two days of outrage and counting over Derek Jeter getting 99.7% of the vote from the Baseball Writers Associatio­n of America for inclusion into the Hall of Fame — missing a unanimous selection by one measly vote — then there should be some outrage for this.

The NBA’s All-Star game gets ripped most every year for being a no-defense exhibition. It’s doubtful any of that will change.

But that doesn’t mean NBA players shouldn’t take the vote seriously.

The players made their voice heard in some cases. Fan pick Kyrie Irving wasn’t named a starter; Walker got that nod instead based on player and media voting.

In all, 292 players got at least one vote from their peers. That’s a new record — three more than the ridiculous number set last year.

The system changed four years ago after 768,112 people voted for Zaza Pachulia in 2016 and nearly made him a starter. Pachulia’s “candidacy” was fueled by social-media influencer­s and many votes from the former Soviet republic of Georgia, his homeland.

The NBA was right to act then and change the rules, going to a formula where starters get picked in a system where fans make up 50% of the vote, media 25% and players the other 25%.

Change the rules again.

 ?? ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT/GETTY ?? Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo got the most player votes, but 32.1% of players didn’t think he should be an All-Star starter.
ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT/GETTY Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo got the most player votes, but 32.1% of players didn’t think he should be an All-Star starter.

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