Rome News-Tribune

Young phenoms set for Rising Stars

- By Brian Mahoney AP Basketball Writer

Ben Simmons thought he should be an All-Star by now.

Yet each time Commission­er Adam Silver needed to tab an injury replacemen­t from the Eastern Conference, he looked in another direction, to Simmons’ disappoint­ment.

Simmons expressed disappoint­ment he didn’t get the call.

Be patient, rookie. Simmons will likely get his chance someday. Maybe a bunch of them.

“He’s a young player that has a bright future that is going to have a long and steady All-Star career,” Hall of Famer and TNT analyst Reggie Miller said.

Same with Donovan Mitchell and a few other first-year phenoms.

Those two guards head up a deep rookie class and might be neck-and-neck in this year’s NBA rookie of the year race in which both are worthy of winning.

“I’m going to throw it out there, I like the whole Grant Hill and Jason Kidd co-rookie of the years,” Miller said. “I’ll throw that out there now because I think both are well-deserving of it.”

Hill and Kidd shared the award in 1995 and might enter the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame together this summer. Perhaps Simmons and Mitchell will be similarly linked years from now.

They will be together tonight when the NBA’s best first- and secondyear players compete in the Rising Stars in Los Angeles to kick off AllStar weekend.

Simmons, the versatile 6-foot-10 point guard from the Philadelph­ia 76ers with six triple-doubles and size and statistics that call to mind a young Magic Johnson, and the high-flying Mitchell from the surging Utah Jazz will garner much of the attention. But the rosters for the game, which pits a U.S. team against the World, show just how deep the league is with young talent. There’s Simmons’ teammate Joel Embiid, who joins him on the World squad, while the U.S. has Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, who helped Boston lead the East most of the season.

from B1

Brandon Ingram and Kyle Kuzma will play for the U.S., though the hometown Lakers lost out on a third player when Lonzo Ball had to pull out because of injury. Dennis Smith Jr. of Dallas, who like Mitchell will compete in the Slam Dunk contest, also will suit up for the Americans. The rest of the rosters: U.S.: Kris Dunn (Chicago), John Collins and Taurean Prince (Atlanta) and De’Aaron Fox (Sacramento). Rookie of the Year Malcolm Brogdon of Milwaukee was picked for the game but is injured.

World: Lauri Markkanen (Chicago), Dario Saric (Philadelph­ia), Buddy Hield and Bogdan Bogdanovic (Sacramento), Jamal Murray (Denver), Domantas Sabonis (Indiana), Frank Ntilikina (New York) and Dillon Brooks (Memphis).

The youngsters are winning games and admirers with skills well beyond their years. Clippers coach Doc Rivers raved about Simmons and Embiid — and said not to forget the second-year Saric — after his team was beaten in Philadelph­ia last week.

“I’m still very impressed sometimes,” he said. “I’ve still (had) great first impression­s.”

The only guys who don’t seem impressed are the players themselves. Not Simmons, the No. 1 pick of the 2016 draft from LSU who had to sit out a year with a foot injury but expected to hit the ground running once he could play.

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