Edmonton Journal

James mends fences with Irving during all-star draft

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NEW YORK LeBron James got Kevin Durant and reunited with Kyrie Irving in the NBA’s first all-star draft.

Stephen Curry picked James Harden and Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, the NBA’s top two scorers, and grabbed his other two Golden State teammates in the selections Thursday.

The draft was not televised and neither James nor Curry would reveal who they chose first when they were interviewe­d on TNT when the rosters were unveiled.

James was among those who said fans should have watched the proceeding­s and his decision to draft Irving could have made for a must-see moment. The point guard asked out of Cleveland last summer and the Cavaliers traded him to conference rival Boston.

“Kyrie was available on the draft board, he’s one of the best point guards we have in our league,” James said.

“It was an easy choice for me.” James and Curry will be the captains Feb. 18 in Los Angeles for the first NBA All-Star Game that doesn’t use the Eastern Conference versus Western Conference format.

James had the No. 1 pick as a result of earning the most votes in fan balloting, while Curry had the first pick in the reserve round.

James also took New Orleans’ Anthony Davis and DeMarcus Cousins as starters. His reserves are Cleveland teammate Kevin Love, Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook, Washington guards John Wall and Bradley Beal, LaMarcus Aldridge of San Antonio, Indiana’s Victor Oladipo and Kristaps Porzingis of New York.

After taking starters Joel Embiid of Philadelph­ia and DeMar DeRozan of Toronto, Curry rounded out his roster with Warriors teammates Klay Thompson and Draymond Green, Minnesota’s Jimmy Butler and Karl-Anthony Towns, Toronto’s Kyle Lowry, Portland’s Damian Lillard and Boston’s Al Horford.

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