Toronto Star

All-star voting by players was flawed, again

- TIM REYNOLDS

It has become an annual joke, one that NBA players keep repeating.

For the sixth consecutiv­e year, players had the right to have a significan­t say in the process of deciding who will start the All-Star Game. The NBA uses a formula to do that now, with fan voting counting for 50 per cent of the total, a media panel counting for 25 per cent and the players themselves getting 25 per cent.

And, also for the sixth consecutiv­e year, most players didn’t take the process seriously.

There’s no other way to explain how 297 players had at least one of their peers — or themselves — saying they should start next month’s game in Cleveland. Ben Simmons got two votes; he has not played this season because he doesn’t want to play for Philadelph­ia. Kawhi Leonard got two votes; he has not played this season because of injury. John Wall, T.J. Warren, Luka Samanic and Michael Carter-Williams all got votes; they, too, have not played this season.

The NBA got votes back from 323 players in this year’s voting. Only four players appeared on more than half of those ballots. Kevin Durant was on 64.1 per cent of them, Giannis Antetokoun­mpo on 56.7 per cent, LeBron James on 52.9 and Nikola Jokic on 51.7.

Imagine this: More than half of the players in the NBA didn’t think that Joel Embiid, who likely would win the MVP award going away if the vote was held today, shouldn’t be an all-star starter.

The NBA changed the rules six years ago for 768,112 reasons. That was the number of fan votes that Zaza Pachulia received in 2016, nearly enough to make him an AllStar starter that season. His candidacy was fuelled by social-media influencer­s and many votes from the former Soviet republic of Georgia.

Hence, the league went to the weighted formula. And players have turned it into a mockery.

In 2017, there were 283 players who got at least one starters vote from a peer or themselves. In 2018, the number was 249. In 2019, it was 289. In 2020, it went up to 292. In 2021, up again to 310.

At least this season the number went down, albeit slightly.

But it would be great to hear the arguments from players about why Kyrie Irving, who has played in seven games this season because of his vaccinatio­n status, got more votes from players (25) than someone like Miami’s Jimmy Butler (23), who has helped the Heat move into first place in the Eastern Conference.

Or why someone thought Zylan Cheatham and Jay Huff should start. By all accounts, they are excellent teammates. But they have combined for five NBA appearance­s and zero NBA points this season. Each got one vote anyway.

Moses Wright played in one game, logging 88 scoreless seconds, for the Clippers. He got two starter votes. So did McKinley Wright IV, who has five points in three games for Minnesota. Joel Ayayi scored two points in seven games with Washington; he got a vote. George King got a vote, which is one vote for every point he has scored for Dallas this season.

Many of the players who got one or two votes were hardship signings who, quite frankly, deserve enormous credit for keeping the league afloat this season when rosters were getting decimated by positive COVID-19 tests. But most of the player votes didn’t seem to be sentimenta­l or look like praise for those who were brought in on those 10day deals. They apparently were either meant to be funny, or to make fun of the process, or both.

Luckily, fans are pretty much getting what they wanted, which should be all that matters since the game is about them. The nine players who got the most fan votes were all picked as starters — James, Stephen Curry, Durant, Antetokoun­mpo, Jokic, DeMar DeRozan, Embiid, Ja Morant and Andrew Wiggins. The only starter who wasn’t in the top10 of fan voting was Trae Young; he was 11th in the fan vote, one spot behind Paul George.

And, once again, the player voting silliness doesn’t appear to have cost anyone a well-deserved starting nod.

But there will be a day when that happens, and that’ll be an embarrassi­ng day for the NBA.

 ?? TIM NWACHUKWU GETTY IMAGES ?? Despite not playing a single game this season, Ben Simmons still got two votes from players who thought he should be an all-star.
TIM NWACHUKWU GETTY IMAGES Despite not playing a single game this season, Ben Simmons still got two votes from players who thought he should be an all-star.

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