Greenwich Time (Sunday)

LeBron picks a powerhouse for NBA All-Star Game

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CLEVELAND — Stephen Curry couldn’t do it. Giannis Antetokoun­mpo has failed at it twice. Now Kevin Durant gets his second shot.

None have been able to draft a team to beat one picked by LeBron James in the NBA All-Star Game. He is 4-0 in the format and might have assembled his most stacked team yet for the game Sunday night in his home state.

Curry, Antetokoun­mpo and Nikola Jokic will start along with James, putting four former NBA MVPs in one starting unit. DeMar DeRozan, who might be having his finest season yet in his first year in Chicago, rounds out the starting five.

It’s hard to compete with that, but that doesn’t mean it can’t be done.

“Well, we’re all All-Stars here,” Team Durant’s Draymond Green said. “So I think we stack up just fine and I don’t know, we’ll see how it goes, but I think we’ll be just fine.”

The NBA did away with the traditiona­l East vs. West format after the 2017 AllStar Game, when the West’s 192-182 victory was so devoid of effort that the players and league realized something had to be done to raise the stakes. So the leading vote-getter in each conference becomes the captain to choose his side and the teams play to win money for charity.

Team LeBron beat Team Stephen in 2018 and scored victories over Team Giannis in 2019 and 2020. Last year’s victory in Atlanta was over Team Durant, the same matchup as this season.

James also drafted Luka Doncic and Chris Paul. Miami and Team Durant coach Erik Spoelstra hoped he would be able to coach James and Jimmy Butler, his former and current Heat stars. Instead, he’ll be going against both.

“So we’re going to throw the kitchen sink at them,” Spoelstra quipped. “Boxand-1, triangle-and-2, fullcourt press and some things that I probably can’t even think of right now.”

Durant is still out with sprained knee ligament, replaced in his starting lineup by Boston’s Jayson Tatum. NBA scoring leader Joel Embiid, Atlanta’s Trae Young and first-time AllStars Ja Morant of Memphis and Andrew Wiggins of Golden State are the other starters.

James will be making his 18th consecutiv­e All-Star Game start, extending his own record. He said he tries not to overdo it with how much and how hard he plays in the exhibition, but also wants to give fans a good show.

“I’ve been a part of quite a few of these games, so definitely want to be smart about my minutes and things that I play,” James said. “It’s the only time and only game throughout the season where I’m OK talking about my minutes.”

Some other things to know about Sunday’s AllStar Game:

INJURIES

Green joins former Golden State teammate Durant on the sideline because of his back injury. James Harden is out for Team LeBron because of a hamstring injury, while Utah’s Donovan Mitchell missed practice Saturday because of an illness not related to COVID-19.

Chris Paul isn’t sure if he can go for Team LeBron, with his right hand wrapped in a cast after he was hurt Wednesday in Phoenix’s victory over Houston.

“I’m going to see, even if it’s just to get out there and maybe throw a couple assists,” said Paul, the AllStar Game’s career leader in that category. “As long as I pass it to somebody, somebody will make it.”

CELEBRATIN­G 75

The NBA will honor members of its 75th anniversar­y team during a halftime ceremony. The league celebrated its 50th anniversar­y team when Cleveland last hosted the game in 1997.

GIANNIS THE GREAT

Antetokoun­mpo has blown past Durant and James as the All-Star Game’s leader in scoring average. He is at 28.8 points per game in his five appearance­s after scoring 35 points on 16-for-16 shooting while winning MVP honors in 2021.

 ?? Jason Miller / Getty Images ?? Khris Middleton, left, and Jayson Tatum, of Team Durant, talk during the NBA All-Star practice on Saturday.
Jason Miller / Getty Images Khris Middleton, left, and Jayson Tatum, of Team Durant, talk during the NBA All-Star practice on Saturday.

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