Las Vegas Review-Journal

Get prepared for plenty of snubs

There’s too many deserving players, but not enough spots on All-star rosters

- By Tim Reynolds

Brace yourself. There’s going to be some angry people in the NBA on Thursday night.

With good reason.

The votes from the coaches are now in, and on Thursday, the NBA will reveal the 14 players — seven from the Eastern Conference, seven more from the Western Conference — who got picked to be reserves for the All-star Game.

They’ll join the pool of 10 starters: the Los Angeles Lakers’ Lebron James, Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, Dallas’ Luka Doncic, Boston’s Jayson Tatum, Brooklyn teammates Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving, Golden State’s Stephen Curry, Cleveland’s Donovan Mitchell, Denver’s Nikola Jokic and New Orleans’ Zion Williamson.

And then the cries of snubbing will begin.

Let’s start dissecting this mess with the East. Philadelph­ia’s Joel Embiid is going to be an All-star reserve, based on both common sense and the fact that NBA coaches wouldn’t dare anger one of the league’s most hard-toguard players by not voting for him. Boston’s Jaylen Brown, New York’s Julius Randle and Miami’s Bam Adebayo all should be Allstars.

That’s nine from the East. That leaves no more than three slots left for this group — Atlanta’s Trae Young, Chicago’s Demar Derozan and Zach Lavine, New York’s Jalen Brunson, Miami’s Jimmy Butler, Orlando’s Paolo Banchero, Indiana’s Tyrese Haliburton and Cleveland’s Darius Garland. And all eight of those guys, plus some others, are all worthy candidates.

“Tyrese Haliburton is an artist,” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said earlier this season. “And you know, some people that have unconventi­onal ways to be successful in this game, you have to just leave them alone and allow them to do what they do. His artistry is the way he gets the ball in the basket, the way he sees the game, the way he connects teammates and the special person that he is.”

Sounds like an All-star. A lot of coaches can make similar arguments for their guys, and not be lying when they make them.

You can see how messy this is going to get.

It might be even worse out West. Sacramento’s Domantas Sabonis, Oklahoma City’s Shai Gilgeous-alexander, Utah’s Lauri Markkanen, Memphis’ Ja Morant and Portland’s Damian Lillard should be locks for reserve nods. The only question on the Lakers’ Anthony Davis is if missing a bunch of games with injury will weigh on the minds of coaches; his numbers are more than good enough, except for that pesky “games played” column.

If Davis and those five other players make it, that leaves one spot on the West roster. ONE.

Phoenix’s Devin Booker is averaging about 27 points a game. Minnesota’s Anthony Edwards is averaging about 25 points a game. Sacramento’s De’aaron Fox is averaging about 24. Odds are, at least one of those guys will miss out on being picked Thursday night.

Maybe two. Maybe even all three.

Denver leads the Western Conference and should have more than one All-star, so that suggests Aaron Gordon — who has been fantastic this season — will get a long look. An All-star Game without Los Angeles Clippers teammates Paul George and Kawhi Leonard would make no sense, given how they’re playing this season. But that could happen. New Orleans’ CJ Mccollum has averaged nearly 20 points per game in his career, is averaging a tick above that this season, and still hasn’t been an All-star. Coaches had to have considered Phoenix’s Chris Paul for their ballots as well.

All we know for certain is there will be some very good players who didn’t make the cut.

It’ll be an interestin­g ballot reveal, for certain.

 ?? Nate Billings The Associated Press ?? Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-alexander, averaging 30.9 points per game, seems to be a lock for one of the reserve spots in the West.
Nate Billings The Associated Press Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-alexander, averaging 30.9 points per game, seems to be a lock for one of the reserve spots in the West.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States