Miami Herald

LeBron, Giannis chosen as captains for NBA All-Star Game

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LeBron James is closing in on Kareem AbdulJabba­r’s NBA career scoring record. And now, he has caught Abdul-Jabbar on another page of the All-Star record book.

James was announced Thursday as an NBA AllStar for the 19th time, the Los Angeles Lakers’ star tying Abdul-Jabbar for the most selections in league history. James — the leading overall vote-getter — will be the captain of one of the teams for the Feb. 19 All-Star Game in Salt Lake City, while Eastern Conference voting leader Giannis Antetokoun­mpo of the Milwaukee Bucks will captain the other side.

This is the sixth year the NBA has used the captain format for the All-Star Game; James has been a captain every time and has never lost, taking a 5-0 record into this year. Antetokoun­mpo is a captain for the third time, after also earning that right in 2019 and 2020.

James and Antetokoun­mpo will pick their teams shortly before the game in Salt Lake City, a new twist and a departure from past years in which the captains picked a week or two in advance of All-Star weekend.

The other eight starters they’ll be choosing from, barring any changes because of injury beforehand, are: Denver’s two-time reigning NBA MVP Nikola Jokic, NBA scoring leader

Luka Doncic of Dallas, Golden State’s Stephen Curry, Boston’s Jayson Tatum, Brooklyn teammates Kevin Durant and

Kyrie Irving, Cleveland’s

Donovan Mitchell and New Orleans’ Zion Williamson.

“I’m definitely blessed and humbled to be a part of this,” Mitchell said during the televised starters’ announceme­nt on TNT. “To be a part of my fourth AllStar and now to be a starter, I couldn’t be happier.”

The big intrigue was the third East frontcourt spot, where Philadelph­ia’s Joel Embiid — No. 2 in the NBA’s scoring race entering Thursday at 33.4 points per game — was the odd man out after Antetokoun­mpo, Durant and Tatum were the top three in the balloting.

Starters — three frontcourt players and two guards from each conference — were selected by a combinatio­n of three different votes: fan balloting counted for 50%, media balloting was worth 25% and voting by the NBA’s players made up the final 25%.

The reserves, which are chosen by votes from the league’s coaches, will be announced Feb. 2. Among the players certain to merit strong considerat­ion: Miami’s Bam Adebayo, Portland’s Damian Lillard, Oklahoma City’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Boston’s Jaylen Brown.

James is 157 points away from Abdul-Jabbar’s career scoring total of 38,387 points.

ETC.

Soccer: The American ●

men’s national team shakeup that began after a public spat erupted between two well-known soccer families accelerate­d when sporting director Earnie Stewart announced he is quitting the U.S. Soccer Federation to join PSV Eindhoven. Men’s general manager Brian McBride

also is resigning, leaving coach Gregg Berhalter in limbo following the expiration of his contract on

Dec. 31.

Golf: Sam Ryder extended

● his lead to three shots in the Farmers Insurance Open in San Diego with a 4-under 68 in challengin­g wind in the second round on Torrey Pines’ South Course while Jon Rahm had an eagle and three straight birdies late in his 5-under 67 on the easier North Course to get under the cut line . ... Patrick Reed fared better than Rory McIlroy after some pre-tournament friction as the Dubai Desert Classic got off to a wet start with only 11 players managing to finish their weather-affected first rounds.

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