Miami Herald

Bam enjoys All-Star Game, jokes about his three points

- BY ANTHONY CHIANG achiang@miamiheral­d.com

INDIANAPOL­IS

Heat center Bam Adebayo looked out of place at times in an NBA AllStar Game that included very little defense. But that is what makes him an All-Star.

Adebayo’s game is built around all-word defense, hard screens, mid-range jumpers, rolls to the basket and a lot of dribble handoffs. That’s not the best fit for a game with almost 400 points.

While the Eastern Conference defeated the Western Conference 211-186 on Sunday night to cap off All-Star Weekend, in Indianapol­is, Adebayo scored just three of his team’s points.

“Man, I got to get teammates that pass the ball, man,” Adebayo said with a half smile prior to leaving Indianapol­is to continue a break that ends when the Heat resumes practice Thursday. “It’s rough out there.”

As the East set an All-Star Game record for points, threes made (42) and three-point attempts (97) by a single team, Adebayo closed his third All-Star appearance with a game-low point total and just two shot attempts in 17 minutes. He also had two rebounds and two assists.

For perspectiv­e, Milwaukee guard Damian Lillard totaled 39 points on 23 three-point attempts to earn the AllStar Game MVP.

“Man, listen. It ain’t that easy,” Adebayo said when asked if he tried to get teammates to pass him the ball. “As much as I would love to be MVP, sometimes it’s another guy’s turn.”

This continued an All-Star Game trend for Adebayo. He has yet to score double-digit points in an All-Star Game, totaling just 15 points on nine shot attempts in three appearance­s.

Adebayo has learned to appreciate the All-Star experience neverthele­ss.

“A fun opportunit­y,” Adebayo said minutes after walking off the court. “Always blessed to come back. Always blessed to try to make this a routine and being able to be in my third, seeing the guys that I’ve come into the league with. We keep seeing each other at this thing.”

Adebayo, who is in his seventh NBA season, was the Heat’s lone representa­tive in the game Sunday. He is one of only six players in franchise history voted into the All-Star Game three or more times as members of the Heat. The others are Alonzo Mourning, Shaquille O’Neal, Dwyane Wade, LeBron James and Chris Bosh.

Adebayo, initially selected by the head coaches as a reserve, started Sunday as a replacemen­t for injured Philadelph­ia center Joel Embiid. Adebayo became one of only seven Heat players to start an All-Star Game, joining Wade, James, Bosh, O’Neal, Mourning and Anthony Mason.

“Respect, at the end of the day,” Adebayo, 26, said of what that all represents. “Being able to, obviously, get to this thing three times, you want it to become a routine. You want it to be an every year thing. For me, it’s just respect from all the coaches who voted me in and respect for who I am and what I do.”

Despite the underwhelm­ing numbers, Adebayo had one memorable moment Sunday.

His three points came on a pull-up three less than five minutes into the game after inbounding the ball off of Denver center Nikola Jokic’s back and then dribbling into the shot. It was a rare three-point make for Adebayo, who is 1 of 11 on threes this season and 2 of 29 on threes in the last three regular seasons.

“Tell Spo [Heat coach Erik Spoelstra],” Adebayo joked to reporters when Sunday’s threepoint make was brought up. “Pull the clip up, show Spo.”

The fact is that threepoint­ers aren’t a part of Adebayo’s role right now, and that’s one of the reasons he has struggled to generate offense for himself in All-Star Games. But he has learned through his three All-Star opportunit­ies that he belongs in the showcase event.

“It’s a steppingst­one to what you want at the end of your career,” Adebayo said. ”When you look back at it and be like, ‘I gave basketball everything.’ But for the end of the year, you want to go from All-Star to All-NBA, championsh­ips, DPOY [Defensive Player of the Year], whatever the case may be. Because you feel like you’ve done one thing, why not try to do something else?”

Adebayo, who is one of only five NBA players averaging at least 20 points, 10 rebounds and four assists this season, will continue the pursuit of something else when the Heat resumes its schedule Friday against the Pelicans in New Orleans.

As Heat rookie Jaime Jaquez Jr. said after being eliminated in the first round of Saturday’s NBA Slam Dunk Contest, it’s the final 27 regular-season games after the break that matter most to Miami, and not what happens during All-Star Weekend. The Heat is in seventh place in the East at 30-25.

“It’s about the real games that matter,” Jaquez said. “So we’re going to get back to work.”

Anthony Chiang: 305-376-4991, @Anthony_Chiang

 ?? KYLE TERADA USA TODAY Sports ?? In an All-Star Game mostly free of defense, Heat center Bam Adebayo, right, gently checks Luka Doncic of Dallas. Adebayo kidded that no one would pass him the ball.
KYLE TERADA USA TODAY Sports In an All-Star Game mostly free of defense, Heat center Bam Adebayo, right, gently checks Luka Doncic of Dallas. Adebayo kidded that no one would pass him the ball.

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