The Sun (San Bernardino)

James selects Giannis, Curry for his roster

- By Kyle Goon kgoon@scng.com @kylegoon on Twitter

If there’s one thing LeBron James has proved throughout his career: He knows how to pick teammates.

Aside from how that has played out with his championsh­ip teams in Miami, Cleveland and now Los Angeles, it’s been a theme in the All-Star Game too: Ever since the NBA transition­ed to a playground-style pickyour-own-team format, Team LeBron is 3-0.

While the weekend will be condensed to one day, the game is still on, and James picked his former rival captains as his first teammates: Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­po and Golden State’s Steph Curry. Dallas’ Luka Doncic and Denver’s Nikola Jokic rounded out the Team LeBron starters when James and Brooklyn’s Kevin Durant selected their teams on Thursday night on TNT.

Durant, who is not playing due to injury, selected Brooklyn teammate Kyrie Irving, Philadelph­ia’s Joel Embiid, the Clippers’ Kawhi Leonard, Washington’s Bradley Beal and Boston’s Jayson Tatum.

All-Star events will begin at 2 p.m. PST, including the skills challenge, 3-point contest and dunk contest. The game itself begins at 5 p.m. PST.

James’ starting unit features the only other active players besides himself to win multiple MVPs, Antetokoun­mpo and Curry — both of whom have served as captains in previous AllStar Games that James’ team won. He also picked up two of the best tripledoub­le threats in the league in Jokic and Doncic.

“I try to get the best available,” James said, “who I think will fit my skill set with my first pick.”

James picked after Durant for All-Star reserves. He scooped up Portland’s Damian Lillard, Philadelph­ia’s Ben Simmons, Phoenix’s Chris Paul, Boston’s Jaylen Brown, the Clippers’ Paul George, Indiana’s Domantas Sabonis and Utah’s Rudy Gobert.

Durant picked teammate James Harden first, then selected Phoenix’s Devin Booker, New Orleans’ Zion Williamson, Chicago’s Zach LaVine, New York’s Julius Randle, Orlando’s Nikola Vucevic and Utah’s Donovan Mitchell.

The draft order got to be a sticking point at the bottom, when both Gobert and Mitchell — who play for the NBA’s winningest team — were still on the board. James poked fun at the Jazz’s expense over Charles Barkley’s cries of slander on the broadcast.

“There’s no slander to the Utah Jazz,” James said. “But you guys got to understand, just like in video games growing up, we never played with Utah. As great as Karl Malone and John Stockton was, we would never pick those guys in video games. Never.”

Stockton and Malone, of course, annually battled James’ childhood idol, Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls when he was playing video games growing up.

One of the players James has routinely selected for his teams wasn’t available: Anthony Davis will sit out the game due to injury and was not on the draft board.

NBA responds to officiatin­g calls

The Lakers had more than one bone to pick with the officials after a 123-120 loss to the Kings on Wednesday night, but the one coach Frank Vogel seemed to have the biggest problem with was a shot by Buddy Hield in the second quarter that replays showed he had a foot on the line.

“We told the officials about it. They said they’d turn it into Seacaucus (N.J. at the league offices), and they gave us some excuse that too much time had passed that they can’t reverse it at that point,” Vogel said. “So when you got a one-point game down the stretch, that’s very disappoint­ing that they weren’t able to look at that.”

After follow-up from Southern California News Group, the NBA confirmed the ruling: Hield’s shot was at the 8:37 mark of the second quarter, so by rule, the Lakers would have needed to ask for a review at the next timeout. The Lakers asked for the review at halftime.

The NBA also showed some spotty calls in the last two-minute report, most markedly that the field goal by Harrison Barnes with 30 seconds left — the gamewinnin­g basket — should have been called a travel. The Lakers had an offensive foul that was not called as well against Richaun Holmes, but got the benefit of the doubt on a noncall against Montrezl Harrell on an offensive foul.

Neither the report nor the NBA has yet addressed Harrell’s technical, which Harrell will almost certainly be fined for after calling the technical “soft” and accusing official Jenna Schroeder of being “in her feelings” when she whistled him.

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