NBA All Star Game 2000
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 Thursday, February 17
Viewer's Guide: What to watch, when, why...
 
By Eric Karabell
ESPN.com

 
Vince Carter
Wanna know what to watch? Start with Vince Carter and keep going...
It's All-Star weekend, ba-by! OK, that's enough of our Dick Vitale impression. Anyway, we have a lot to discuss in the NBA All-Star 2000 Viewer's Guide, because there's a lot going on in Oakland this weekend. All of it will be televised on TNT and NBC and you can listen in on ESPN Radio.

In order of when they happen, there's the:

  • Rookie Challenge
  • 2Ball competition
  • Long distance Shootout
  • Slam Dunk contest
  • All-Star game (6 p.m. ET Sunday)

    Whew. So, to keep with our format of breaking down the games as we do each week in the Association in our Weekly Tip-Off, our Viewer's Guide will break down the events. Enjoy.

    And, as always, click here to register your comments via e-mail.

    OVERALL PLAYERS TO WATCH


    Vince Carter
    Raptors
    There's that dunk contest thing -- maybe you've heard of it?


    Steve Francis
    Rockets
    Will be busy dunking, 2balling and chasing Jason Williams in the rookie game


    Kevin Garnett
    Wolves
    The rising king of the league will infect everyone with that smile


    Gary Payton
    Sonics
    Comin' home to Oakland and he always has something to say


    Allen Iverson
    Sixers
    NBA's leading scorer is always a guy to watch; also in shootout

     

    Rookie Challenge, Saturday, 4 p.m. ET (TNT)
  • Why you should care: Because, frankly, this might be the most exciting event of the weekend. Yeah, we know about the dunk contest, and that 2ball thing is intriguing, but the rookies of last season against the first-year dudes of this season, very interesting. It's always water cooler fodder to ask which rookie class is better, and now we get to see. Sure, Vince Carter won't be there, but Jason Williams vs. Steve Francis? Cool stuff.

  • What to watch for: Well first of all, some of the guys in this game can actually play defense, so don't look for constant running and gunning. Other than the point guards, there will be D. The 1999-2000 rookies can start a lineup of Francis and Andre Miller or Adrian Griffin at guard, Lamar Odom and Elton Brand at forward, and Todd MacCulloch is your center. The other players available are James Posey and Wally Szczerbiak.

    The rookie team of 1998-99 has more depth, and not surprisingly is more developed. Williams and Paul Pierce could be the guards, with Arizona and Vancouver twins Mike Bibby and Michael Dickerson in reserve, while the frontcourt is Dirk Nowitzki, Raef LaFrentz and former top pick Michael Olowokandi. Cuttino Mobley replaces Antawn Jamison.

    For the record, this game will be played in a pair of 15-minute halves. As you can see, these teams don't go 12 deep, and the Grizzlies wouldn't appreciate their starting frontcourt returning home real tired. Each team may call one full timeout per half and one of the 20-second variety. Fouls will be charged, but nobody can foul out. (That's good for Olowokandi. If only Shawn Kemp could have this rule all the time.) There is a 2-minute overtime if needed, but after that you have to kiss your sister as it's a tie. Thirty two minutes is the max here.

  • Key players/matchups: Williams-Francis and LaFrentz-Brand are our favorites if you're looking at sidebars and angles. Frankly, the current rookie class doesn't have a ton of size. Brand has been getting it done down low, but MacCulloch could be overmatched by Nowitzki, LaFrentz and the Kandi man. Odom, who has struggled mightily of late, could be a key. Also, the current rookies don't have a lot of outside shooting, unless Wally suddenly starts to go that route.

  • History: Remember the last Rookie game MVP? How 'bout that Zydrunas Ilgauskas. We could bore you with which team has won the five other rookie games, but we won't. Incidentally, the first one, it was the Phenoms beating the Sensations? Then it was White over Green, and three East-West clashes. By the way, Kobe Bryant holds the record for points in one of these games with 31, while Khalid Reeves and Damon Stoudamire each had 11 assists once. We think that record could go down.

  • Who should win: Who really cares? This is for fun, right? Well, if we had to pick, we'd have to go with the second-year rookies. But that's not really why they're playing the game. As for your MVP, we would have gone with Jamison, but now we will do an about face and say Francis.

    All-Star 2ball, Saturday, 8 p.m. ET
  • Why you should care: Because women's basketball has hit it big, and it's only fair to let the world see some of the WNBA's finest on the NBA's big weekend. And who wouldn't want to watch Cynthia Cooper, Chamique Holdsclaw and Lisa Leslie in action? Some of the matchups with NBA people are very interesting. In fact, we wager to say that in more than one case, the WNBA player could beat the NBA player. Hmmm....

  • What to watch for: For those who don't know, this is the second go-round for this event. Houston's Cooper and Clyde Drexler were the winners at Madison Square Garden in 1998. Briefly, here's what occurs: There are eight two-player teams competing. For one minute we see the players shooting, rebounding, dribbling and passing, and eventually shooting from seven specific locations on the court. It is a half-court game where teams score points based on the difficulty of each shot made. The men and women must alternate each shot, and one team plays at a time, and with one NBA basketball. Points range from a deuce for a layup to eight points for a nice NBA three-pointer.

    And one more thing: As Derek Fisher pointed out as the best reason why he's excited to go after Kobe Bryant bowed out, there's money on the line. The winners get to split $25,000, second place is worth $10,000 and the other teams get $2,500.

    So what are we looking for? Well, in the previous 2ball contest, Utah's Tammi Reiss and Karl Malone had a strategy, which worked in the first round at least. The Mailman tried three-pointers, worth eight points, while Reiss rebounded the ball and fired up closer shots. But Cooper and Drexler won with a more harmonic effort.

  • Key players/matchups: As ESPN.com women's basketball editor Melanie Jackson has pointed out, there are some very opposite pairings here. For Los Angeles, Leslie is quite a few inches taller than Fisher (and probably better). For Phoenix, Jennifer Gillom is an inside force while Jason Kidd isn't. And Jason Williams is big-time flash, while Sac teammate Yolanda Griffith is the WNBA's do-it-all MVP, but without the one-on-one dazzle. Check out the complete list of teams and ESPN.com women's editor Melanie Jackson's more in-depth description of the women's entries in the event, including why Holdsclaw is the best player in the Washington entry.

  • Who should win: We'll stick with Cooper to defend the title, this time with Rockets rook Steve Francis.

    AT&T Shootout
  • Why you should care: Some of the best marksmen in the league the last 13 years have competed here and put on a show. Craig Hodges, who didn't offer much else on the court, won three straight titles in this event to begin the 1990s. Larry Bird won the first three titles and Dale Ellis, Mark Price, Glen Rice and Steve Kerr have also starred here. This is an exciting event, racing against the clock for points, and there have been some great efforts in the past. Think about hitting half your shots from that range and how tired you would get.

  • What to watch for: Utah's Jeff Hornacek, who also competes in the 2ball competition, will try to defend his title. Dallas' Davis is currently leading the NBA in three-point field goal percentage, and has to be considered one of the favorites. Other sharpshooters here are league scoring leader Allen Iverson, Mike Bibby, Ray Allen, Terry Porter, Bob Sura and Dirk Nowitzki. So we have point guards, pure shooters and big men, too. Normally you'd see one-dimensional shooters in this event, but clearly that's not the case here. These guys are all-around players, which, is important to compete in the league. Specialists just aren't enough anymore.

    There's money on the line here to make it worth everyone's time. Winner gets $25,000, runner-up earns $15,000, third place gets $10,000 and the others get $3,000. To refresh your memory, there are three rounds. Each player has one minute to shoot from five different spots around the three-point line. You shoot five balls at each spot, with the first four worth one point and the final ball, the one with lots of pretty colors, worth two. That's it.

  • Key players/matchups: There aren't any great rivalries here, sorry to say. Who is Dirk's big rival? Iverson shoots all the time in real life and is normally not the most accurate, so he wouldn't be a favorite. Same with Sura. Hornacek and Davis have beautiful releases on their shots, and it's worth watching.

  • History: The record for highest three-round score is 65 by Tim Legler, who has been fighting injuries the last few years but could always drain a long jumper. Hodges once hit for 25 in a round and Hubert Davis, Price and Hodges had 24 once. Hodges, amazingly, made 19 straight shots in the 1991 semifinals. The second-best mark is merely 11, done by Davis and Bird. There's been a different winner here each of the last five seasons (Hornacek, Kerr, Legler, Rice and Price). The first nine years only four people won it.

  • Who should win: Davis won the thing a few years back, and since he's shooting so much better than anyone else in the NBA right now from this range (Among qualifiers, Davis is at .535, Dell Curry is at .459), we say he wins again.

    Slam Dunk Contest
  • Why you should care: Not sure. Who would want to see the greatest dunkers in the NBA put on a show? Well, everyone! Year after year this is the one part of All-Star weekend that never disappoints. Vince Carter is here, and if you ever watch Raptors games or SportsCenter, you know he dunks quite well. Everyone here is capable of a great show. We asked the ESPN.com users who would have the best chance to beat Carter and about 40 percent went with Toronto teammate Tracy McGrady. The other contestants, in order of where users picked them, are Steve Francis, Jerry Stackhouse, Larry Hughes and Ricky Davis, who replaces injured hometown guy Antawn Jamison.

  • What to watch for: A lot of ooohs and aaahs. Carter can do just about anything when it comes to dunking, and probably a bunch of things nobody has ever even thought of. This group of leapers will put on a show.

  • Key players/matchups: Everyone here is a key player. The Toronto angle is certainly an interesting one, with McGrady trying to out-do his teammate. Also, Carter and Jamison (now out) were dealt for each other after playing together in college, and Francis would have been the fourth Atlantic Coast Conference player to be in this event. So Hughes and Davis (Iowa) are the only players here to go to a college outside the ACC.

    Carter is clearly the favorite. After watching him in games the last two seasons, one can only imagine what he can do when it's not in the flow of a game. For this event, Carter will try some things never seen in games, maybe even, rumor has it, dunking a basketball twice without hitting the ground. Francis is only 6-3, but he is an exciting dunker. McGrady and Hughes are only 20 and have shown creativity in games before.

  • History: Who can forget when this event made its debut back in 1984. Julius Erving, Dominique Wilkins, Darrell Griffith and Clyde Drexler were in the original event, and Larry Nance won it. Believe it or not, Dr. J never won one of these things (He beat David Thompson in the ABA's final year). Three people have won this event twice: Wilkins, that Jordan guy, and Harold Miner (remember him?). Some of the greatest All-Star weekend moments have come here, from Cedric Ceballos doing it blindfolded, Dee Brown pumping up his sneakers first and Spud Webb rising high. And plenty of kids have the poster of Jordan flying from the foul line, just like Dr. J, for the winning dunk in 1988 to beat 'Nique.

    "Mike and I just went at it that year, playing to the crowd," Wilkins said. "It was the way we did it, back and forth. People came to see it. It mattered more than the game itself."

  • Who should win: Is it heresy to pick against Vinsanity? Yep. But watch out for McGrady.


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    ALSO SEE
    NBA All-Star Game 2000

    Sizing up the Slam Dunk competition

    Sizing up the Shootout competition

    Sizing up the Rookie Challenge

    Sizing up the 2ball competition

    NBA East: Mutombo no ordinary Hoya

    NBA West: Stockton deserves selection

    Ratto: Latrell's not coming; who cares?

    Lawrence: All-Star game is kid's stuff

    All-Star game rosters

    All-Star Game history

    NBA Power Rankings, Feb. 8