NBA All-Stars have all been revealed, and as is the case every year, there are some glaring absences. Each member of the two teams has earned their
Among those to make the cut are first-timer Victor Wembanyama and 21st-timer LeBron James. Six teams had multiple selections, while only two teams above .500 — the Dallas Mavericks and Sacramento Kings — had none. The game is once again stacked with recognizable talent, but there were plenty more players beyond the 24 players selected.
Sabonis has been a prototypical snub since he got to Sacramento four years ago. He puts up huge numbers for a team outside of title contention and sometimes gets lost in the fray as a result. He’s actually made more All-NBA teams than All-Star Games in his full seasons with the Kings.
And then Norman Powell entered the chat ... That’s also ahead of guys like Jaylen Brown (29), De’Aaron Fox (29), Trae Young (29), Cade Cunningham (28), and LeBron James (27).
The Los Angeles Clippers have had a strong season thanks to James Harden and Norman Powell. Kawhi Leonard hopes they're named NBA All-Stars.
The Los Angeles Clippers are hopeful to get a first-time NBA All-Star by the name of Norman Powell following a strong start to the year.
Every year, there are several players who have played at an All-Star level but ultimately don't get invited to attend the game. This year was no different. After fans, players, and media selected the 10 starters,
but didn't have enough coach support to be a reserve — along with Atlanta's Trae Young, Phoenix's Devin Booker, Dallas' Kyrie Irving and the Clippers' Norman Powell.
The All-Star roster feels like it was largely determined by durability. Luka Doncic is usually an All-Star lock, but he doesn’t even make our snubs list after being sidelined by
Kings star Domantas Sabonis has once again been left off the NBA All-Star Game roster. Here is who else was snubbed from this year's event.
Wembanyama becomes only the fourth Spurs player to make the All-Star Game in his first or second season. The others: Alvin Robertson in 1986, David Robinson in 1990 and 1991, and Tim Duncan in 1998.
James Harden scored 17 of his 40 points in the third quarter and Norman Powell added 33 points as the Los Angeles Clippers finished off a 127-117 victory over the visiting Milwaukee Bucks at Inglewood,