Saturday, 13 February 2016
Zach LaVine highlights Rising Stars with 30 points, 7 boards
TORONTO -- Zach LaVine hoisted the MVP trophy above his head, laughing along with Minnesota Timberwolves teammates Andrew Wiggins and Karl-Anthony Towns as he stood on the podium.
One win down at All-Star Weekend. One to go.
LaVine had 30 points and seven rebounds and the United States team beat the World team 157-154 in the BBVA Compass Rising Stars Challenge on Friday night on the opening night of All-Star festivities.
In the game featuring some of the best rookies and sophomores in the league, LaVine geared up to defend his slam dunk title on Saturday night by making 13 of 20 shots to beat Wiggins, who took home MVP honors last year in Brooklyn.
"I'm excited for tomorrow," said LaVine, who revived interest in the dunk contest with an electrifying performance last year. "I'm ready to put on a show."
Kristaps Porzingis scored 30 points, and Emmanuel Mudiay had 30 points and 10 assists for the World team. Wiggins scored 29 points while playing in front of his hometown fans.
Los Angeles Lakers sophomore Jordan Clarkson added 25 for the Americans.
The Rising Stars game can sometimes take on the feel of a sideshow, something that forces the next generation into a spotlight that they aren't always ready for. But the court was loaded with talent on Friday night in Toronto, players like Wiggins, Porzingis, Towns, Elfrid Payton and Jabari Parker.
The influx of talent has given several long-suffering franchises -- the Timberwolves, Knicks, Bucks -- hope that better days are arriving soon.
For most fans in attendance, Wiggins was the star attraction. He has been churning out highlight reels since he was 14 years old, was drafted No. 1 overall last season and won the rookie of the year award. The locals have called him "Maple Jordan" and openly pine for him to one day come home and play for the Raptors.
"It felt great," Wiggins said. "I got to play in front of a lot of people I haven't seen in a long time. My family, friends got to watch it. It was great being back home and playing in front of my hometown."
Wiggins has stated time and again that he loves it in Minnesota and envisions a long and bright future with Towns, LaVine and the rest of the Timberwolves' promising young core. But he has never shied away from his love of Toronto and he said he was looking forward to being back in Canada for an extended stretch this weekend while the rest of the basketball world finally trained its focus on his hometown.
Wiggins received a thunderous ovation upon introduction in the starting lineup and was serenaded with chants of "M-V-P! M-V-P!" late in the game.
"He's a rock star in his hometown," LaVine said.
For as much time as the 20-year-old Wiggins has spent in the spotlight in his young life, he is remarkably disinterested in attention. He threw down a few big dunks early in the game -- one off of a backboard pass from Mudiay -- to get the crowd on its feet, but was also happy to let his teammates get in on the action until a late flurry that got the World team back in it.
Porzingis, the Latvian who captivated the Big Apple and helped revive the Knicks, hit 5 of 8 3-pointers and threw down an alley-oop midway through the second half. And Mudiay, the Nuggets rookie who has struggled with his shot this season, hit 5 of 10 from deep.
Phoenix Suns rookie Devin Booker scored 23 points, and Towns had 18 for the U.S. team.
And Wiggins wasn't mad at all that LaVine walked out of the arena with the MVP trophy.
"I got it last year, he got it this year," Wiggins said. "(Towns) is going to get it next year. We're going back-to-back-to-back. That's the plan."
TORONTO -- Shaquille O'Neal was just 9 years old when his stepfather began teaching him basketball with a plan to dominate like Wilt Chamberlain, Bill Russell and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Young Shaquille didn't even know who they were. Now he's on the verge of joining them in basketball immortality.
"He told me this day would happen and I never believed him,'' O'Neal said of Phillip Harrison, who raised Shaq along with his mother and died in 2013.
O'Neal was chosen Friday as a finalist for induction into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, joining Allen Iverson to highlight the potential class.
Yao Ming could accompany them in Springfield, Massachusetts, in September, though he was nominated by the Hall's International Committee and wasn't subject to the step O'Neal and Iverson had to clear Friday.
Former Phoenix Suns point guard Kevin Johnson, college coaches Tom Izzo, Bo Ryan, Lefty Driesell, Eddie Sutton and Muffet McGraw; women's superstar Sheryl Swoopes, longtime referee Darrel Garretson, high school coaches Leta Andrews and Robert Hughes, 10-time AAU national champion Wayland Baptist University, and John McClendon, the first African-American coach in a professional league, also were chosen as finalists by the North American or Women's Committees.
The entire class will be unveiled April 4 in Houston before the NCAA championship game and enshrinement ceremonies are set for Sept. 9 in what could be an overcrowded birthplace of basketball if O'Neal, Yao, Iverson and their fans are all there.
"We're going to go on tour,'' joked Jerry Colangelo, chairman of the Hall of Fame board. "It could be a big one.''
O'Neal and Iverson couldn't be much different as people or players. The 7-foot-1 O'Neal, dressed in business attire wearing a jacket and tie, lived up to his stepfather's vision by becoming an inside force like Chamberlain, Russell and Abdul-Jabbar on his way to four NBA championships and an MVP award.
"Later on in my career people started comparing me to them, so I was like if you want to compare me to the greats, I have to represent the game with grace and honor, and hopefully I did that,'' O'Neal said.
Iverson came casually dressed as he did for most of his career, wearing a T-shirt, Yankees hat and faded jeans with a couple of neck chains as accessories. It was his look that made him as popular with a generation of fans as his game.
"I'm a product of Michael Jordan, Isiah Thomas, Magic Johnson, Charles Barkley, Shaquille O'Neal, all those guys that paved the way for us,'' Iverson said. "They might not have no idea of what they did for us as kids wanting to be like them.''
And many of today's small, speedy guards wanted to be like Iverson, a 6-foot, relentless wave of energy who averaged 26.7 points, won four scoring titles and an MVP award.
"I was fast until Allen Iverson. I'm not afraid to admit it,'' Johnson said. "They called me the fastest point guard in the NBA with the basketball, and I knew I had to relinquish that title the moment I saw Allen Iverson play.''
Yao recalled first watching the NBA live in China during the 1994 finals, when Houston won the title. He went on to play for the Rockets after they made the 7-6 center the No. 1 pick in the 2002 draft, and now he could find out he's a Hall of Famer in that city.
"I feel very peaceful,'' Yao said. "I'm glad it all can be connected to Houston.''
He, O'Neal and Iverson all benefited from a recent change in Hall of Fame rules that made a player eligible for candidacy after four full years of retirement. It was previously five, which meant they were actually six years removed from their playing days before they could be enshrined.
"Now we benefit this year by a couple of people who are going to be eligible, but we've been talking about this for a while as a board,'' Colangelo said. "So I think it's a good move for the Hall of Fame.''
Longtime NBA reporter David Aldridge and ESPN broadcaster Jay Bilas won the 2016 Curt Gowdy Media Awards, while Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany is the John W. Bunn Lifetime Achievement Award winner.
"I am honored beyond words," Bilas said in a statement released by ESPN. "I am so grateful to be the recipient of such a prestigious award, and when I look at the list of Gowdy Award honorees, I cannot help but feel unworthy.
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