Easy bein’ Green
Boston’s Gerald Green capped All-Star Saturday with an acrobatic leap over a table to win the dunk contest, and Miami’s Jason Kapono fell just short of an event record while winning the 3-Point Shootout.
Green, the Celtics’ 20-year-old swingman, performed his two most memorable dunks in the first round before that final leap over a table bearing the All-Star game logo for a windmill jam.
He first made an electrifying two-handed slam on an alley-oop pass off the side of the backboard from teammate Paul Pierce in the first round. Green then jumped over fellow finalist Nate Robinson while wearing the No. 7 Celtics jersey of 1991 dunk champion Dee Brown – and shielding his eyes in the crook of his elbow in an homage to Brown’s memorable no-look dunk.
Green easily won over the five-man judges’ panel of Michael Jordan, Julius Erving, Dominique Wilkins, Kobe Bryant and Vince Carter – particularly when Robinson, the diminutive 2006 champion, missed nine straight times on his final dunk before landing a one-handed spin move.
Green and Robinson eliminated Orlando’s Dwight Howard and Chicago’s Tyrus Thomas in the first round, even though the 6-foot-11 Howard came up with the most original move.
While catching a high bounce pass from teammate Jameer Nelson for a right-handed slam, Howard reached nearly to the top of the backboard to slap a sticker bearing his face onto the glass – 12 feet, 6 inches off the ground, according to Nelson.
Earlier, Kapono beat stars Gilbert Arenas and Dirk Nowitzki with a final-round 24 – just one shy of the event record. Kapono, the fourth-year pro who finally blossomed with the Heat this season, tied Mark Price’s final-round record and fell just one point shy of Craig Hodges’ overall mark with an impressive performance leading off the last round.
After defending champion Nowitzki struggled to a nine, Arenas posted a 17 – and Kapono became the latest in a long line of shooting specialists to best more complete players in this particular event.
Even before Kapono’s performance, Las Vegas put on a show on the All-Star weekend’s busiest night, complete with a disqualification and a repeat champion. There also was an entertaining sideshow: NBA star-turned-broadcaster Charles Barkley beat 67-year-old NBA referee Dick Bavetta in a footrace for charity.
Though Barkley, who turns 44 Tuesday, has gained weight exponentially since his playing career, he still had enough spring to outrun Bavetta over 3 1/2 lengths of the court. Barkley nearly lost when he began running backward for the final feet, but tumbled over the half-court line just before Bavetta made a headfirst dive to the finish.
The evening got off to an appropriately silly start in the Shooting Stars competition, featuring three-person teams composed of an NBA player, a WNBA player and a former NBA great from the same city.
Detroit’s team of Chauncey Billups, Swin Cash and Bill Laimbeer won when the Chicago’s team was disqualified from the final round for shooting out of order.