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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

James, Allen lead East win

Tom Withers Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS – Toss some leftover Mardi Gras beads toward the East. LeBron James and his crew earned them.

Outdunking, outpassing and outperforming their more trumpeted counterparts from the Western Conference, the Eastern Conference All-Stars avenged a year-old beating with a 134-128 win on Sunday night.

Ray Allen scored 28 points, making three straight 3-pointers in the final 3:15, and James added 27, including a did-he-really-do-that? dunk in the last minute to propel the East and earn MVP honors.

Last year, the West humiliated the East in a 153-132 rout in Las Vegas when Kobe Bryant and Co. rewrote the event’s record books. However, this time led by Allen’s 14 fourth-quarter points and James, the East salvaged some pride and can return to the season’s second half with bragging rights.

“They beat up on us pretty bad last year,” James said. “We didn’t want to allow that to happen. We wanted to win.”

Amare Stoudemire, Brandon Roy and Carmelo Anthony scored 18 points apiece to lead the West, which trailed by 13 entering the fourth quarter before rallying behind New Orleans’ own Chris Paul. The sensational guard’s seventh assist of the final period set up Roy’s layup to give the West a 122-119 lead.

But Boston’s Allen, the final player added to either roster, knocked down his second 3-pointer in 48 seconds to tie it before Paul answered with a 3, sending the hometown crowd into a frenzy.

Allen finally missed and James poked away the ball, and then came up with the night’s most stirring moment.

Slashing through the lane, Cleveland’s megastar rose and dunked over several West defenders, much like he did in Game 5 of last year’s Eastern Conference finals in Detroit when he scored the Cavaliers’ final 25 points

“We had two people on him,” Paul said. “but that still wasn’t enough.”

Paul was called for an offensive foul on the West’s next trip. Dwyane Wade hit a layup and Allen scored to make it 131-125. Roy’s 3-pointer with 8.7 seconds brought the West within three, but Allen made three free throws to close it out.

The weekend in New Orleans was about much more than spectacular dunks, a game featuring marginal defense or collecting strings of beads while strolling down boozy Bourbon Street. The NBA came to the Big Easy hoping to help this special city continue its comeback from Hurricane Katrina, the effects of which are still being felt 2 1/2 years since she blasted through.

On Friday, the world’s biggest basketball names as well as hundreds of volunteers fanned out to all sides of the city to help refurbish playgrounds, paint houses and lend a hand with whatever they could on a day devoted to community service.

Bryant, who won MVP honors last year, played less than 3 minutes so he could rest his injured pinkie.