James stands tall
King James is All-Star royalty again.
LeBron James threw down a powerful dunk for the go-ahead basket with 55 seconds left, punctuating an MVP performance and helping the Eastern Conference beat the West 134-128 on Sunday night in the All-Star game in New Orleans.
James finished with 27 points, nine assists and eight rebounds in capturing his second MVP award in the last three years. He was honored in 2006 in Houston after he sparked the East’s big rally in a 122-120 victory in Houston.
“He’s amazing,” the West’s Dirk Nowitzki said. “He’s making shots and he almost had a triple-double. Amazing play down the stretch with the dunk. It was a fun game down the stretch and he really took the team on his back.”
James does that all the time in Cleveland, carrying a team with mediocre talent to the NBA finals last year. On Sunday, he showed he can do it even against the league’s best players.
Unlike the game two years ago, the East blew the big cushion this time. The West rallied from 16 points down to grab a fourth-quarter lead. But with the game tied at 125, James came up with a steal, then dribbled the length of the court before soaring for a dunk over a couple of West players that put the East back on top for good.
“LeBron is a freight train when he goes to that basket,” West coach Byron Scott said. “He’s so big and strong, and so quick and powerful. It’s hard to stop him when he gets the momentum going like that.”
Coming off last year’s embarrassing loss in Las Vegas, James was ready to play from the start. He danced along with a jazz band playing during pregame introductions, then went down the line and high-fived the rest of the East players at the completion of the national anthem.
“The East did a great job man, we got a big lead in the first half and we withstood their run in the fourth quarter,” James said after accepting the MVP trophy from NBA commissioner David Stern. “We made plays down the stretch.”
None bigger than the one by James, which started with him batting away a pass by Nowitzki.
“You saw that last dunk by LeBron,” West guard Chris Paul said. “I mean, we had two people on him, but that still wasn’t enough.”
James nearly joined Michael Jordan (1997) as the only players to have a triple-double in the All-Star game. But the NBA’s scoring leader said the only thing that mattered to him was getting the win.
“We were down and the game was tied. And I was able to put the finishing touch on it with the dunk and kept the momentum going for us,” James said.
Paul brings it home
Chris Paul delighted his hometown crowd with the nifty passing and clutch shooting they’ve seen all season.
If only the West had won, he might have had a shot at the All-Star MVP award.
Paul’s All-Star debut was a memorable one nonetheless, thanks to a dominant fourth quarter performance that helped the West overcome a double-digit deficit and briefly take the lead.
Paul had 16 points and 14 assists, with nine points and seven assists coming in the fourth quarter alone.
With the West staging a late comeback, however, Paul’s enthusiasm got the best of him and cost the West dearly. He was called for setting an illegal screen that sent Ray Allen crashing to the floor during a possession on which the West could have tied the game with 36 seconds to go.
Star-studded event
As usual, the All-Star game was a star-studded affair not only on the court but in the stands.
Those making VIP entrances on a red carpet included actors Arnold Schwarzenegger, Alyssa Milano, Gabrielle Union, Olivia Wilde, Chris Rock, Terry Crews and Corbin Blue. Musical artist Ludacris and music producer Jimmy “Jam” Harris also were on hand.
The game being in New Orleans, however, former Saints quarterback Archie Manning, father of Peyton and Eli, was treated like the biggest star of them all. The crowd erupted when his face appeared on the scoreboard video screen.
Who heard boos? Dallas Cowboys receiver Terrell Owens.