1991 NBA All-Star Game

Last updated

1991 NBA All-Star Game
1991 NBA All-Star Game.gif
1234Total
West 23353422114
East 22452722116
DateFebruary 10, 1991
Arena Charlotte Coliseum
City Charlotte
MVP Charles Barkley
National anthem Bruce Hornsby, Branford Marsalis
Attendance23,530
Network NBC
TNT (All-Star Saturday)
Announcers Bob Costas, Mike Fratello and Pat Riley [1]
Bob Neal, Doug Collins and Hubie Brown (All-Star Saturday)
NBA All-Star Game
<  1990 1992  >

The 1991 NBA All-Star Game was an exhibition basketball game between players selected from the National Basketball Association's Western Conference and the Eastern Conference that was played on February 10, 1991, at the Charlotte Coliseum in Charlotte, North Carolina. This game was the 41st edition of the NBA All-Star Game and was played during the 1990–91 NBA season.

Contents

The All-Star Weekend began on Saturday, February 9, 1991, with the Stay In School Jam, Legends Classic, the Three-Point Shootout and the Slam Dunk Contest.

This was the first NBA All-Star Game broadcast by NBC after 17 years with CBS.

The All-Star Game returned to Charlotte in 2019, though it was played at the Spectrum Center in Uptown, and broadcast on TNT (the All-Star Game has never been broadcast on ABC or ESPN during the networks' current contract with the league, which began during the 2002–03 season).

All-Star Game

The West could have won, but Kevin Johnson's potential game-winning three-pointer was nullified by a basket interference call on Karl Malone. Charles Barkley was named MVP for the game.

Rosters

All-Star Weekend

Legends Classic

The 8th edition of the Schick Legends Classic took place on February 9, 1991. It consisted of an exhibition match between retired players from the Eastern and Western Conference. The East Legends won 41–34.

Rosters

Slam Dunk Contest

The Gatorade Slam Dunk Contest had three of the previous year's contestants, with the notable absence of defending champion Dominique Wilkins. Dee Brown took home the trophy after defeating Shawn Kemp in the final, performing a dunk while covering his eyes with one arm. [2] The scoring system consisted of the total of the two dunks, and in the final round the two best out of three dunks.

Contestants
Pos.PlayerTeamFirst RoundSemifinalFinal
1st dunk2nd dunkTotal1st dunk2nd dunkTotal1st dunk2nd dunk3rd dunkTotal
G Dee Brown Boston Celtics 48.244.292.449.648.498.048.146.449.697.7
F/C Shawn Kemp Seattle SuperSonics 47.648.295.848.347.395.644.348.045.793.7
G Rex Chapman Charlotte Hornets 45.549.795.249.046.094.0Did not advance
G Kenny Smith Houston Rockets 48.542.390.846.641.387.9Did not advance
F Kenny Williams Indiana Pacers 42.344.686.9Did not advance
F/G Blue Edwards Utah Jazz 40.144.284.3Did not advance
F/G Otis Smith Orlando Magic 41.241.883.0Did not advance
G Kendall Gill Charlotte Hornets 40.140.981.0Did not advance

Three-Point Shootout

The American Airlines ITT Sheraton Three-Point Shootout saw Craig Hodges repeat as champion, by defeating Portland's Terry Porter in the final round. Players begin shooting from one corner of the court, and move from station to station along the three-point arc until they reach the other corner. Each station has four standard balls, worth one point each, plus one specially colored "money ball", worth two points.

Contestants
Pos.PlayerTeamFirst roundSemifinalFinal
G Craig Hodges Chicago Bulls 202417
G Terry Porter Portland Trail Blazers 15 TIE 1412
F Dennis Scott Orlando Magic 1612Did not advance
F/G Danny Ainge Portland Trail Blazers 1811Did not advance
G Tim Hardaway Golden State Warriors 15 TIE Did not advance
G Hersey Hawkins Philadelphia 76ers 14Did not advance
F Glen Rice Miami Heat 9Did not advance
F/G Clyde Drexler Portland Trail Blazers 8Did not advance

^TIE Terry Porter and Tim Hardaway broke the tie in a 30-second shooting round.

References