NBA All-Star Weekend Shooting Stars Competition

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The Shooting Stars competition is a National Basketball Association (NBA) contest during All-Star Weekend held on the Saturday before the All-Star Game. The contest was held from 2004 to 2015 before returning in 2026. The contest involves two current NBA or WNBA players and a retired NBA player competing together in a shooting competition. The current format involves teams consisting of two current NBA players and a retired NBA player competing together in a two-round shooting competition, in which each team must shoot from seven locations in order and each player must shoot from each location to score the most points.

Contents

Format

Original format

The original format involved a current NBA player, a WNBA player, and a retired NBA player competing together in a shooting competition. From 2004 to 2012, players represented their teams' cities. Starting in 2013, the NBA player chose both a WNBA player and the retired player to compete on his team. The competition itself was time based, involving shooting from four locations of increasing difficulty and making all four shots in sequential order. The first shot was a 10-ft bank shot from the right angle, the second was straight-on jump shot from the top of the key, the third was an NBA three-point shot from the left angle and the fourth is a half-court shot. There was a two-minute time limit for each attempt and the top two teams advanced to the final round. The event was held each All-Star Weekend from 2004 to 2015 In 2007–08, Team San Antonio became the event's first two-time winner. Detroit followed suit in 2008–09 with their second title. In 2006, Team San Antonio set the course record with 25.1 seconds. In 2011, Team Atlanta became the first team to win the event with a time over one minute. From 2013 to 2015, Team Bosh became the first back-to-back and only three-time winner. Starting with the 2016 NBA All-Star Game, the contest was retired and removed from All Star Weekend until 2026. [1]

Format change

The seven Shooting Star locations 2026 NBA Shooting Star locations.jpg
The seven Shooting Star locations

With the competition's return in 2026, a new format was announced. The new format maintains its two-round format, but the competition will consists of four teams consisting of two current NBA players and one NBA legend. Each have one minute and ten seconds to score points while rotating through seven designated shooting locations around the court, with all three players on a team shooting at each spot in a set order. The two teams with the most points in the first round will advance to the final round. The team with the most points in the final round will be crowned the winner. [2] [3]

The seven shooting locations:

  1. Right lane layup/dunk (2 points)
  2. 18' right baseline (2 points)
  3. Right elbow (2 points)
  4. Right win 3-pointer (3 points)
  5. Top of the key (2 points)
  6. Left corner 3-pointer (3 points)
  7. Long range 3-pointer (4 points)

List of champions

Chris Bosh e1 (cropped).jpg
Dominique Wilkins 2022.jpg
Swin Cash National Team.jpg
Team Bosh, consisting of Chris Bosh (left), Dominique Wilkins (center), and Swin Cash (right), won in three consecutive years from 2013 to 2015.
Active NBA player
Inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
Player (#)Denotes the number of times the player has won
Team (#)Denotes the number of times a player from this team has won
YearTeamPlayersRepresentingFirst RoundFinal Round
2004
Los Angeles Lakers logo.svg
Los Angeles Lakers
Flag of the United States.svg Derek Fisher Los Angeles LakersN/a43.9
seconds
Flag of the United States.svg Lisa Leslie Los Angeles Sparks
Flag of the United States.svg Magic Johnson Los Angeles Lakers (2)
2005 Flag of Arizona.svg Phoenix Flag of the United States.svg Shawn Marion Phoenix Suns N/a28.0
seconds
Flag of the United States.svg Diana Taurasi Phoenix Mercury
Flag of the United States.svg Dan Majerle Phoenix Suns (2)
2006 Flag of San Antonio, Texas.svg San Antonio Flag of France.svg Tony Parker San Antonio Spurs N/a25.1
seconds
Flag of the United States.svg Kendra Wecker San Antonio Silver Stars
Flag of the United States.svg Steve Kerr San Antonio Spurs (2)
2007 Flag of Michigan.svg Detroit Flag of the United States.svg Chauncey Billups Detroit Pistons 66.0
seconds
50.5
seconds
Flag of the United States.svg Swin Cash Detroit Shock
Flag of the United States.svg Bill Laimbeer Detroit Pistons (2)
2008 Flag of San Antonio, Texas.svg San Antonio (2) Flag of the United States.svg Tim Duncan San Antonio Spurs (3)Unknown35.8
seconds
Flag of Russia.svg Becky Hammon San Antonio Silver Stars (2)
Flag of the United States.svg David Robinson San Antonio Spurs (4)
2009 Flag of Michigan.svg Detroit (2) Flag of the United States.svg Arron Afflalo Detroit Pistons (3)59.3
seconds
58.4
seconds
Flag of the United States.svg Katie Smith Detroit Shock (2)
Flag of the United States.svg Bill Laimbeer (2)Detroit Pistons (4)
2010 Flag of Texas.svg Texas Flag of Germany.svg Dirk Nowitzki Dallas Mavericks 88.0
seconds
34.3
seconds
Flag of Russia.svg Becky Hammon (2) San Antonio Silver Stars (3)
Flag of the United States.svg Kenny Smith Houston Rockets
2011 Flag of Atlanta.svg Atlanta Flag of the Dominican Republic.svg Al Horford Atlanta Hawks 47.6
seconds
70.0
seconds
Flag of the United States.svg Coco Miller Atlanta Dream
Flag of the United States.svg Steve Smith Atlanta Hawks (2)
2012 Flag of New York City.svg New York Flag of the United States.svg Landry Fields New York Knicks 38.7
seconds
37.3
seconds
Flag of the United States.svg Cappie Pondexter New York Liberty
Flag of the United States.svg Allan Houston New York Knicks (2)
2013 Team Bosh Flag of the United States.svg Chris Bosh Miami Heat 50.0
seconds
89.0
seconds
Flag of the United States.svg Swin Cash (2) Chicago Sky
Flag of the United States.svg Dominique Wilkins N/a
2014 Team Bosh (2) Flag of the United States.svg Chris Bosh (2) Miami Heat (2)35.6
seconds
31.4
seconds
Flag of the United States.svg Swin Cash (3) Chicago Sky (2)
Flag of the United States.svg Dominique Wilkins (2)N/a
2015 Team Bosh (3) Flag of the United States.svg Chris Bosh (3) Miami Heat (3)30.8
seconds
57.6
seconds
Flag of the United States.svg Swin Cash (4) New York Liberty (2)
Flag of the United States.svg Dominique Wilkins (3) Atlanta Hawks (3)
2026
Flag placeholder.svg
Flag placeholder.svgN/a

List of participants

Statistics

RankTeamAPPS1ST2ND3RD4THPCT
1Flag placeholder.svg Team Bosh330001.000
2 Flag of San Antonio, Texas.svg San Antonio 42020.500
3 Flag of Michigan.svg Detroit 42011.500
4 Flag of Texas.svg Texas 31200.333
5 Flag of Arizona.svg Phoenix 41111.250
6 Flag of Atlanta.svg Atlanta 31011.333
7
Los Angeles Lakers logo.svg
Los Angeles Lakers
110001.000
Flag of New York City.svg New York 110001.000
9 Flag of Los Angeles, California.svg Los Angeles 60213.000
10 Flag of Chicago, Illinois.svg Chicago 30201.000
11Flag placeholder.svg Team Westbrook20200.000
12 Flag of Denver, Colorado.svg Denver 10100.000
Flag placeholder.svg San Antonio Spurs 10100.000
Flag placeholder.svg Team Durant10100.000
15Flag placeholder.svg Team Curry20020.000
16 Flag of Houston, Texas.svg Houston 10010.000
Los angeles clippers logo 1984-2010.jpg
Los Angeles Clippers
10010.000
Flag of Orlando, Florida.svg Orlando 10010.000
Flag of Sacramento, California.svg Sacramento 10010.000
Flag placeholder.svg Team Harden10010.000
21Flag placeholder.svg Detroit Pistons 10001.000
Flag placeholder.svg Team Hardaway10001.000
Flag placeholder.svg Team Lopez10001.000
Flag placeholder.svg Team Millsap10001.000

References

  1. Herbert, James. "Chris Bosh says NBA has scrapped Shooting Stars at All-Star weekend." CBSSports.com , December 31, 2015. Retrieved July 2, 2016.
  2. "NBA announces teams for 2026 Kia Shooting Stars". NBA . February 7, 2026. Retrieved February 7, 2026.
  3. Wright, Michael C. (2026-02-07). "NBA brings back Shooting Stars contest for All-Star weekend". ESPN . Retrieved 2026-02-10.