This article needs additional citations for verification .(May 2017) |
Sport | Basketball |
---|---|
Competition | National Basketball Association |
Discipline | Dunking |
Sponsored by | AT&T |
History | |
First award | Julius Erving, 1976 |
Most wins | Nate Robinson: 3 times |
Most recent | Mac McClung, 2024 |
Website | NBA AT&T Slam Dunk |
The NBA Slam Dunk Contest (officially known as the AT&T Slam Dunk) is an annual National Basketball Association (NBA) competition held during the NBA All-Star Weekend. [1] Sports Illustrated wrote "the dunk contest was the best halftime invention since the bathroom." [2] [3]
The contest was conceived of and started by the American Basketball Association (ABA) for its 1976 ABA All-Star Game in Denver. [2] The winner was Julius Erving of the New York Nets. [2] As a result of the ABA–NBA merger later that year, the contest moved to the NBA for the 1976–77 season. [4]
There was not another slam dunk contest at the professional level until 1984. [5] The contest has adopted several formats over the years, including, until 2014, the use of fan voting, via text-messaging, to determine the winner of the final round. The current champion of the Slam Dunk Contest is Mac McClung of the Osceola Magic. [6]
The first-ever Slam Dunk Contest was held on January 27, 1976 at McNichols Sports Arena in Denver during halftime of the 1976 ABA All-Star Game, the league's final All-Star game before the completion of the ABA–NBA merger. [2] In financial trouble and fighting with the NBA for viewers, the ABA started the slam dunk contest as a gimmick to attract viewers nationwide. [2] [5] In Remember the ABA, Jim Bukata recalled, "We were sitting around the office one day, discussing things that would draw more people, and it just came to us…It was Julius [Erving] really giving us the idea that we're the league of the dunkers. So we said, 'Well if that's the case, let's have a contest.' It really was as simple as that. …Three guys talking about what we could do to sell a few more tickets." [7] Bukata was the director of marketing and public relations for the ABA. [7] The other two in the room were the league's finance director Jim Keeler and Carl Scheer, general manager of the Denver Nuggets who were hosting the All-Star game. [7] [8]
There was a format each competitor had to follow in which they must attempt five dunks in a row under two minutes, with the clock stopping after each shot to allow the player to plan their next attempt. [9] [8] One required dunk was from a standing position under the basket, and another from a distance of ten feet away from the basket in the foul lane. [9] [8] The next three required dunks were freestyle positions, one coming in from the left side of the basket, one coming in from the right side of the basket, and finally from either corner down the baseline to the basket. [9] [8] At the contest, it was announced that the competitors were judged on artistic ability, body flow, fan response, and imagination, earning up to ten points in each category. [8] There were $1,200 in prizes provided by the Denver Nuggets and KHOW radio station. [8]
There were five competitors: Artis "A-Train" Gilmore of the Kentucky Colonels went first followed by George "Iceman" Gervin of the San Antonio Spurs, Larry "Special K" Kenon of the San Antonio Spurs, David "Skywalker" Thompson of the Denver Nuggets, and finally Julius "Dr. J" Erving of New York Nets. [2] [9]
Rookie and shortest competitor in the contest, Thompson recalls, "Since my hands weren't very big, I couldn't really palm the ball so I would cup it. I'd cup it with my left hand between my hand and forearm and put it above the rim and come over the top with my right hand and punch it into the basket. Very few guys could do it, I was told that Wilt Chamberlain could do something like it but I never seen it. You not only had to be able to jump high but you had to have the hang time, you had to be able to levitate up there and punch it through the basket.” [2] [9] Thompson performed a 360 degree or twist-around dunk to finish his routine—the first time this trick had ever been seen. [9] However, Thompson missed a dunk during his routine which counted as a zero; Gervin missed two dunks. [8]
All competitors had to perform a dunk from ten feet, but Julius Erving started marking his steps from the free throw line which is fifteen feet away. [2] [5] Erving then completed a dunk from the free throw line, winning the contest. [9] [5] He said, "I just wanted to make a nice, soaring play that would get the fans out of their seats. I really started going at half court and got a good running start and made sure that I made the shot authoritatively." [7]
Erving said that his favorite dunk of the night was by Thompson who "came out of the corner, spun 360 degrees in the air and slammed it, 50 by anyone's standards.” [2] One basketball historian wrote, "The 1976 Slam Dunk Contest represents a key focal point in basketball history. David Thompson and the rest of the ABA players were true pioneers and innovators; they transcended the game of basketball into what it is today." [2]
In 1976, Arthur Erhat filed a patent for "a rim that had give but immediately returned to its original position," making dunking safe for the first time by significantly reducing the shattering of backboards. [10] That year, NBA held its first Slam Dunk Contest as a one-off, season-long event similar to NBA Horse event held the following season. [11] [4] During halftime at each game, there was a one-on-one slam dunk competition. [12]
There were 22 competitors at multiple venues throughout the event—one for each team at the league—including future Hall of Famers Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Alex English, Julius Erving, George Gervin, Elvin Hayes, Moses Malone, and David Thompson. [4] Former ABA player Darnell "Dr. Dunk" Hillman was named the winner that season, beating out the Golden State Warriors' Larry McNeill in the championship round on June 5, 1977 in Portland during the halftime of the final playoff game. [13] [12] Although he received the winner's $15,000 check, Hillman did not receive a trophy until 2017. [4] [13]
The NBA reintroduced the Slam Dunk Contest on a permanent basis as a free-standing event during All-Star Weekend in 1984 at its birthplace in Denver. [5] Phoenix's Larry Nance defeated the original Dunk contest winner Julius Erving in the final round. Dominique Wilkins won the contest the following year, but in 1986 his Atlanta Hawks teammate Spud Webb made history when he defeated Wilkins in the final, preventing him from retaining his title. [11] Standing a mere 5 feet 6 inches tall, Webb became the shortest player ever to win the contest, a distinction that he still holds. Chicago's Michael Jordan won back-to-back dunk contest victories in 1987 and in 1988. [11] His victory over Wilkins in 1988 in Chicago finished with a perfect 50 dunk from the free-throw line for his third dunk to win the contest. However, the announcers did note that Wilkins was given abnormally low score for his breathtaking third dunk, a 45, allowing Jordan to win it by 2 with his perfect 50. To this day, the allegations of "home cooking" still float around surrounding the event (it was held on Jordan's home court; one of the judges was former Chicago Bears star Gale Sayers; and another judge, former NBA star Tom Hawkins, is a Chicago native) and until the competition in 2020, was considered arguably the most controversial of the slam dunk competitions. Extensive debate continues whether Wilkins 3rd dunk should have scored higher than a 45 and whether Jordan's second dunk, which scored a 47, was a superior creative effort to Wilkins third dunk. The following year in Houston would have been the first time where all the previous dunk champs would've faced off against each other; but Jordan, Wilkins, and Nance, who were going to play in the All-Star Game that Sunday, decided to skip the contest due to minor injuries. New York's Kenny "Sky" Walker, a last-minute replacement whose father died just days beforehand, upset Portland's Clyde "The Glide" Drexler, the hometown favorite and Houston native who was seen as the favorite to win. 1986 champ Spud Webb finished 3rd, while Shelton Jones finished 4th. [14]
In 1990, Dominique Wilkins of the Atlanta Hawks edged out Kenny Smith of the Sacramento Kings to win his second Slam Dunk Contest. He first won it in 1985 over Michael Jordan. Smith scored high points for originality with his signature dunk—he started by turning his back to the basket, bouncing the ball backward between his legs and off the backboard, then turning and grabbing it in the air and reverse dunking it. As the 1990s progressed, stars such as Jordan, Wilkins and Drexler sometimes declined to participate and were replaced by less-known players. Harold Miner was a standout in 1993, winning the contest with a reverse power dunk, reaching between his legs and down to his feet in mid-air before sending the ball down. In 1994 and 1997 respectively, Isaiah Rider and Kobe Bryant won the contest. [11] Rider would win with a spectacular, between-the-legs dunk, reminiscent of the Orlando Woolridge effort in the 1984 contest. [11] However, he wasn't able to repeat in 1995, missing the same dunk on several tries, opening the way for Miner to grab his second slam dunk title in three years. In 1998, the Slam Dunk Contest was replaced with the WNBA-NBA 2Ball Contest. In 1999, there was no All-Star Game due to the NBA lockout.
The NBA brought the Slam Dunk Contest back for the 2000 All-Star Weekend in Oakland, California. The 2000 contest was widely acclaimed, featuring a showdown between eventual winner Vince Carter of the Toronto Raptors, his cousin and then-teammate Tracy McGrady, and the Houston Rockets' Steve Francis. Carter won after performing a number of very impressive dunks, including two 360 windmills, a honey dip, and a between-the-legs dunk off a bounced alley-oop from McGrady. [15] [16] The next four contests did not feature superstars like Carter and Bryant, and despite innovative efforts by the likes of Desmond Mason and Jason Richardson, the lack of A-list superstars willing to participate hurt the appeal of the contest.
In 2005, the Slam Dunk Contest returned to its birthplace in Denver. With the spectacular dunks of prior contests, there was buzz[ citation needed ] that the dunk competition could regain the popularity it had in the 1980s. The Phoenix Suns' Amar'e Stoudemire alley-ooping 360 off a soccer-style header from teammate Steve Nash; J. R. Smith putting it around his back and dunking, and the new champion, Josh Smith alley-ooping over Kenyon Martin all wowed the crowd with their maneuvers. With the change in the rules requiring an additional teammate starting in the second round, they proved there were indeed many ways to dunk a basketball that had not been done before. Amar'e Stoudemire received rave reviews, as did Smith when he did a tribute dunk to Dominique Wilkins while donning Wilkins' jersey.
Again in 2006, the Dunk Contest in Houston revitalized the interests of audiences as 5'9" Nate Robinson of the New York Knicks took the title with a great dunk-off. One of his most exciting dunks was a high-flying dunk over former Slam Dunk Contest winner, 5'7" Spud Webb. The 2006 Slam Dunk Contest was also the first Dunk Contest in history to have a "Dunk Off", the equivalent to a Dunk Contest overtime, between Knicks point guard Nate Robinson and shooting guard Andre Iguodala of the Philadelphia 76ers. Many fans argue that Iguodala should have won the contest, as it took Robinson fourteen attempts before finally completing his dunk. Iguodala pulled off a dunk where he started out of bounds from the right side of the baseline while teammate Allen Iverson bounced the ball off the back of the right side of the backboard. Iguodala caught the ball in mid-air behind the backboard, spun around to the other side while ducking his head (to avoid colliding with the backboard) and dunked it with his right hand.
On February 17, 2007, the contest was held in Las Vegas. Judges for the event were all past winners: Michael Jordan, Dominique Wilkins, Kobe Bryant, Julius Erving, and Vince Carter. The title was taken by the Boston Celtics' Gerald Green, who, among other dunks, jumped over reigning champ Nate Robinson while covering his face – a homage to 1991 winner, Dee Brown, whose jersey Green had worn. He also scored a perfect fifty with his last slam, a windmill over a table. Other noteworthy dunks include a dunk by Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard, who, while making his dunk, stuck a sticker with his smiling face on the backboard a reported 12'6" from the ground, two and a half feet beyond the regulation NBA rim. [17]
On February 16, 2008, the contest was held in New Orleans. Judges for the event included Darryl Dawkins, Dominique Wilkins, Karl Malone, Julius Erving, and Magic Johnson. The title was taken by Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard. Howard's most noteworthy dunk came during the first round, his second dunk overall, when he took off his jersey to reveal a Superman shirt and cape. [18] With teammate Jameer Nelson's assistance he would make a leaping dunk from just in front of the free-throw line after a running start, throwing the ball through the rim from a few feet away. [19] Other noteworthy dunks included the first round slam by Jamario Moon while the previous year's winner, Gerald Green, relied heavily on theatrics by blowing out a cupcake with a birthday candle on the rim before dunking (a jam he termed "The Birthday Cake"). For the first time ever, fan voting determined the outcome of the final round of the contest; Howard beat Green for the trophy by claiming 78% of the fans' votes.
Nate Robinson won the 2009 contest on February 14 in Phoenix, Arizona. [11] The 5'9" guard dressed all in green as "Krypto-Nate" (a portmanteau of 'Nate' and Kryptonite) and jumped over 6'11" Dwight Howard characterized as Superman. He defeated Howard in the finals by a fan vote of 52–48 percent. J. R. Smith and Rudy Fernández also competed.
Nate Robinson won the 2010 contest on February 13 in Dallas, becoming the first 3-time Slam Dunk champion. [11] Robinson took on Shannon Brown of the Los Angeles Lakers, Gerald Wallace of the Charlotte Bobcats, and DeMar DeRozan of the Toronto Raptors. DeRozan earned his spot in the competition by defeating Los Angeles Clippers guard Eric Gordon in the inaugural Sprite Slam Dunk-In held the night before the actual dunk contest. Robinson and DeRozan advanced to the final round, where Robinson's double-pump reverse dunk helped seal a 51% to 49% victory.
Blake Griffin won the 2011 slam dunk contest by jumping and dunking over the hood of a Kia sedan on February 19 in Los Angeles. JaVale McGee of the Washington Wizards, DeMar DeRozan of the Toronto Raptors, and Serge Ibaka of the Oklahoma City Thunder all competed against Griffin. Griffin and McGee advanced to the final round, where Griffin stole the show, winning the contest with 68% of the vote.
Jeremy Evans won the 2012 Sprite Slam Dunk Contest by performing a dunk over Kevin Hart on February 25 in Orlando, Florida with 29% of the votes. Joining Evans were Chase Budinger of the Houston Rockets, Paul George of the Indiana Pacers, and Derrick Williams of the Minnesota Timberwolves. While George awed the crowd with a dunk with the lights turned off, Evans had perhaps the dunk of the contest by jumping teammate Gordon Hayward, catching two balls from Hayward, and dunking it.
Terrence Ross won the 2013 Sprite Slam Dunk Contest after a tomahawk dunk in tribute to former Toronto Raptors player Vince Carter, as well as a between-the-legs dunk performed while jumping over a ball boy. Ross took on Jeremy Evans of the Utah Jazz, Eric Bledsoe of the Los Angeles Clippers, Kenneth Faried of the Denver Nuggets, Gerald Green of the Indiana Pacers, and James White of the New York Knicks. Evans advanced to the final round to defend his title of slam dunk champion, but was thwarted by Ross. Ross carried the momentum of his near-perfect first round, in which he scored a 99 out of a possible 100, with a stellar final round. Ross won the competition decisively, earning 58% of the vote.
Team East, composed of dunkers Paul George, defending champion Terrence Ross, and John Wall won the 2014 Sprite Slam Dunk Contest in commanding fashion. Under the new team format, they dominated the Freestyle Round, capping it off with a pass off the backboard from Ross to Wall, then off the shot clock from Wall to George for the finish. In the Battle Round, Ross defeated Damian Lillard with a through the legs dunk from rapper Drake, George took down Harrison Barnes with a 360-degree, through the legs finish, and Wall defeated Ben McLemore by jumping over the Wizards' mascot G-Man and throwing down a reverse on the first try. Though Team East are the official winners, Wall was voted by fans as the Dunker of the Night.
To the delight of NBA fans, the 2015 contest was changed back to its original format, as the Freestyle Round as well as the teams were taken out. The 4 dunkers competing were all up-and-coming players: The Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Timberwolves' Zach LaVine, the Magic's Victor Oladipo, and the Nets' Mason Plumlee. LaVine took home the hardware with dunks that included a between-the-legs reverse, a behind-the-back slam in which he caught it in midair, a between-the-legs lefthanded dunk, and finished with a between-the-legs dunk as he caught it off the pole behind the backboard. Similar to Howard with Superman, LaVine did his first dunk with a cultural homage, wearing Michael Jordan's jersey from Space Jam . [20]
Zach LaVine won the 2016 slam dunk contest with incredibly talented dunks, from a windmill from the free throw line to a sensational between-the-legs reverse dunk. [21] Aaron Gordon (runner-up) of the Orlando Magic, Will Barton of the Denver Nuggets and Andre Drummond of the Detroit Pistons also competed. [22]
The 1976 event was held during the ABA All-Star game.
Slam Dunk Contest champions by franchise
No. | Franchise | Last Time |
---|---|---|
5 | New York Knicks | 2022 |
4 | Atlanta Hawks | 2005 |
3 | Miami Heat | 2020 |
3 | Indiana Pacers | 2017 |
3 | Minnesota Timberwolves | 2016 |
2 | Oklahoma City Thunder | 2019 |
2 | Utah Jazz | 2018 |
2 | Toronto Raptors | 2013 |
2 | Los Angeles Clippers | 2011 |
2 | Boston Celtics | 2007 |
2 | Golden State Warriors | 2003 |
2 | Phoenix Suns | 1992 |
2 | Chicago Bulls | 1988 |
2 | Orlando Magic | 2024 |
1 | Philadelphia 76ers | 2023 |
1 | Portland Trail Blazers | 2021 |
1 | Washington Wizards | 2014 |
1 | Los Angeles Lakers | 1997 |
1 | Brooklyn Nets | 1976 |
Bold denotes winner(s) of that year.
Player | First round | Semifinals | Finals |
---|---|---|---|
Larry Nance (Phoenix) | 134 (44+44+46) | 140(49+48+43) | 134(48+39+47) |
Julius Erving (Philadelphia) | 134 (39+47+48) | 140(44+49+47) | 122 (47+25+50) |
Dominique Wilkins (Atlanta) | 135(47+39+49) | 137 (48+48+41) | |
Darrell Griffith (Utah) | 121 (39+40+42) | 108 (42+42+24) | |
Edgar Jones (San Antonio) | 118 (32+43+43) | ||
Ralph Sampson (Houston) | 118 (37+40+41) | ||
Orlando Woolridge (Chicago) | 116 (23+45+48) | ||
Clyde Drexler (Portland) | 108 (40+24+44) | ||
Michael Cooper (L.A. Lakers) | 70 (24+24+22) |
Player | First round | Semifinals | Finals |
---|---|---|---|
Dominique Wilkins (Atlanta) | 145(47+49+49) | 140 (48+45+47) | 147(47+50+50) |
Michael Jordan (Chicago) | 130 (44+42+42) | 142(45+47+50) | 136 (43+44+49) |
Terence Stansbury (Indiana) | 130 (46+50+34) | 136 (49+48+39) | |
Julius Erving (Philadelphia) | BYEa | 132 (43+44+45) | |
Larry Nance (Phoenix) | BYEa | 131 (42+47+42) | |
Darrell Griffith (Utah) | 126 (38+42+46) | ||
Orlando Woolridge (Chicago) | 124 (40+43+41) | ||
Clyde Drexler (Portland) | 122 (39+39+44) |
aErving and Nance received first-round byes as they were the finalists from the previous year.
Player | First round | Semifinals | Finals |
---|---|---|---|
Spud Webb (Atlanta) | 141(46+48+47) | 138(50+42+46) | 100(50+50) |
Dominique Wilkins (Atlanta) | BYEa | 138(46+47+45) | 98 (50+48) |
Terence Stansbury (Indiana) | 129b(34+47+48) | 132 (44+39+49) | |
Gerald Wilkins (New York) | 133 (44+50+39) | 87 (37+25+25) | |
Jerome Kersey (Portland) | 129 (39+43+47) | ||
Paul Pressey (Milwaukee) | 116 (44+35+37) | ||
Roy Hinson (Cleveland) | 112 (35+39+38) | ||
Terry Tyler (Sacramento) | 110 (37+36+37) |
aWilkins received a first-round bye as he was the previous year's champion.
bStansbury defeated Kersey in a dunk-off to break their tie.
Player | First round | Semifinals | Finals |
---|---|---|---|
Michael Jordan (Chicago) | 88 (41+47) | 148(49+49+50) | 146(48+48+50) |
Jerome Kersey (Portland) | 92 (48+44) | 147 (50+48+49) | 140 (46+45+49) |
Terence Stansbury (Seattle) | 99(49+50) | 144 (49+45+50) | |
Clyde Drexler (Portland) | 92 (45+47) | 136 (46+45+45) | |
Ron Harper (Cleveland) | 83 (45+38) | ||
Johnny Dawkins (San Antonio) | 81 (37+44) | ||
Tom Chambers (Seattle) | 62 (41+21) | ||
Gerald Wilkins (New York) | 62 (41+21) |
1988
Ron Harper (Cleveland) was to participate but withdrew due to injury.
Player | First round | Semifinals | Finals |
---|---|---|---|
Michael Jordan (Chicago) | 94 (47+47) | 145(50+48+47) | 147(50+47+50) |
Dominique Wilkins (Atlanta) | 96(49+47) | 143 (49+47+47) | 145 (50+50+45) |
Clyde Drexler (Portland) | 88 (44+44) | 133 (45+42+46) | |
Otis Smith (Golden State) | 87 (40+47) | 109 (45+22+42) | |
Jerome Kersey (Portland) | 79 (41+38) | ||
Greg Anderson (San Antonio) | 76 (42+34) | ||
Spud Webb (Atlanta) | 52 (34+18) |
Player | First round | Semifinals | Finals |
---|---|---|---|
Kenny "Sky" Walker (New York) | 91.3 (42.5+48.8) | 96.4(46.9+49.5) | 148.1(48.9+49.6+49.6) |
Clyde Drexler (Portland) | 93.7 (46.6+47.1) | 95.0 (47.3+47.7) | 49.5 (24.5+25.0+ 0.0a) |
Spud Webb (Atlanta) | 94.5(46.8+47.7) | 91.8 (47.8+44.0) | |
Shelton Jones (Philadelphia) | 89.5 (44.1+45.4) | 90.6 (45.7+44.9) | |
Tim Perry (Phoenix) | 89.4 (44.4+45.0) | ||
Jerome Kersey (Portland) | 88.9 (44.9+44.0) | ||
Ron Harper (Cleveland) | 88.5 (41.7+46.8) | ||
Chris Morris (New Jersey) | 83.2 (41.1+42.1) |
aDrexler did not attempt his final dunk, as victory was out of reach.
Player | First round | Semifinals | Finals |
---|---|---|---|
Dominique Wilkins (Atlanta) | 96.3 (48.1+48.2) | 97.7 (48.0+49.7) | 146.8(47.9+49.7+49.2) |
Kenny Smith (Sacramento) | 93.0 (43.4+49.6) | 98.3(49.1+49.2) | 145.1 (48.1+49.8+47.2) |
Kenny "Sky" Walker (New York) | 95.2 (47.0+48.2) | 97.4 (49.5+47.9) | |
Shawn Kemp (Seattle) | 98.2(49.1+49.1) | 96.4 (47.6+48.8) | |
Scottie Pippen (Chicago) | 92.2 (47.2+45.0) | ||
Rex Chapman (Charlotte) | 92.1 (45.5+46.6) | ||
Billy Thompson (Miami) | 91.4 (47.7+43.7) | ||
Kenny Battle (Phoenix) | 85.8 (42.5+42.8) |
1991
Beginning with this year, final round competitors were allowed three dunks, with the two highest scores comprising the total.
Player | First round | Semifinals | Finals |
---|---|---|---|
Dee Brown (Boston) | 92.4 (48.2+44.2) | 98.0(49.6+48.4) | 97.7(48.1+49.6–46.4) |
Shawn Kemp (Seattle) | 95.8(47.6+48.2) | 95.6 (48.3+47.3) | 93.7 (48.0+45.7–44.3) |
Rex Chapman (Charlotte) | 95.2 (45.5+49.7) | 94.0 (48.0+46.0) | |
Kenny Smith (Houston) | 90.8 (48.5+42.3) | 87.9 (46.6+41.3) | |
Kenny Williams (Indiana) | 86.9 (42.3+44.6) | ||
Blue Edwards (Utah) | 84.3 (40.1+44.2) | ||
Otis Smith (Orlando) | 83.0 (41.2+41.8) | ||
Kendall Gill (Charlotte) | 81.0 (40.1+40.9) |
Player | First round | Semifinals | Finals |
---|---|---|---|
Cedric Ceballos (Phoenix) | 85.4 (43.1+42.3) | 90.4 (45.7+44.7) | 97.2(47.2+50.0–43.3) |
Larry Johnson (Charlotte) | 98.0(48.6+49.4) | 98.0(49.6+48.4) | 66.0 (33.5+32.5–0.0a) |
Nick Anderson (Orlando) | 88.6 (47.4+41.2) | 89.8 (46.0+43.8) | |
John Starks (New York) | 89.6 (42.6+47.0) | 87.9 (43.1+44.8) | |
Doug West (Minnesota) | 84.1 (44.3+39.8) | ||
Shawn Kemp (Seattle) | 81.4 (47.4+34.0) | ||
Stacey Augmon (Atlanta) | 79.5 (44.7+34.8) |
aJohnson did not attempt his final dunk, as victory was out of reach.
1993
The two highest score dunks of three in each round constituted the competitor's score.
Shawn Kemp (Seattle) was scheduled to compete but was injured.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Harold Miner (Miami) | 94.8(49.0+45.8–45.8) | 97.4(48.0+49.4–47.0) |
Clarence Weatherspoon (Philadelphia) | 87.5 (43.2+44.3–38.5) | 92.2 (44.7+47.5–27.5) |
Cedric Ceballos (Phoenix) | 87.3 (42.3+45.1–22.5) | 79.8 (42.3+37.5–24.5) |
David Benoit (Utah) | 85.8 (41.5+44.3–28.5) | |
Kenny Smith (Houston) | 85.0 (46.5+38.5–26.5) | |
Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf (Denver) | 80.8 (38.0+42.8–26.0) | |
Tim Perry (Philadelphia) | 70.0 (38.5+31.5–22.0) |
1994
In the first round, each competitor was allowed 90 seconds to do as many dunks as he chooses with one overall score. The final round score was the best of two dunks.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Isaiah Rider (Minnesota) | 46.8 | 49.0, 47.0 |
Robert Pack (Denver) | 42.0 | 43.8, 25.0 |
Shawn Kemp (Seattle) | 46.6 | 25.0, 25.0 |
Allan Houston (Detroit) | 41.5 | |
Antonio Davis (Indiana) | 40.0 | |
James Robinson (Portland) | 39.0 |
1995
This year, each competitor was allowed 90 seconds to do at least three dunks and then given an overall score in round one. In the final round, each competitor was allowed 60 seconds to do at least two dunks and then given an overall score.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Harold Miner (Miami) | 49.2 | 46.0 |
Isaiah Rider (Minnesota) | 44.6 | 34.0 |
Jamie Watson (Utah) | 40.4 | 26.0 |
Antonio Harvey (L.A. Lakers) | 35.2 | |
Tim Perry (Philadelphia) | 31.0 | |
Tony Dumas (Dallas) | 15.0 |
1996
Beginning this year, in the first round, each competitor was allowed 90 seconds to do as many dunks as he chooses with one overall score. The final round score was the best of two dunks.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Brent Barry (L.A. Clippers) | 45.5 | 8.0, 49.0 |
Michael Finley (Phoenix) | 45.0 | 7.0, 46.2 |
Greg Minor (Boston) | 41.0 | 2.0, 40.0 |
Jerry Stackhouse (Philadelphia) | 40.0 | |
Doug Christie (New York) | 39.5 | |
Darrell Armstrong (Orlando) | 25.5 |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Kobe Bryant (L.A. Lakers) | 37 | 49 |
Chris Carr (Minnesota) | 44 | 45 |
Michael Finley (Dallas) | 39 | 33 |
Ray Allen (Milwaukee) | 35 | |
Bob Sura (Cleveland) | 35 | |
Darvin Ham (Denver) | 36 |
1998
No competition was held.
1999
No competition was held as All-Star Weekend was not held due to the NBA's lockout.
2000
Beginning with this year, the two highest dunks in each round constituted the competitor's total score.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Vince Carter (Toronto) | 100(50,49,50) | 98(50+48) |
Steve Francis (Houston) | 95 (45,50,32) | 91 (43+48) |
Tracy McGrady (Toronto) | 99 (45,49,50) | 77 (45+32) |
Ricky Davis (Charlotte) | 88 (40,32,48) | |
Jerry Stackhouse (Detroit) | 83 (41,36,42) | |
Larry Hughes (Philadelphia) | 67 (30,30,37) |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Desmond Mason (Seattle) | 91 (42+49) | 89(45+44) |
DeShawn Stevenson (Utah) | 95(46+49) | 85 (38+47) |
Baron Davis (Charlotte) | 94 (45+49) | 77 (44+33) |
Stromile Swift (Vancouver) | 90 (45+45) | |
Jonathan Bender (Indiana) | 90 (46+44) | |
Corey Maggette (L.A. Clippers) | 88 (46+42) |
2002
A tournament format was adopted for this year.
Semifinals | Finals | ||||||||
1 | Desmond Mason (Seattle) | 84 (41,43,36) | |||||||
4 | Jason Richardson (Golden State) | 98(48,31,50) | |||||||
Jason Richardson | 85(36+49) | ||||||||
Gerald Wallace | 80 (44+36) | ||||||||
3 | Steve Francis (Houston) | 77 (31,40,37) | |||||||
2 | Gerald Wallace (Sacramento) | 84(41,43,36) |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Jason Richardson (Golden State) | 100(50+50) | 95(45+50) |
Desmond Mason (Seattle) | 90 (46+44) | 93 (50+43) |
Amar'e Stoudemire (Phoenix) | 79 (49+30) | |
Richard Jefferson (New Jersey) | 74 (37+37) |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Fred Jones (Indiana) | 92(50+42) | 86(50+36) |
Jason Richardson (Golden State) | 95(45+50) | 78 (45+33) |
Chris Andersen (Denver) | 88 (42+46) | |
Ricky Davis (Boston) | 76 (45+31) |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Josh Smith (Atlanta) | 95(45+50) | 100(50+50) |
Amar'e Stoudemire (Phoenix) | 95(45+50) | 87 (45+42) |
J. R. Smith (New Orleans) | 90 (45+45) | |
Chris Andersen (New Orleans) | 77 (41+36) |
Player | First round | Finals | Tie-break |
---|---|---|---|
Nate Robinson (New York) | 93 (49+44) | 94(44+50) | 47 |
Andre Iguodala (Philadelphia) | 95(45+50) | 94(50+44) | 46 |
Hakim Warrick (Memphis) | 86 (44+42) | ||
Josh Smith (Atlanta) | 81 (41+40) |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Gerald Green (Boston) | 95(48+47) | 91(41+50) |
Nate Robinson (New York) | 90 (45+45) | 80 (39+41) |
Dwight Howard (Orlando) | 85 (43+42) | |
Tyrus Thomas (Chicago) | 80 (37+43) |
2008
The final round was decided by fan voting via text messaging for the first time.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Dwight Howard (Orlando) | 100(50+50) | 78% |
Gerald Green (Minnesota) | 91 (46+45) | 22% |
Jamario Moon (Toronto) | 90 (46+44) | |
Rudy Gay (Memphis) | 85 (37+48) |
2009
The final round was decided by fan voting via text messaging.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Nate Robinson (New York) | 87 (46+41) | 52% |
Dwight Howard (Orlando) | 100(50+50) | 48% |
J. R. Smith (Denver) | 85 (43+42) | |
Rudy Fernández (Portland) | 84 (42+42) |
2010
The final round was decided by fan voting via text messaging.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Nate Robinson (New York) | 89 (44+45) | 51% |
DeMar DeRozan (Toronto) | 92(42+50) | 49% |
Gerald Wallace (Charlotte) | 78 (38+40) | |
Shannon Brown (L.A. Lakers) | 78 (37+41) |
2011
The final round was decided by fan voting via text messaging.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Blake Griffin (L.A. Clippers) | 95 (49+46) | 68% |
JaVale McGee (Washington) | 99(50+49) | 32% |
DeMar DeRozan (Toronto) | 94 (44+50) | |
Serge Ibaka (Oklahoma) | 90 (45+45) |
2012
The format for this season was changed so that each participant had 3 dunks, and the results would be entirely decided by fan voting online, via text messaging, and (for the first time) via Twitter.
Player | Voting results |
---|---|
Jeremy Evans (Utah) | 29% |
Chase Budinger (Houston) | 28% |
Paul George (Indiana) | 24% |
Derrick Williams (Minnesota) | 19% |
2013
The final round was decided by fan voting via text messaging.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Terrence Ross (Toronto) | 99(50+49) | 58% |
Jeremy Evans (Utah) | 90 (47+43) | 42% |
Eric Bledsoe (L.A. Clippers) | 89 (39+50) | |
Kenneth Faried (Denver) | 89 (39+50) | |
Gerald Green (Indiana) | 83 (50+33) | |
James White (New York) | 77 (45+32) |
2014
A team format was adopted this year. The first round was a Freestyle Round, with the winning team choosing the order of dunkers for the Battle Round. The Battle Round was then composed of one-on-one "battles", with the first team to three victories being the champion.
John Wall was voted Dunker of the Night.
Division | Members | Result |
---|---|---|
East | Paul George, Indiana Pacers Terrence Ross, Toronto Raptors John Wall , Washington Wizards | Won |
West | Harrison Barnes, Golden State Warriors Damian Lillard, Portland Trail Blazers Ben McLemore, Sacramento Kings | Lost |
Division | Player | Result |
---|---|---|
East | Terrence Ross, Toronto Raptors | Won |
West | Damian Lillard, Portland Trail Blazers | Lost |
East | Paul George, Indiana Pacers | Won |
West | Harrison Barnes, Golden State Warriors | Lost |
East | John Wall , Washington Wizards | Won |
West | Ben McLemore, Sacramento Kings | Lost |
2015
This year saw the return of the voting style that was last used in 2007.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Zach LaVine (Minnesota) | 100(50+50) | 94(45+49) |
Victor Oladipo (Orlando) | 89 (50+39) | 75 (31+44) |
Mason Plumlee (Brooklyn) | 76 (40+36) | |
Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee) | 65 (30+35) |
Player | First round | Finals | Tie-break 1 | Tie-break 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Zach LaVine (Minnesota) | 99(50+49) | 100 (50+50) | 50 | 50 |
Aaron Gordon (Orlando) | 94 (45+49) | 100 (50+50) | 50 | 47 |
Andre Drummond (Detroit) | 75 (36+39) | |||
Will Barton (Denver) | 74 (44+30) |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Glenn Robinson III (Indiana) | 91 (50+41) | 94(44+50) |
Derrick Jones Jr. (Phoenix) | 95(45+50) | 87 (37+50) |
DeAndre Jordan (L.A. Clippers) | 84 (41+43) | |
Aaron Gordon (Orlando) | 72 (38+34) |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Donovan Mitchell (Utah) [25] | 98(48+50) | 98(50+48) |
Larry Nance Jr. (Cleveland) | 93 (44+49) | 96 (46+50) |
Dennis Smith Jr. (Dallas) | 89 (39+50) | |
Victor Oladipo (Indiana) | 71 (31+40) |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Hamidou Diallo (Oklahoma City) [26] | 98(48+50) | 88(43+45) |
Dennis Smith Jr. (New York) | 95 (45+50) | 85 (35+50) |
Miles Bridges (Charlotte) | 83 (33+50) | |
John Collins (Atlanta) | 82 (40+42) |
Player | First round | Finals | Tie-break 1 | Tie-break 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Derrick Jones Jr. (Miami) | 96 (46+50) | 100 (50+50) | 50 | 48 |
Aaron Gordon (Orlando) | 100 (50+50) | 100 (50+50) | 50 | 47 |
Pat Connaughton (Milwaukee) | 95 (45+50) | |||
Dwight Howard (L.A. Lakers) | 90 (41+49) |
2021
The final round was decided by judges.
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Anfernee Simons (Portland) | 95(46+49) | 3 |
Obi Toppin (New York) | 94 (48+46) | 2 |
Cassius Stanley (Indiana) | 81 (44+37) | DNQ |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Obi Toppin (New York) | 90(44+46) | 92(45+47) |
Juan Toscano-Anderson (Golden State) | 87 (44+43) | 69 (39+30) |
Jalen Green (Houston) | 83 (38+45) | |
Cole Anthony (Orlando) | 70 (40+30) |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Mac McClung (Philadelphia) | 99.8 (50+49.8) | 100 (50+50) |
Trey Murphy III (New Orleans) | 96 (46.6+49.4) | 98 (48.8+49.2) |
Jericho Sims (New York) | 95.4 (47.6+47.8) | |
Kenyon Martin Jr. (Houston) | 93.2 (46+47.2) |
Player | First round | Finals |
---|---|---|
Mac McClung (Orlando) | 97.4 (48+49.4) | 98.8 (48.8+50) |
Jaylen Brown (Boston) | 96.4 (48.8+47.6) | 97.8 (48.6+49.2) |
Jaime Jaquez (Miami) | 94.2 (47.4+46.8) | |
Jacob Toppin (New York) | 95.0 (47.8+47.2) |
Historically, the dunk contest drew some mild criticisms. One is that players who often compete in these contests are seen as dunkers only (with the notable exceptions of Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, and Julius Erving), which is why notable high flying athletes like Shawn Marion and LeBron James have sometimes refused to participate.[ citation needed ] High-profile players such as Dwyane Wade and Charles Barkley have also declined to participate citing it as an unnecessary risk to injury.[ citation needed ] In the 2000 NBA Slam Dunk Contest, Tracy McGrady injured his wrist while performing a dunk.[ citation needed ] Also in the 1995 NBA Slam Dunk Contest, Tony Dumas hurt his knee while performing his "Texas Twister" dunk.[ citation needed ] Although a longtime critic, LeBron James said he would perform in the 2010 Slam Dunk Contest. This decision was made after watching the 2009 dunk contest when Dwight Howard and Nate Robinson went at it. However, he withdrew his statement once the All-Star Weekend came around.[ citation needed ]
The 2006 NBA Slam Dunk Competition between Nate Robinson and Andre Iguodala drew much criticism because players were not penalized for missing a dunk attempt. Consequently, Robinson attempted a single dunk 14 times before completing it. [27] Prior to the 2007 competition, the NBA changed a few rules to prevent excessive dunk attempts. Each participant has two minutes to complete their dunk (with a maximum of 3 attempts). At the end of the two minutes allotted, they then have their number of dunk attempts limited to one.
Many people, including 2010 winner Nate Robinson, thought that the 2011 contest was rigged to allow up-and-coming star Blake Griffin to win and that runner-up JaVale McGee deserved to win. [28] [29] [30] [31] It was even disputed if Griffin even legitimately qualified for the finals since his final dunk got a perfect score but was basically a copy of DeMar DeRozan's first dunk with a lower degree of difficulty. Ben Maller of Fox Sports Radio reported that a media advisory sent out by the NBA over an hour before the 2011 Slam Dunk Contest began already referring to Blake Griffin as the winner. [32]
The American Basketball Association (ABA) was a men's professional basketball major league from 1967 to 1976. The ABA merged into the National Basketball Association (NBA) in 1976, resulting in four ABA teams joining the NBA and the introduction of the NBA 3-point shot in 1979.
A slam dunk, also simply known as a dunk, is a type of basketball shot that is performed when a player jumps in the air, controls the ball above the horizontal plane of the rim, and scores by shoving the ball directly through the basket with one or both hands. It is a type of field goal that is worth two points. Such a shot was known as a "dunk shot" until the term "slam dunk" was coined by former Los Angeles Lakers announcer Chick Hearn.
Julius Winfield Erving II, commonly known by the nickname Dr. J, is an American former professional basketball player. Erving helped legitimize the American Basketball Association (ABA), and he was the best-known player in that league when it merged into the National Basketball Association (NBA) after the 1975–1976 season.
Jacques Dominique Wilkins is an American former professional basketball player who primarily played for the Atlanta Hawks of the National Basketball Association (NBA). Regarded as one of the greatest small forwards in NBA history, Wilkins was a nine-time NBA All-Star, a seven-time All-NBA Team member and is widely viewed as one of the most acrobatic slam dunkers in NBA history, earning the nickname "the Human Highlight Film". In October 2021, he was honored as one of the league's greatest players of all time by being named to the NBA 75th Anniversary Team. Wilkins is the leader in most years with the Hawks for 12 seasons, the most games played with 882 in Hawks franchise history, the most minutes played with 32,545 in Hawks franchise history, the most career points in Hawks franchise history with 23,292 points, and the most points per game with 26.4 in Hawks franchise history.
Anthony Jerome "Spud" Webb is an American former professional basketball player. A 5 ft 6 in (168 cm) point guard, Webb played college basketball at Midland College and at North Carolina State University. He then played for four teams in the National Basketball Association (NBA) in a professional career that spanned from 1985 to 1998. Webb also played professional basketball in the United States Basketball League, in the Continental Basketball Association, and in Italy.
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Nathaniel Cornelius Robinson is an American former professional basketball player and professional boxer. Born in Seattle, Robinson played college basketball for the University of Washington in Seattle and was the 21st pick in the 2005 NBA draft. The 5-foot-9-inch (1.75 m) point guard played in the NBA for the New York Knicks, Boston Celtics, Oklahoma City Thunder, Golden State Warriors, Chicago Bulls, Denver Nuggets, Los Angeles Clippers, and New Orleans Pelicans. Robinson became the NBA's first three-time slam dunk champion in 2010.
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