NBA All-Star weekend arrives with LeBron James set for special recognition

AP file photo by Mark J. Terrill / The Los Angeles Lakers' LeBron James, right, and the Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo, left, are captains for this weekend's NBA All-Star Game in Salt Lake City, but they won't pick their teams until Sunday, shortly before the matchup at the home of the Utah Jazz.
AP file photo by Mark J. Terrill / The Los Angeles Lakers' LeBron James, right, and the Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo, left, are captains for this weekend's NBA All-Star Game in Salt Lake City, but they won't pick their teams until Sunday, shortly before the matchup at the home of the Utah Jazz.

SALT LAKE CITY — If so inclined, and if fellow captain LeBron James was to cooperate with his own selections, Giannis Antetokounmpo could pick Luka Doncic, Joel Embiid, Nikola Jokic and Lauri Markkanen to play on his team Sunday night.

Imagine that: an all-international starting lineup for an NBA All-Star Game.

It's one of the many possibilities for this weekend's events in Salt Lake City.

NBA All-Star weekend is almost here, with many of the principals arriving in Utah on Thursday and a few more set to arrive Friday in time for the official three-day lineup of festivities to begin. More than 60 players from the NBA and its developmental G League will be part of the showcase — with the main event Sunday following the dunk, 3-point and skills competitions on Saturday, as well as the Jordan Rising Stars three-game mini tournament for first- and second-year players on Friday.

"You can never take this for granted," said Antetokounmpo, the 28-year-old Milwaukee Bucks forward who was born in Greece and is heading to his seventh All-Star Game. "You never know how many times more you're going to be an All-Star. I don't take this for granted. And by the way, thanks for all the fans who voted for me as captain. I don't take that for granted. We have to go there, have fun, enjoy the time with our kids."

Of the 10 starters Sunday night, barring any changes to the rosters because of injuries, six were born outside the United States, which is a record. The nine internationally born All-Stars ties a record.

It's a homecoming of sorts for Donovan Mitchell, the Cleveland Cavaliers guard who spent the first five years of his NBA career in Utah until he was traded last summer. The four-time All-Star still has deep ties to Utah; he's throwing a comedy show for charity this weekend to benefit Kearns High School, a place that he worked closely with when he played for the Jazz.

"You learn to appreciate those moments," said Mitchell, who had to miss last year's All-Star Game in Cleveland because of an upper respiratory problem. "You learn to appreciate those things because they saw me grow up. I was a young kid, just happy to be drafted and then given a role to be one of the leaders on the team early, making the playoffs, having big moments, having struggles, ups and downs. And to grow into who I am today, I'm forever grateful, forever thankful.

"So to be there my first time as a starter, back on the team that I was a fan of as a kid, there's just so many different things you can point to."

This is the first All-Star appearance for Anthony Edwards of the Minnesota Timberwolves, De'Aaron Fox of the Sacramento Kings, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of the Oklahoma City Thunder, Tyrese Haliburton of the Indiana Pacers, Jaren Jackson Jr. of the Memphis Grizzlies and Markkanen of the host Jazz.

Gilgeous-Alexander is also among the international group, but the Toronto native finished his prep basketball career at Chattanooga's Hamilton Heights Christian Academy before spending one season with the Kentucky Wildcats and getting drafted 11th overall in 2018.

It's the 19th All-Star selection for James, the 38-year-old Los Angeles Lakers star. And this one will be like none other, with the NBA set to pay tribute to him with a halftime ceremony Sunday night for passing Kareem Abdul-Jabbar earlier this month as the league's career scoring leader. The NBA started eyeing All-Star weekend as the right time to properly fete James a few weeks ago when it looked like the timing would be right for him to break the record before the events in Salt Lake City, and then the plans began in earnest after he moved into the No. 1 spot last week.

James said he'll be doing some studying for the Lakers' stretch run over the break, but he said he's also looking forward to some time off. He missed three games with foot and ankle injuries, then returned and played only 29 minutes in the Lakers' win Wednesday over the New Orleans Pelicans, so he should be fully recharged for the last 23 games.

"I've got a game on Sunday, but we don't play again until Thursday," James said of the Lakers. "It'll be great not only for me, but for the rest of the group as well."

And for host Utah, this has been 30 years in the making. The most recent time the league's midseason showcase — though in this case, midseason is more like three-quarters of the way through the schedule, with all teams having from 21 to 25 of their 82 regular-season games remaining — came to Salt Lake City was 1993.

"This is a really important moment for our state to shine," Utah Jazz owner Ryan Smith said. "I mean, it's been 30 years. To give you an idea of what the difference is, 10 times the hotel rooms needed to be secured ... and we're ready for it."

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