By Christopher Harris
On Sunday February 20, 2011 one of the most exciting exhibition games took place in Los Angeles, California for the fifth time, the National Basketball Association (NBA) All-Star Game. This game marked the 60th year anniversary for the event. The crowd of 17,163 had no idea of what to expect from this year’s game, but Kobe Bryant, Lebron James, Kevin Durant, and the remaining West and East All-Star teams gave them their monies worth. A few entertainers attended the historic game as well, which include Jack Nicholson, Stevie Wonder, Beyonce, and Justin Bieber just to name few.
The West All-Star starters included Kobe Bryant, who received the top number of overall All-Star votes, Carmelo Anthony, Kevin Durant, Chris Paul, and Yao Ming. However, Yao Ming was replaced later by San Antonio Spurs center, Tim Duncan. The West All-Star reserves included Manu Ginobili, Pau Gasol, Dirk Nowitzki, Deron Willams, and three first time selections; Kevin Love, Russell Westbrook, and exceptional rookie Blake Griffin. The head coach is San Antonio Spurs head coach, Greg Popovich. The East All Star Starters were lead by Dwight Howard, who received the most All-Star votes from their conference, Derrick Rose, Amar’e Stoudemire, Dwyane Wade, and the spectacular Lebron James. To round it out on the East, the reserves included Ray Allen, Chris Bosh, Kevin Garnett, Al Horford, Rajon Rondo, Paul Pierce, and Joe Johnson. The head coach is the Boston Celtics head coach, Doc Rivers.
In the third quarter the West began to pull away and widen their halftime lead over the East. In that third period Kobe Bryant made two fantastic plays back to back. After leaking out on a fast break one on one with Lebron James and slamming it home for his third highlight dunk of the night, Kobe then nailed a 3 point basket to slow down the East’s push to get back into the game. Following those two huge plays from, Bryant the West took an eleven point lead and stretched it from eleven to seventeen by the end of the third quarter.

This was Kobe Bryant’s thirteenth straight selection to the NBA All-Star game. He ended the game with 37 points, 14 rebounds and three steals to close out an impressive performance. Bryant also earned his fourth NBA All-Star Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award. That ties him with NBA Hall of Famer, Bob Pettit for the most All-Star MVP awards in NBA history.
Sources:

Christopher,
ReplyDeleteThanks for a great blog. I used to be in love with basketball until my children came along. It's good you are so interested in one sport and one team...I like how you recapped a important game for us. I had no idea this game even took place. I appreciate your love for sports. good writing. I look forward to hearing more.
Ali
You gave an amazing description of the game. I actually ended up watching most of the game and I normally do not watch basketball games. I found your blog to be very interesting and you really showed your love for the sport. I am very interested in reading more of your blog down the road. Keep up the great work.
ReplyDeleteChristopher, this reads just like something in a sports section of a newspaper. Well-done. The organization was logical with the game structure, and you include so many excellent specifics. It's like I was watching it myself. Well-done.
ReplyDeleteThanks everyone for the positive feedback. It makes me feel like the effort I put towards the blog was well worth it. I'm glad you enjoyed reading and I will do my best to continue to provide great work for you to read.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Chris
Chris,
ReplyDeleteGreat job on the description. I agree that this is just as well written as an article you might see in the newspaper. Your writing really shows how passionate you are about this. Great job.
Samantha Cribbs