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词条 1991 NBA All-Star Game
释义

  1. All-Star Game

     Rosters 

  2. All-Star Weekend

     Legends Classic  Rosters  Slam Dunk Contest  Three-Point Shootout 

  3. References

{{Infobox NBA All-Star Game
| name = 1991 NBA All-Star Game
| image = File:1991_NBA_All-Star_Game.gif
| visitor = West
| home = East
| visitor_total = 114
| home_total = 116
| visitor_qtr1 = 23
| visitor_qtr2 = 35
| visitor_qtr3 = 34
| visitor_qtr4 = 22
| home_qtr1 = 22
| home_qtr2 = 45
| home_qtr3 = 27
| home_qtr4 = 22
| date = February 10, 1991
| arena = Charlotte Coliseum
| city = Charlotte, North Carolina
| referee = Ed Rush
Mike Mathis
Lee Jones
| attendance = 23,530
| MVP = Charles Barkley
| anthem = Bruce Hornsby, Branford Marsalis
| halftime =
| 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)
| prev_year = 1990
| next_year = 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, United States. This game was the 41st edition of the NBA All-Star Game and was played during the 1990–91 NBA season.

The All-Star Weekend began on Saturday, February 9, 1991, with the 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.

Rosters

{{col-begin}}{{col-2}}
Eastern Conference All-Stars
Pos. Player Team Appearance
Starters
G Michael Jordan Chicago Bulls 7th
G Joe Dumars Detroit Pistons 2nd
F Charles Barkley Philadelphia 76ers 5th
F Bernard King Washington Bullets 4th
C Patrick Ewing New York Knicks 5th
Reserves
F Dominique Wilkins Atlanta Hawks 6th
G Ricky Pierce Milwaukee Bucks 1st
G Hersey Hawkins Philadelphia 76ers 1st
F Kevin McHale Boston Celtics 7th
C Brad Daugherty Cleveland Cavaliers 3rd
G Alvin Robertson Milwaukee Bucks 4th
C Robert Parish Boston Celtics 9th
Fdnp|DNP}} Boston Celtics 11th
Gdnp|DNP}} Detroit Pistons 10th
Head coach: Chris Ford (Boston Celtics)
{{col-2}}
Western Conference All-Stars
Pos. Player Team Appearance
Starters
G Magic Johnson Los Angeles Lakers 11th
G Kevin Johnson Phoenix Suns 2nd
F Chris Mullin Golden State Warriors 3rd
F Karl Malone Utah Jazz 4th
C David Robinson San Antonio Spurs 2nd
Reserves
F James Worthy Los Angeles Lakers 6th
G Clyde Drexler Portland Trail Blazers 5th
C Kevin Duckworth Portland Trail Blazers 2nd
F Tom Chambers Phoenix Suns 4th
G Terry Porter Portland Trail Blazers 1st
G Tim Hardaway Golden State Warriors 1st
G John Stockton Utah Jazz 3rd
Head coach: Rick Adelman (Portland Trail Blazers)
{{col-end}}{{note|dnp|DNP}}Even though they were selected, Isiah Thomas and Larry Bird couldn't play due to injuries. Hersey Hawkins was selected as Bird's replacement, and no replacement was named for Thomas.

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

{{col-begin}}{{col-2}}
Eastern Conference Legends
Pos. Player Age Last NBA season
C Tommy Burleson 38 1980–81 (Atlanta Hawks)
F/C Dave Cowens 42 1982–83 (Milwaukee Bucks)
F/G Dave DeBusschere 50 1973–74 (New York Knicks)
G Phil Ford 35 1984–85 (Houston Rockets)
F Bobby Jones 39 1985–86 (Philadelphia 76ers)
F/C Jerry Lucas 50 1973–74 (New York Knicks)
F/G Jack Marin 46 1976–77 (Chicago Bulls)
F/G Oscar Robertson 52 1973–74 (Milwaukee Bucks)
F/G Charlie Scott 42 1979–80 (Denver Nuggets)
F/G David Thompson 36 1983–84 (Seattle SuperSonics)
Head coach: Frank McGuire
{{col-2}}
Western Conference Legends
Pos. Player Age Last NBA season
F Rick Barry 46 1979–80 (Houston Rockets)
G Phil Chenier 40 1980–81 (Golden State Warriors)
F/G George Gervin 38 1985–86 (Chicago Bulls)
C Artis Gilmore 41 1987–88 (Boston Celtics)
F/C Maurice Lucas 38 1987–88 (Portland Trail Blazers)
G Calvin Murphy 42 1982–83 (Houston Rockets)
F/G Sam Jones 57 1968–69 (Boston Celtics)
C Clifford Ray 42 1980–81 (Golden State Warriors)
F/C Dan Roundfield 37 1986–87 (Washington Bullets)
F/G Jamaal Wilkes 37 1985–86 (Los Angeles Clippers)
Head coach: Jack Ramsay
{{col-end}}

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 dunk 2nd dunk Total 1st dunk 2nd dunk Total 1st dunk 2nd dunk 3rd dunk Total
G Dee Brown Boston Celtics48.244.292.449.648.498.048.146.449.697.7
F/C Shawn Kemp Seattle SuperSonics47.648.295.848.347.395.644.348.045.793.7
G Rex Chapman Charlotte Hornets45.549.795.249.046.094.0Did not advance
G Kenny Smith Houston Rockets48.542.390.846.641.387.9Did not advance
F Kenny Williams Indiana Pacers42.344.686.9Did not advance
F/G Blue Edwards Utah Jazz40.144.284.3Did not advance
F/G Otis Smith Orlando Magic41.241.883.0Did not advance
G Kendall Gill Charlotte Hornets40.140.981.0Did 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. Player Team First Round Semifinal Final
G Craig Hodges Chicago Bulls202417
G Terry Porter Portland Trail Blazers15{{ref|tie|TIE}}1412
F Dennis Scott Orlando Magic1612Did not advance
F/G Danny Ainge Portland Trail Blazers1811Did not advance
G Tim Hardaway Golden State Warriors15{{ref|tie|TIE}}Did not advance
G Hersey Hawkins Philadelphia 76ers14Did not advance
F Glen Rice Miami Heat9Did not advance
F/G Clyde Drexler Portland Trail Blazers8Did not advance
{{note|tie|TIE}} Terry Porter and Tim Hardaway broke the tie in a 30-second shooting round.

References

1. ^NBA ALL-STAR FACTS, Chicago Sun-Times, February 8, 1991
2. ^[https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/USAToday/access/56132931.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT Celts' Brown slams point home;Slam-dunk contest results], USA Today, February 11, 1991
{{NBA All-Star Games}}{{1990–91 NBA season by team}}{{NBA on NBC}}{{NBA Radio Network}}

4 : National Basketball Association All-Star Game|1990–91 NBA season|1991 in sports in North Carolina|GMA Network television specials

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