Lega Basket All Star Game
The Lega Basket All Star Game, known for sponsorship reasons as the Beko All Star Game, is an all-star game organised annually by Lega Basket, in conjunction with RCS Sport and the Italian Basketball Federation.
It brings together a selection of players from the Lega Basket Serie A (LBA), the highest-tier professional basketball league in Italy, to play between themselves, or against another opponent.
First held in 1982, the event has seen a fluctuating history, with numerous changes of format through the years, including the participation of the senior men's Italian national team.
History
The Italian Basketball Federation had organised an All Star Game in 1980, to celebrate Italy's silver medal at the 1980 Summer Olympics. 12 May 1982, saw the first All Star Game organised by the Lega Basket, the entity responsible for organising the top two professional leagues in Italy, the first-tier Serie A and second-tier Serie A2.
Two teams from the respective divisions were chosen by the public, at the league's games a few weeks before the game, also selecting the coaches for the game played at the Palasport di San Siro in Milan.[1]
For the November 1992 edition, the event was termed the All Star Game ULEB and was organised in partnership with the Spanish ACB League's organizing body, the ACB, seeing a squad from each league compete in Madrid. The formula was repeated the next year, this time in Rome.
The 1994 edition of the All Star Game ULEB, saw a team from the top-tier French Pro A League also take part.[2] The three squads, mostly made up of foreign players, played each other in games of a single 20 minute quarter in Valencia's Fuente de San Luis.[3]
The senior men's Italian national team has participated in a number of All Star Games. Originally, the squad of Serie A based players was very similar to the main squad, with only one player (the Spain-based Nikola Radulović) from the EuroBasket 2003 bronze medal team absent for the December 2003 edition.[4]
In more recent editions, with the departure of a number of players abroad (to the NBA for example), the Italy squads have been more experimental, and have consisted mostly of reserve players and promising players.[5][6]
The 2014 and 2015 editions saw the absence of EA7 Emporio Armani Milano players, as the club was involved in Euroleague games during the same period.[6][7]
Editions
Season | Date | Location | Result | MVP |
---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 May 1982 | Palasport di San Siro, Milan | A2 Caselli 133-125 A1 Tempest | Mike D'Antoni / Abdul Jeelani |
| 9 February 1983 | Caserta | A1 Ocean Star 137-121 A2 Malaguti | Clyde Bradshaw |
| 29 February 1984 | Treviso | A1 S.O.S. 140-127 A2 Tempest | Stan Pietkiewicz |
| 13 February 1985 | Florence | A1 Liberti 149-143 A2 Nuova Stampa | Joe Bryant |
| 18 December 1985 | Rome | A2 E.M.M. 120-112 A1 Riccadonna | Joe Bryant (2) |
| 17 December 1986 | Rome | A1 Reebok 177-147 A2 Reebok | - |
| 21 November 1987 | Rome | A1 Reebok 157-154 A2 Reebok | Oscar Schmidt |
| 26 November 1988 | Rome | A1 Reebok 167-143 A2 Reebok | Micheal Ray Richardson |
| 25 November 1989 | Rome | South Reebok 178-166 North Reebok | Wes Matthews |
| 1 December 1990 | Rome | South Paluani 182-176 North Paluani | Michael Cooper |
| 16 November 1991 | Rome | Italy 136-122 Paluani All Stars | Dino Rađa |
| 14 November 1992 | Madrid | All Star Spain Fiat 136-123 All Star Italy Polti | Arvydas Sabonis |
| 13 November 1993 | Rome | All Star Italy Polti 135-131 All Star Spain | Micheal Ray Richardson (2) |
| 14 November 1994 | Fuente de San Luis, Valencia | All Star Italy 58-54 All Star France All Star Spain 59-43 All Star France All Star Italy 53-48 All Star Spain | Aleksandar Đorđević |
| 24 February 1996 | Rome | Bostik All Stars 113-112 Italy | Orlando Woolridge |
| 22 February 1997 | Pesaro | Bostik All Stars 131-127 Italy | Mike Iuzzolino |
| 30 November 1997 | Florence | Bostik All Stars 121-116 Italy | Thurl Bailey |
| 29 November 1998 | Naples | Bison All Stars 167-145 Uhu All Stars | Vincenzo Esposito |
| 27 November 1999 | PalaMalaguti, Casalecchio di Reno | Italy 99-81 Champion All Stars | Andrea Meneghin |
| 25 January 2001 | PalaTrieste, Trieste | Italy 101-83 Champion All Stars | Gregor Fučka |
| 13 December 2003 | PalaFiumara, Genoa | All Stars 106-99 Italy | Maurice Evans |
| 11 December 2004 | PalaRuffini, Turin | Italy 100-98 All Stars | James Singleton |
| 11 December 2005 | PalaMalaguti, Casalecchio di Reno | AIL All Star 112-101 Quadrifoglio Verde All Star | Carlton Myers |
| 23 December 2006 | PalaRuffini, Turin | Italy 96-73 Champion All Stars | Massimo Bulleri |
| 13 March 2011 | Mediolanum Forum, Milan | Italy 90-88 All Stars | Stefano Mancinelli |
| 11 March 2012 | Adriatic Arena, Pesaro | Italy 91-85 All Stars | Daniel Hackett |
| 16 December 2012 | BiellaForum, Biella | Italy 107-92 All Stars | Stefano Gentile |
| 13 April 2014 | PalaRossini, Ancona | Italy 76-59 All Stars | Stefano Gentile (2) |
| 17 January 2015 | PalaOlimpia, Verona | Named Sport Team 146-143 Dolomiti Energia Team | Christian Eyenga |
| 10 January 2016 | PalaTrento, Trento | Canvit Team 154-148 Dolomiti Energia Team | Alex Kirk |
Three-Point Contest
The Three-point contest (Italian: gara del tiro da tre punti), known as the Festina Three Points Contest for sponsorship reasons, was first organised during the December 1986 edition, Oscar Schmidt is the record-holder with four wins, adding an unofficial title in December 2003 after beating the official winner Michele Mian in an extra contest.[9] The latest (2015) edition saw the contestants try to score as many three-point field goals as possible from five shooting positions around the three-point line, with each position consisting of a rack with four balls worth three-points and a special "Money Ball" worth six, for a total of twenty five shots in one minute, with the highest score crowning the winner.[10]
Results | ||
---|---|---|
Season | Winner | Runner-up |
| Bob McAdoo | - |
| Oscar Schmidt | - |
| Oscar Schmidt (2) | - |
| Oscar Schmidt (3) | - |
| Michael Cooper | - |
| Alessandro Fantozzi | - |
| Danko Cvjetićanin | - |
| Oscar Schmidt (4) | - |
| Aleksandar Đorđević | - |
| Steve Henson | - |
| Alessandro Abbio | - |
| Henry Williams | - |
| Steve Burtt | - |
| Alessandro Abbio (2) | - |
| Giacomo Galanda | - |
| Michele Mian | Matt Bonner |
| Giacomo Galanda (2) | - |
| Dante Calabria | - |
| Danilo Gallinari | - |
| Nicolás Mazzarino | - |
| Travis Diener | Jeff Viggiano |
| Carlton Myers | - |
| Drake Diener | - |
| Andy Rautins | Marco Spanghero |
| Krunoslav Simon | Tyrus McGee |
Slam dunk contest
The slam dunk contest (Italian: gara delle schiacciate), known as the Openjobmetis Slam Dunk Contest for sponsorship reasons, was first organised by Spain's ACB during the November 1992 and 1994 editions played in that country. The first time it was organised by Lega Basket was during the December 2005 edition, dunk specialist James White is the record-holder with two wins (Chandler Thompson won both ACB editions).[11] White refused to defend his title in 2014, having decided to retire from dunk contests following his last place in the 2013 NBA Slam Dunk Contest.[12] It formerly saw the contestants each have two dunk attempts, with the pair performing the best judged dunks reaching the final, where another couple of attempts crowned the winner.[13] The 2015 edition saw the contestants separated into two teams, consisting of players DeQuan Jones and Tony Mitchell each paired with a member of the Da Move freestyle group, whose five attempts each were judged by a panel of experts and the public[10]
Results | ||
---|---|---|
Season | Winner | Runner-up |
| Chandler Thompson | Antonio Davis |
| Chandler Thompson (2) | Darrell Armstrong |
| Pervis Pasco | - |
| Paul McPherson | - |
| James White | - |
| James White (2) | Aubrey Coleman |
| Tommaso Raspino | - |
| Achille Polonara | - |
| Tony Mitchell / Kader Kam | DeQuan Jones / Vincent van Sliedregt |
Awudu Abass | Micah Downs / Trent Lockett |
Family Shootout
The Grundig sponsored Family Shootout was a one-off event organised during the April 2014 edition. It saw four pairs of current or former professional players from the same family contest successive rounds of four shots from different positions.[14] The father-son pair of Nando and Stefano Gentile prevailed in the final over brothers Michele and Luca Vitali.[15]
Under-23 game
The December 2003 edition saw a game played between mostly (but not exclusively) under-23 Italian players in view of judging their potential as part of the Belgrade 2005 project by the national team organisation. Andrea Michelori top-scored with 28 points in the game between Blues and Whites that finished 90-72.[16][17]
References
- ↑ "Storia della Lega Basket" [Lega Basket history] (PDF) (in Italian). Lega Basket. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "Storia della Lega Basket" [Lega Basket history] (PDF) (in Italian). Lega Basket. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ Casanova, Juan Antonio (13 November 1994). "Extranjero de Italia, Francia y España juegan por el espectáculo" [Foreigners of Italy, France and Spain play for show]. hemeroteca.laVanguardia.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "Mian nell'Italia all'All star game" [Mian with Italy at the All Star Game]. LegaBasket.it (in Italian). MessageroVeneto. 2 December 2003. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "Italy mini training camp boosts youth". FIBAEurope.com. 11 April 2014. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- 1 2 Valenti, Stefano (12 April 2014). "Basket, ecco l'All Star Game: Pianigiani con un'Italia di giovani" [Basketball, here's the All Star Game: Pianigiani with an Italy of youngsters]. Repubblica.it (in Italian). Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "Basket, All Star Game senza i milanesi impegnati in Eurolega" [Basketball, All Star Game without the Milanese caught up in the Euroleague]. Gazzetta.it (in Italian). 5 January 2015. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "Beko All Star Game 2015, il Named Sport Team batte il Dolomiti Energia Team 146 a 143" [Beko All Star Game 2015, Named Sport Team beats Dolomiti Energia Team 146 to 143]. PallacanestroReggiana.it (in Italian). 17 January 2015. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "ASG, Oscar batte Mian" [ASG, Oscar beats Mian]. LegaBasket.it (in Italian). 13 December 2003. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- 1 2 Valente, Matteo (16 January 2015). ""All star game", partita fra le stelle del campionato italiano di basket" [«All star game», match between the stars of the Italian basketball league]. CorrieredelVeneto.Corriere.it (in Italian). Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "Historia del All Star – concurso de mates" [All Star History – dunk contest]. ACB.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "Drew Gordon alla gara delle schiacciate" [Drew Gordon at the dunk contest]. LaNuovaSardegna.it (in Italian). 29 March 2014. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "TIM All Star Game: i partecipanti alla gara delle schiacciate" [TIM All Star Game: the slam dunk contest participants]. LegaBasket.it (in Italian). 7 December 2005. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "Presentato a Torino il TIM All Star Game" [The TIM All Star Game was presented in Turin]. LegaBasket.it (in Italian). 30 November 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "L'Italia comincia bene il 2014 all'All star game" [Italy starts 2014 well at the All Star Game]. MessageroVeneto.it (in Italian). 14 April 2014. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ Morelli, Valerio (3 December 2003). "Un po' di Snaidero sbarca nel basket Usa" [A bit of Snaidero comes to American basketball]. GElocal.it/MessageroVeneto (in Italian). Udine. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
- ↑ "ASG, Progetto Belgrado 2005: vincono gli Azzurri" [ASG, Belgrade 2005 project: the Blues win]. LegaBasket.it (in Italian). 13 December 2003. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
External links
- All Star Game boxscores by Lega Basket (Italian) Retrieved 12 September 2015
- All Star Game team and individual results by Lega Basket (Italian) Retrieved 12 September 2015