07/06/2023

For the second year in a row, leading All-Star vote-getter LeBron James drafted Anthony Davis — now his teammate on the Lakers — first overall. Giannis Antetokounmpo took Philadelphia big man Joel Embiid with his No. 2 pick.

Giannis Antetokounmpo and LeBron James divvied up the remaining 22 All-Stars taking part in next weekend’s NBA All-Star Game on Thursday night.
The two leading vote-getters from the Eastern and Western Conferences went back-and-forth in selecting which players would be on their respective teams. James, who was wearing a black sweatshirt with two hearts on it — a yellow one with Kobe Bryant’s numbers, 8 and 24, written in purple inside it, and the other with Kobe’s daughter Gianna’s No. 2 in black inside a white heart — went first, and took Lakers teammate Anthony Davis for the second straight year.
Before the draft began, TNT’s Charles Barkley reminded Antetokounmpo he had chided James for tampering the year before when taking Davis first, when he was still a member of the New Orleans Pelicans. James, with a smile, responded, “Listen, those guys [the Bucks] are 80 and 0 right now. We don’t need them to get another guy on their team.”
After Davis, the two men went back-and-forth, with Antetokounmpo — who spent the whole draft consulting a notebook he’d spent time compiling pre-draft notes in — taking Joel Embiid, Pascal Siakam, Kemba Walker and Trae Young, while James selected Kawhi Leonard, Luka Doncic and James Harden.
When Antetokounmpo was trying to choose between Harden, Walker and Young, Barkley chimed in, “You don’t want the dribbler?” in reference to Harden. Antetokounmpo smiled and said, “I want someone who is going to pass.”
Antetokounmpo had the first pick of the reserves round, and with it took Khris Middleton, his Milwaukee Bucks teammate, while James took Portland Trail Blazers star Damian Lillard. For the rest of the reserves, Antetokounmpo took, in order, Bam Adebayo, Rudy Gobert, Jimmy Butler, Kyle Lowry, Brandon Ingram and Donovan Mitchell. James, meanwhile, took Ben Simmons, Nikola Jokic, Jayson Tatum, Chris Paul, Russell Westbrook and Domantas Sabonis.
Unlike last year, when the James and Antetokounmpo made a trade, this time around both men said they were happy with their rosters, and didn’t bring up the idea of a swap.
“At the end of the day you cannot go wrong,” Antetokounmopo said. “They’re all great players, all great guys, and hopefully we can all have fun this weekend.”
Before the draft began, both James and Antetokounmpo announced the Chicago-based charities their respective teams will be supporting in the All-Star Game, with James choosing to support Chicago Scholars, while Antetokounmpo chose After School Matters.
To honor Bryant and his daughter, Team Giannis will wear No. 24, and Team LeBron will wear No. 2.
The NBA also announced major changes to this year’s All-Star format, turning every quarter into a mini-game for charity before an untimed final quarter with a target score that will decide which team wins. Scores will be reset — back to 0-0 — at the start of the second and third quarters, then restored to begin the fourth quarter.
The team that wins the All-Star Game will be the first to reach a target score, determined by the total points the team in the lead scored in the first three quarters combined — plus 24, in a nod to the jersey Bryant wore for the last decade of his NBA career.
Team LeBron

  1. Anthony Davis
  2. Kawhi Leonard
  3. Luka Doncic
  4. James Harden
  5. Damian Lillard
  6. Ben Simmons
  7. Nikola Jokic
  8. Jayson Tatum
  9. Chris Paul
  10. Russell Westbrook
  11. Domantas Sabonis

Team Giannis

  1. Joel Embiid
  2. Pascal Siakam
  3. Kemba Walker
  4. Trae Young
  5. Khris Middleton
  6. Bam Adebayo
  7. Rudy Gobert
  8. Jimmy Butler
  9. Kyle Lowry
  10. Brandon Ingram
  11. Donovan Mitchell