Dunk contest, 3-point contest, more

The 2024 NBA All-Star Weekend and All-Star Game are back in Indianapolis for the first time since 1985, a nod to the state’s basketball history and 89-year-old Pacers owner Herb Simon.

Here’s what to know about tonight’s NBA dunk contest, 3-point contest, skills challenge and the Stephen Curry vs. Sabrina Ionescu contest.

USA TODAY Sports will have the latest updates, highlights, analysis, reaction and more. Follow along.

Sabrina Ionescu and Steph Curry will be shooting from the same depth. 

Sabrina Ionescu had the option of shooting from either the WNBA three-point line (22 feet and 1.75 inches) or NBA three-point line (23 feet and nine inches), but opted for the NBA arc. However, she will still use a WNBA ball. 

“So much credit to them,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver said. “I wish I could say that the league in its lab came up with this idea. This was about Steph and Sabrina, two friends who said, ‘Won’t this be fantastic?’ I know that Steph cares a lot about the women’s game, the opportunity to bring more attention to this fantastic shooting.” — Cydney Henderson

Once again, it was Dame Time in NBA All-Star 3-point contest.

One of the clutch players in the game, Milwaukee Bucks guard Damian Lillard needed to make the final shot of the event to edge Atlanta’s Trae Young and win his second consecutive 3-point contest.

Lillard had 26 points in the final round, slipping past Young’s 24 points.

He is the first player to repeat since Toronto’s Jason Kapono in 2007 and 2008.

In the final round, Lillard made 16 of 27 3-point shots, including the final money-ball shot (worth two points) on each rack and hit one of the two deep-range shots (worth three points).

Lillard is 15th in 3-pointers made this season with 148.

In the first round, Lillard, Young, Indiana’s Tyrese Haliburton and Minnesota’s Karl-Anthony Towns had a four-way tie with 26 points and went to a tiebreaker: 30 seconds to make as many shots as possible, and Haliburton was eliminated with a  score of 12 while Lillard and Towns posted 16 points and Young had 15 to reach the final round. Towns, the 2022 3-point winner, had 22 points in the final round.

Lillard earned $60,000 for the win, Young picked up $40,000, Towns $25,000 and Haliburton $15,000. — Jeff Zillgitt  

Is there a such thing as home-court advantage? It appears so. For the third consecutive time, the home team has won the NBA All-Star skills challenge. Team Pacers, composed of Tyrese Haliburton, Bennedict Mathurin and Myles Turner, took home the trophy in front of the crowd at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis on Saturday evening. 

Team Pacers got on the board first with 100 challenge points for winning the first round, which consisted of a 35-foot outlet pass, pylon dribbles, a short shot in the lane, corner three over an automated windmill defender, and a made basket on the opposite end. Haliburton capped his team’s impressive run with an off-the-backboard dunk. 

The second round consisted of a passing challenge, where each team had 30-seconds to collect as many points as possible by scoring in moving targets. Team All-Stars and Team Pacers tied with 74-points, resulting in a tiebreaker, which Team Pacers ultimately won by scoring 92 to the All-Stars’ 90 points. With the second-round win, Team Pacers took a 200 point lead over Team First Picks and Team All-Stars, who both had zero points.

Team All-Star evened things up with Team Pacers by winning the shooting challenge, where each team had 60-seconds to make as many shots from certain locations on the floor, including a five-point shot from half-court and a four-pointer beyond the arc.  

Team All-Star and Team Pacers both had 200 points, while Team First Pick had zero. 

The skills challenge went to a sudden death, half-court shootout. It took Team All-Stars 58.8 seconds to hit a half-court shot. Team Pacers, however, were able to knock the shot down in only 30.3 seconds. — Cydney Henderson

NBA commissioner Adam Silver defended the new 65-game rule to become eligible for major regular-season awards such as MVP and All-NBA. Though Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid is ineligible for a second consecutive MVP and All-NBA because he won’t play in 65 games, and Indiana Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton can’t afford to miss more than six games the rest of the season not only for All-NBA consideration but the possibility of an extra $41 million in his five-year supermax contract.

“As you know, a lot of thought went into the 65-game demarcation,” Silver said. “Not only was it collectively bargained with the players, but we spent extensive time leading up to collective bargaining talking to all the various constituencies in the league, most importantly the coaches or general managers, individual players directly, and as was built into your question, the notion was we needed to further incentivize players, particularly star players, to play more games.

“So I’m not ready to say that it isn’t working so far. I can tell you that the number of games that players have participated in is up this season, and interestingly enough, injuries are actually down. Whether that’s meaningful data yet, I don’t know.” — Jeff Zillgitt  

When is the NBA 3-point contest?

The 3-point contest is Saturday at the Indianapolis Colts’ Lucas Oil Stadium in downtown Indianapolis. The event will take place after the skills challenge and before the Steph Curry vs. Sabrina Ionescu 3-point shootout and the dunk contest. 

The dunk contest is the last event on Saturday night. 

TNT, ESPN, ESPN 2 and NBA TV and the NBA will provide coverage of the weekend’s events and news conferences. 

Here’s the schedule for the rest of the weekend: 

Saturday, Feb. 17 

  • All-Star Saturday Night Skills Challenge, 3-point Contest, Steph vs. Sabrina 3-point Challenge, Slam Dunk Content, 8 p.m. ET, TNT 

Sunday, Feb. 18 

  • G League Up Next Game, 1:30 p.m. ET, NBA TV 
  • NBA All-Star Game, 8 p.m. ET, TNT 

A few items of note from Adam’s Silver’s NBA All-Star Weekend press conference:

∎ Silver acknowledged he is focused on improving player-referee relations.

“I’m so sympathetic to both players who feel that an official missed a call, and sometimes they do, and I’m incredibly sympathetic to officials who have some of the hardest jobs in sports and are under a microscope and occasionally, of course, do miss calls, and we acknowledge when they do,” Silver said. “What makes me most frustrated are the communication issues sort of between players and officials. I feel that’s an area we should be able to do a better job, both ways. … It’s an area where we can make progress.”

∎ With NIL deals changing the college sports landscape, Silver said he will re-evaluate the G League Ignite, which the NBA has used to develop teens who did not want to play in college and sought a payday but were draft-age eligible.

“We are in the process of reassessing Team Ignite because now some of those same players who didn’t want to be one-and-done players because they felt it was unfair and they wanted the ability not just to earn a living playing basketball but to do commercial deals that weren’t available to them at college, to hire professional agents, an opportunity that wasn’t available to them at college, they now – all of those same opportunities have become available to them,” Silver said.

“I’m not sure what the future of Team Ignite will be, because before there was a hole in the marketplace that we thought we were filling before doing that, and now my focus is turning to earlier development of those players.”

∎ Silver praised former Dallas Mavericks majority owner Mark Cuban who sold his majority share to the families of Dr. Miriam Adelson and Sivan and Patrick Dumont.

“He’s truly been a game-changing owner in this league, and he’s had great success, obviously, with a championship but also competitive teams most of the time during his tenure. And he’s been a very active participant in league matters, whether it’s been our media committee or Board of Governors meetings. He’s never hesitated to speak his mind.

“I’m pleased that he’s still – he’s not the controlling governor of the team anymore – a very significant investor in the Dallas Mavericks as he’s made clear he’s not going anywhere. If you just tune into a game, he still seems to be standing in the same spot he was when he was the governor, and he continues to text, email, call us at the league office when he has something he wants to share with us.” — Jeff Zillgitt  

Victor Wembanyama — the San Antonio Spurs rookie and No. 1 overall pick in the 2023 NBA draft — is not a Western Conference All-Star.

However, Wembanyama did take part in the rising stars competition on Friday night.

Wembanyama finished the second semifinal game with a team-high 11 points, seven rebounds and two blocks, though his team was defeated and did not reach the final. — Jim Reineking

This year’s NBA All-Star Weekend marks the debut of the LED court.

The court, developed by the German company ASB GlassFloor, included design and color changes, location-based player tracking animations, and countdowns for extra point periods.

It’s the first time a fully LED court’s been used for an NBA event. — Ayrton Ostly

These four players are taking part:  

  • Mac McClung, G League’s Osceola Magic (2023 dunk contest winner) 
  • Jacob Toppin, New York Knicks, G League’s Westchester Knicks 
  • Jaylen Brown, Boston Celtics 
  • Jaime Jaquez Jr., Miami Heat 

Read Jeff Zillgitt’s full feature on McClung here. 

These are players are taking part: 

  • Damian Lillard, Milwaukee Bucks (2023 3-point contest winner)
  • Malik Beasley, Milwaukee Bucks 
  • Tyrese Haliburton, Indiana Pacers 
  • Jalen Brunson, New York Knicks 
  • Karl-Anthony Towns, Minnesota Timberwolves 
  • Trae Young, Atlanta Hawks 
  • Donovan Mitchell, Cleveland Cavaliers 
  • Lauri Markkanen, Utah Jazz 

Here are the winners for the last 10 years. Find the complete list here

  • 2023: Damian Lillard (Trail Blazers) 
  • 2022: Karl-Anthony Towns (Timberwolves) 
  • 2021: Steph Curry (Warriors) 
  • 2020: Buddy Hield (Kings) 
  • 2019: Joe Harris (Nets) 
  • 2018: Devin Booker (Suns) 
  • 2017: Eric Gordon (Rockets) 
  • 2016: Klay Thompson (Warriors) 
  • 2015: Stephen Curry (Warriors) 
  • 2014: Marco Belinelli (Spurs) 

The Boston Celtics’ Larry Bird and Chicago Bulls’ Craig Hodges have each won the event three times. — Jeff Zillgitt 

Golden State’s Steph Curry and Indiana’s Tyrese Haliburton share the record with 31 points out of a possible 40. — Jeff Zillgitt  

Ball racks are stationed at five locations around the 3-point line, and four of the racks contain four orange basketballs and one money ball. The orange basketballs are worth one point, and the money ball, which has to be the last ball shot on each rack, is worth two points. The fifth rack will be an all money-ball rack and each competitor gets to choose where this rack will be among the locations. Each money ball on this rack is worth two points. Two pedestals are placed deeper than the 3-point line, edging closer to the center court logo, and each pedestal holds a white basketball. A made shot from deep range is worth 3 points. Each contestant has 70 seconds to shoot as many of the 27 basketballs as he can. — Jeff Zillgitt   

Here are the winners for the last 10 years. Find the complete list here. 

  • 2023: Mac McClung (76ers) 
  • 2022: Obi Toppin (Knicks) 
  • 2021: Anfernee Simons (Trail Blazers) 
  • 2020: Derrick Jones Jr. (Heat)  
  • 2019: Hamidou Diallo (Thunder) 
  • 2018: Donovan Mitchell (Jazz) 
  • 2017: Glenn Robinson III (Pacers) 
  • 2016: Zach LaVine (Timberwolves) 
  • 2015: Zach LaVine (Timberwolves) 
  • 2014: John Wall (Wizards) 

Golden State Warriors guard Steph Curry and New York Liberty guard Sabrina Ionescu will compete head-to-head in the first NBA vs. WNBA 3-point challenge. This event will take place after the traditional 3-point contest and before the slam dunk contest. 

Curry will shoot from the NBA 3-point line and use NBA basketballs, and Ionescu has the option to shoot from the WNBA 3-point line but she said she plans to shoot from the NBA line. She will use WNBA basketballs. Each made shot will result in a donation from State Farm to the NBA Foundation to support economic empowerment in the Black community.

Read Jeff Zillgitt’s story on how this contest came together. 

The format for the Sabrina vs. Steph 3-point contest is the same as a traditional NBA and WNBA 3-point contest: 

∎ 70 seconds to shoot as many of the 27 basketballs as he/she can. 

∎ Four ball racks with four game balls and one “money” ball. 

∎ Fifth rack will be a special “all money ball” rack. He/she can decide the spot for this rack. 

∎ Two deep range shots. 

∎ Game balls worth 1 point, money balls worth 2 points and deep range balls worth 3 points. 

Sabrina Ionescu told reporters this week that she plans to shoot from the NBA 3-point line. 

“I shoot from that range to begin with,” she said. “I practice from that range and wanting to just be a better shooter, a better basketball player and get better as a whole. And so knowing that I had the opportunity to pick what line I wanted to shoot from, it was a no-brainer from when it was first presented that I wanted to shoot from the NBA line and continue to just prove that we’re capable and we’re willing. 

“It’s not something that it took a lot of convincing and knowing that I wanted to continue to just equal the playing field and do so when it matters and on the biggest stage.” 

She can change her mind and shoot from the WNBA 3-point line though it seems unlikely. — Jeff Zillgitt 

Mac McClung’s life took off, skyrocketing into the NBA stratosphere on a February night in Salt Lake City when he won the 2023 NBA All-Star Slam Dunk Contest as a G League player one year ago. 

Fame appeared. Exposure increased. Endorsement opportunities arrived. 

He ended the season playing two games with the Philadelphia 76ers, scoring 20 points, grabbing nine rebounds and collecting nine assists in the Sixers’ season-ending victory against Brooklyn. 

What didn’t show up was a guaranteed contract with an NBA team. 

“That’s the biggest battle I fought this summer,” McClung told USA TODAY Sports. “So many people around me were like, ‘Man, you deserve this. What’s going on? What’s wrong? Why didn’t you get this?’ There were so many questions. 

“And truly, I felt the same way. I felt like I deserved to get a contract somewhere with the way I played last year.” Read Jeff Zillgitt’s full feature on McClung here. 

Here are the judges for Saturday’s slam dunk contest: Two-time dunk contest winner Dominique Wilkins, 2004 dunk contest winner Fred Jones, Hall of Famers Gary Payton and Mitch Richmond, and Darnell Hillman.

Here is how the prize money is distributed: 

  • First place: $105,000 
  • Second place: $55,000 
  • Third place: $20,000 
  • Fourth place: $20,000 

Here is how the prize money is distributed: 

  • First place: $60,000 
  • Second place: $40,000 
  • Third place: $25,000 
  • Fourth place: $15,000 
  • Fifth place: $15,000 
  • Sixth place: $15,000 
  • Seventh place: $15,000 
  • Eighth place: $10,000 

The highest number of tickets at BetMGM are on Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (+525) to win the dunk contest. Mac McClung (-225) is the favorite. — Richard Morin 

The field is wide open for the 3-point contest, according to BetMGM. The most money is on Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton (+500), who owns 26.7% of the handle. — Richard Morin  

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