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Victor Wembanyama inspires most competitive NBA All-Star Game in years
Team World center Victor Wembanyama (1) of the San Antonio Spurs dunks the ball in game three during the 75th NBA All Star Game at Intuit Dome. Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Victor Wembanyama inspires most competitive NBA All-Star Game in years

The NBA has switched formats, cajoled its players and tweaked the selection process to make the All-Star Game competitive. It turns out they just needed to get Victor Wembanyama fired up.

The San Antonio Spurs' center inspired his fellow All-Stars to a hard-fought series of games in the NBA's Team USA vs. Team World format. While Wemby's World team lost both their games, the 22-year-old scored 33 points on 10-for-13 shooting, grabbing eight rebounds and blocking three shots.

MVP Anthony Edwards credited Victor Wembanyama for his strong effort

Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards took home the MVP trophy after scoring 32 points in 26 minutes and making six three-pointers. One of those threes sent the first game of Team Stars, the USA squad with younger players, into overtime. Edwards got another bucket in the extra period, before Scottie Barnes answered Wemby's go-ahead three-ball with a game-winning three-pointer, making it 37-35.

The intensity between Edwards and Wembanyama started with the opening tip, when the 6-foot-4 Edwards jumped center against the 7-foot-4 Wembanyama. Wemby secured the tip and immediately sprinted to the rim for a dunk in the game's first six seconds. Wembanyama finished the first game with 14 points, whiled Edwards tallied 13.

After the game, Edwards told NBC's postgame crew that once Wembanyama came out playing extremely hard, he and the other All-Stars had no choice but to match his intensity.

Victor Wembanyama gave notice this All-Star Game would be different

Two weeks before Sunday's game, Wembanyama put the other All-Stars on notice, declaring that if the NBA's other stars weren't going to give maximum effort in the exhibition, he would play hard without them.

You could argue that Wembanyama inspired what may have been the All-Star Game's most impressive performance, when Kawhi Leonard put up 31 points in the Los Angeles Clippers' own arena to spark Team Stripes' 48-45 win over Team World.

Leonard shot 11-for-13 but his biggest offensive output came after Wemby sat down briefly. With the NBA's best shot-blocker sitting, Leonard scored 11 points on four straight possessions — then scored two more points when Wemby fouled him.

Wemby kept the pressure on with two three-pointers in the final two minutes, then sinking two game-tying free throws — which set up Leonard's game-winner with 3.5 seconds left to play.

Edwards and Leonard deserved their flowers for how well they played Sunday. But they got a big push from Wembanyama, who refused to treat the All-Star Game as an exhibition and wouldn't let anyone else do it either. It was the least he could do.

Sean Keane

Sean Keane is a sportswriter and a comedian based in Oakland, California, with experience covering the NBA, MLB, NFL and Ice Cube’s three-on-three basketball league, The Big 3. He’s written for Comedy Central’s “Another Period,” ESPN the Magazine, and Audible. com

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