List of Continental Basketball Association All-Star Games
| CBA All-Star Classic | |
|---|---|
| Status | Inactive |
| Inaugurated | 1949 |
| Most recent | 2008 |
| Organized by | CBA |
The CBA All-Star-Game (or CBA All-Star Classic) was a basketball event organised by the CBA from 1979 until 2008. It started originally in 1949 as the EBA All-Star Game, and in 1971 it became the EPSBL All-Star Game, following the League's name changes. In 1979 CBA organised its first event under the CBA logo and it had been known as the CBA All-Star Classic. Overall, it predates the NBA All-Star Game by two years, as the latter took place for first time in 1951.
The players who hold the record with the most CBA All-Star appearances since 1979 are former NBA star Tim Legler, Ronnie Fields and Claude Gregory who also had a brief NBA spell.[1][2] Additionally the coaches with the most appearances since 1979 are Eric Musselman with 5, Paul Woolpert, Chris Daleo and Dan Panaggio with 4 and Bill Musselman with 3.[3][4]
The slam-dunk contest was added on the 1988 edition and the long distance shoot contest on the 1990 and onwards.[5] Many legendary and former NBA players like Bob McNeill, Jim Bostic, Eddie Johnson, Mario Elie, Jim Lampley, Stacey King, Anthony Frederick, Ron Rowan, David Thirdkill, Claude Gregory, Steve Burtt Sr., Conner Henry, Michael Hawkins, Michael Brooks, Scott Fisher, Jack Haley, Tony Harris, Tim Legler, Jamario Moon and others have featured in the All-Star Game.
Format
[edit | edit source]The first All-Star Game in 1949 featured an XI consisted of EPBL All-Stars against the host team of Pottsville Packers. The West All-Stars versus East All-Stars format continued for the following years until 1962. For most of the years to follow an EPBL All-Star squad would face a host team and the same pattern continued when the league was rename to EBA and then CBA. On 28 October 1986 the CBA All-Stars played against the Soviet National basketball team of Vladimir Tkachenko, Sarunas Marciulionis and Aleksander Volkov, the first game to be played between a Soviet team and professional players from the United States (score 72-77).[6] The CBA All-Stars were led by Kenny Natt (Albany Patroons), Billy Goodwin, Cozell McQueen, and Derrick Rowland.
The National Conference versus American Conference format was played from 1990 until 2004. It was followed by the Eastern Conference versus Western Conference format until 2008. The 1982 All-star game was the first nationally televised minor league game in history.[7] In 1990 the CBA instituted the all-star weekend, introducing slam-dunk and long-distance shooting contests.
All-Star Game Results
[edit | edit source]Note: Stadium names are named based on the name at the day of the All-Star Game.[8]
- EBA 1949-1970, EPBL 1971-1978, CBA 1979-2008
Players with most MVP awards
[edit | edit source]| Player | Wins | Editions |
|---|---|---|
| United States Bob McNeill | 2 | 1963, 1965 |
| United States Jim Bostic | 2 | 1977, 1978 |
| United States Conner Henry | 2 | 1990, 1992 |
Wins by team (1949-2008)
[edit | edit source]| Team | Wins | Years |
|---|---|---|
| CBA/EBA/EPBL All-Stars | 10 | 1949, 1962, 1972, 1976, 1977, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988 |
| National Conference | 9 | 1990, 1991, 1992, 1995, 1996, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008 |
| East | 6 | 1961, 1966, 1968, 1978, 2000, 2005 |
| West | 6 | 1958, 1959, 1967, 1969, 1982, 2006 |
| American Conference | 3 | 1993, 1994, 1997 |
| Camden Bullets | 2 | 1963, 1965 |
| Wilmington Blue Bombers | 1 | 1970 |
| Scranton Apollos | 1 | 1971 |
| Rochester Zeniths | 1 | 1979 |
| Albany Patroons | 1 | 1983 |
| Rockford Lightning | 1 | 1988-89 |
Most Valuable Player Award winners
[edit | edit source]- 1961 – United States Alex "Boo" Ellis, Wilkes-Barre Barons
- 1963 – United States Bobby McNeill, Camden Bullets
- 1964 – United States Jimmie Hadnot, Trenton Colonials
- 1965 – United States Bobby McNeill, Camden Bullets
- 1966 – United States Walt Simon, Allentown Jets
- 1967 – United States Willie Murrell, Scranton Miners
- 1968 – United States Willis "Spider" Bennett, Hartford Capitols
- 1969 – United States Jim Jackson, Scranton Miners
- 1970 – United States John Savage, Wilmington Blue Bombers
- 1971 – United States Willie Somerset, Scranton Apollos
- 1972 – United States Reggie Lacefield, Hartford Capitols
- 1977 – United States Jim Bostic, Jersey Shore Bullets
- 1978 – United States Jim Bostic, Jersey Shore Bullets
- 1979 – United States Andre McCarter, Rochester Zeniths
- 1982 – United States Brad Branson, Anchorage Northern Knights
- 1983 – United States Larry Spriggs, Albany Patroons
- 1984 – United States Anthony Roberts, Wyoming Wildcatters
- 1985 – United States Rick Lamb, Wyoming Wildcatters
- 1986 – United States Don Collins, Tampa Bay Thrillers
- 1987 – United States Eddie Johnson, Tampa Bay Thrillers
- 1988 – United States Michael Brooks, Albany Patroons
- 1989 – United States Dwayne McClain, Rockford Lightning
- 1990 – United States Conner Henry, Rapid City Thrillers
- 1991 – United States Vincent Askew, Albany Patroons
- 1992 – United States Conner Henry, Yakima Sun Kings
- 1993 – United States Pat Durham, Fargo-Moorhead Fever
- 1994 – United States Jeff Martin, Grand Rapids Hoops
- 1995 – United States Tony Dawson, Rockford Lightning
- 1996 – United States Shelton Jones, Florida Beachdogs
- 1997 – United States Dexter Boney, Florida Beachdogs
- 2000 – United States Dontae' Jones, LaCrosse Bobcats
- 2003 – United States Versile Shaw, Sioux Falls Skyforce
- 2004 – United States Roberto Bergersen, Idaho Stampede
- 2005 – United States Sam Clancy, Jr., Idaho Stampede
- 2006 – United States Randy Holcomb, Gary Steelheads
- 2007 – United States Ralph Holmes, Yakama Sun Kings
- 2008 – United States Odell Bradley, Butte Daredevils
Slam-Dunk champions (1988-2008)
[edit | edit source]| Year | Player | Team |
|---|---|---|
| 1988 | United States Jamie Waller | Quad City Thunder |
| 1988-89 | United States Daren Queenan | Charleston Gunners |
| 1990 | United States Gerry Wright | Pensacola Tornados |
| 1991 | Not held | |
| 1992 | United States Myron Brown | Fort Wayne Fury |
| 1993 | United States Shelton Jones | Rapid City Thrillers |
| 1994 | United States Myron Brown (2) | Fort Wayne Fury |
| 1995 | United States Terry Ross | Tri-City Chinook |
| 1996 | United States Shelton Jones (2) | Florida Beach Dogs |
| 1997 | United States Ronnie Fields | La Crosse Bobcats |
| 2003 | United States Bryant Notree | Gary Steelheads |
| 2004 | United States Kaniel Dickens | Dakota Wizards |
| 2005 | United States Renaldo Major | Gary Steelheads |
| 2006 | Sierra Leone Libya Alpha Bangura | Michigan Mayhem |
| 2007 | United States Anthony Richardson | Butte Daredevils |
| 2008 | United States Harvey Thomas | Yakima Sun Kings |
Long Distance Shootout Contest
[edit | edit source]| Year | Player | Team |
|---|---|---|
| 1990 | United States Jose Slaughter | Quad City Thunder |
| 1991 | United States Everette Stephens | Rockford Lightning |
| 1992 | United States Duane Washington | Columbus Horizon |
| 1993 | United States Tim Legler | Omaha Racers |
| 1994 | United States Leon Wood | Fargo-Moorhead Fever |
| 1995 | United States Charles Smith | Hartford Hellcats |
| 1996 | United States Darryl Johnson | Omaha Racers |
| 1997 | United States Tony Harris | Sioux Falls Skyforce |
| 2003 | United States Malik Dixon | Dakota Wizards |
| 2004 | United States Jimmie Hunter | Rockford Lightning |
| 2005 | United States David Graves | Gary Steelheads |
| 2006 | United States David Jackson | Idaho Stampede |
| 2007 | United States David Bell | Butte Daredevils |
| 2008 | United States Desmond Ferguson | Yakima Sun Kings |
One-on-One challenge
[edit | edit source]| Year | Player | Team |
|---|---|---|
| 1991 | United States Mario Elie | Albany Patroons |
| 1992 | United States Richard Rellford | Sioux Falls Skyforce |
| 1993 | ||
| 1994 | United States Dan Bingenheimer | Hartford Hellcats |
Top Scorers
[edit | edit source]- 1959 – United States Bill Spivey, West All Stars, 28 pts
- 1961 – United States Boo Ellis, East All Stars, 29 pts
- 1962 – United States Ed Burton, Allentown Jets, 32 pts
- 1963 – United States Paul Arizin, Camden Bullets, 35 pts
- 1964 – United States Jimmy Hadnot, South All Stars, 31 pts
- 1965 – United States Bobby McNeil, Camden Bullets, 29 pts
- 1966 – United States Walt Simon, East All Stars, 37 pts
- 1967 – United States Art Heyman, East All Stars, 39 pts
- 1968 – United States Spider Bennett, East All Stars, 36 pts
- 1969 – United States Phil Schoff, East All Stars, 22 pts
& Willie Davis, West All Stars, 22 pts - 1970 – United States Stan Pawlak, EPBL All Stars, 39 pts
- 1971 – United States Willie Somerset, EBA All Stars, 36 pts
- 1972 – United States Chuck Lloyd, Scranton Apollos, 27 pts
- 1976 – United States Charlie Criss, EBA All Stars, 35 pts
- 1977 – United States Major Jones, Allentown Jets, 27 pts
- 1978 – United States Jim Bostic, East All Stars, 26 pts
- 1979 – United States Ron Davis, CBA All Stars, 47 pts
- 1983 – United States Larry Spriggs, Albany Patroons, 22 pts
- 1984 – United States Anthony Roberts, Wyoming Wildcatters, 43 pts
- 1985 – United States Rick Lamb, CBA All Stars, 19 pts
- 1986 – United States Don Collins, CBA All Stars, 21 pts
- 1987 – United States Eddie Johnson, CBA All Stars, 22 pts
- 1988 – United States Jerome Batiste, Topeka Sizzlers, 21 pts
- 1988-89 – United States Dwayne McClain, CBA All Stars, 18 pts
- 1990 – United States Tim Legler, National Conference, 17 pts
- 1991 – United States Mario Elie, National Conference, 22 pts
- 1992 – United States Stephen Thompson, American Conference, 22 pts
- 1993 – United States Pat Durham, National Conference, 22 pts
- 1994 – United States Jeff Martin, American Conference, 20 pts
- 1995 – United States Tony Dawson, American Conference, 25 pts
- 1996 – United States Henry James, National Conference, 24 pts
- 1997 – United States Dexter Boney, American Conference, 25 pts
- 2000 – United States Dontae' Jones, Eastern Conference, 34 pts
- 2003 – United States Versile Shaw, National Conference, 27 pts
- 2004 – United States Roberto Bergersen, American Conference, 27 pts
- 2005 – United States Sam Clancy Jr., Western Conference, 19 pts
- 2006 – United States David Jackson, Western Conference, 22 pts
- 2007 – United States Erick Barkley/Ralph Holmes, American /National Conference, 25 pts
- 2008 – United States Odell Bradley, National Conference, 22 pts
Highest attendances
[edit | edit source]| Edition | Venue | Location | Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1982 | Brendan Byrne Arena | East Rutherford, New Jersey | 10,000 |
| 1983 | Washington Avenue Armory | Albany, New York | 11,272 |
| 1984 | Casper Events Center | Casper, Wyoming | 7,398 |
| 1985 | Roberts Municipal Stadium | Evansville, Indiana | 8,537 |
| 1987 | La Crosse Center | La Crosse, Wisconsin | 6,011 |
| 1988 | Landon Arena | Topeka, Kansas | 7,040 |
| 1989 | Rockford Metrocenter | Rockford, Illinois | 6,572 |
| 1993 | Myriad Convention Center | Oklahoma City | 11,382 |
| 1994 | Allen County War Memorial Coliseum | Fort Wayne, Indiana | 6,324 |
| 1995 | Hartford Civic Arena | Hartford, Connecticut | 10,039 |
| 2003 | Sioux Falls Arena | Sioux Falls, South Dakota | 7,500 |
| 2005 | Genesis Convention Center | Gary, Indiana | 6,683 |
All-Star Coaches
[edit | edit source]Coaches 1979-2008
[edit | edit source]| Coach | American Conference | National Conference | East | West | CBA All-Stars | Host team |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States Eric Musselman (5) | - | 1990, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1997 | - | - | - | - |
| United States Paul Woolpert (4) | - | 2007, 2008 | - | 2000, 2006 | - | - |
| United States Chris Daleo (4) | 2003, 2008 | - | 2005, 2006 | - | - | - |
| United States Phil Jackson (2) | - | - | - | - | 1985 | 1983 (Albany Patroons) |
| United States George Karl (2) | - | 1991 | - | - | 1988-89 | - |
| United States Flip Saunders (2) | 1994 | 1995 | - | - | - | - |
| United States Cazzie Russell (2) | - | - | 1982 | - | 1983 | - |
Coaches with most victories
[edit | edit source]| Coach | Wins | Editions | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States Stan Novak | 4 | 1969 (first win) | |
| United States Eric Musselman | 3 | 1990, 1992, 1997 | |
| United States Paul Woolpert | 3 | 2000, 2007, 2008 | |
| United States Buddy Donnelly | 3 | 1963, 1964, 1965 | |
| United States Bill Musselman | 2 | 1987, 1988 | |
| United States Flip Saunders | 2 | 1994, 1995 | |
| United States Phil Jackson | 2 | 1983, 1985 | 4x NBA All-Star coach |
All-Star Players
[edit | edit source]Players with most appearances (1979-2008)
[edit | edit source]| Player | All-Star | Editions | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States Tim Legler | 4 | 1990, 1992, 1993, 1995 | 1x CBA Long Distance Winner (1993), 1x NBA Three-Point Contest Winner (1998) |
| United States Claude Gregory | 4 | 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988 | As an Evanville Thunder player in the 1985 All-Star Classic |
| United States Ronnie Fields | 4 | 2003, 2004, 2006, 2008-DNP | 1x Slam Dunk Winner (1997) |
| United States Tom Hemans | 4 | 1958, 1959, 1962, 1966 | |
| United States Vincent Askew | 3 | 1988-89, 1990, 1991 | 2x MVP |
| United States Jose Slaughter | 3 | 1985, 1988-89, 1990 | As a Rockford Lightning player in 1988-89 edition |
| United States Rick Lamb | 3 | 1985, 1986, 1987 | As a Tampa Bay Thrillers player in the 1986 edition |
| United States Robert Smith | 3 | 1983, 1984, 1985 | |
| United States Republic of Ireland Ron Rowan | 3 | 1987, 1988, 1988-89 | As a Rockford Lightning player in 1988-89 edition |
| United States Leon Wood | 3 | 1990, 1994, 1996 | - |
| United States Reggie Jordan | 3 | 1993, 1994, 1996 | - |
| United States Jerome Lane | 3 | 1994, 1995, 1996 | |
| United States Henry James | 3 | 1993, 1995, 1996 | |
| United States Ralph McPherson | 3 | 1983, 1984, 1985 | As Albany Patroons player in 1983 |
Notable CBA All-Stars
[edit | edit source]- United States Paul Arizin (1963, 1964, 1965)
- Puerto Rico Larry Ayuso (2003)
- United States Anthony Bonner (2004)
- United States Don Collins (1986, 1987)
- United States Winston Crite (1990)
- United States Lloyd Daniels (1988, 1995)
- United States Darryl Dawkins (1996)
- United States Mario Elie (1991)
- United States Australia Scott Fisher (1990)
- United States Alphonso Ford (1994, 1995)
- United States Tom Hemans (1958, 1959, 1962, 1966)
- United States Conner Henry (1990, 1992)
- United States Anthony Goldwire (1996, 2004)
- United States Derrick Gervin (1990, 1992)
- United States Shelton Jones (1993, 1996
- United States Eddie L. Johnson (1987)
- United States Bob Love (1966)
- United States Pace Mannion (1988-89)
- United States Anthony Mason (1991)
- United States John Starks (1990)
- United States Charles Smith (1995, 2000)
- United States Roy Tarpley (2004)
- United States Clinton Wheeler (1986, 1994)
References
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- ^ The Soviet National basketball team beat a team of All Stars (1986) - upi.com
- ^ CONTINENTAL IS LEAGUE OF HOPE (1982) - nytimes.com
- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ This first All-Star contest was a fundraiser for hospitalized Pottsville team captain Tommy Bell.
- ^ The game was played at York, Pa., to test whether the city could support a franchise.
- ^ This game took two days to play, as a blackout hit the Rochester, N.Y. area during the contest. The CBA commissioner ordered that a full four-quarter game be played the next day, while still retaining the score from the first two quarters (at that time, Rochester was leading 57-48).
- ^ A rookie game preceded the All-Star game, with the East beating the West 91-89.
- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
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Sources
[edit | edit source]See also
[edit | edit source]- Continental Basketball Association
- List of Continental Basketball Association seasons
- Continental Basketball Association franchise history
- List of Continental Basketball Association Champions
- List of Continental Basketball Association MVP's and Notable Alumni
- List of developmental and minor sports leagues