NBA will not keep All-Star mini-tournament for 2026 - ESPN
NEW YORK — The NBA will not bring back its All-Star Game mini-tournament next season.
Commissioner Adam Silver said Thursday that the format used last month — a four-team tournament made up of 24 All-Stars and another team of rookies and sophomores that played its way in by winning the Rising Stars event on All-Star Friday, with each matchup playing an untimed game to a target score of 40 points — «was a miss.»
«We're not there in terms of creating an All-Star experience that we can be proud of and our players can be proud of,» Silver said.
The game is shifting to NBC next season as part of the league's new broadcast deal, and Silver said the league and the network are talking about what might work. The league tried something new this season with hopes of sparking some competitiveness, which the game has lacked for years.
«We're a bit back to the drawing board,» Silver said.
Some players liked the All-Star format this season; others did not; and a few didn't seem to have much of an opinion either way. The tournament was put into place after the 2024 All-Star Game saw more points than ever — a 211-186 final score that set a slew of records and essentially was the last straw for the league.
«I think it was a good step in the right direction to reinvigorate the game in some way,» All-Star MVP Stephen Curry of the host Golden State Warriors said after last month's event.
There was one particular element that flopped from a competitive standpoint this year, that being a long stoppage in play — almost 20 minutes — during the All-Star championship game to pay tribute to the TNT broadcast team that was involved in the airing of the game for the final time.
«It was well-intentioned,» Silver said. «But I think the long stoppage in


