
Stephen Curry scored 12 points to lead Team Shaq to a win in the All Star Championship game and was named All Star MVP. Dave DuFour and Es Baraheni react to the new All Star format results, discuss whether we live in a post dunk era, and the Wemby skills challenge controversy. Then, Zena Keita catches up with Law Murray postgame from Chase to discuss the game, Curry’s MVP, and the weekend.Host: Dave DuFourWith: Zena Keita, Es Baraheni, & Law MurrayExecutive Producer: Andrew SchlechtAudio Producer: Grayson MoodyJoin our Discord: https://discord.gg/Ua2qrEe7 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Good morning and welcome to the NBA Daily. Coming up, All-Star Weekend. And man, there was not a lot of basketball in that broadcast. We got Zena caught up with Law Murray there at the arena. And S and I try to make sense of the whole weekend. Good morning, everybody. Good morning, S. Good morning, Kevin Hart. Yeah, a lot of Kevin Hart last night. We had Zena Kata on assignment after the break.
She's going to talk to Law Murray. They were both in the building talking about, you know, just the game and the atmosphere there. But S, I think that we've got to start with Sunday night with the game. New all-star format, you know. Yeah. Seemed like the broadcast wasn't very happy about the changes to the format, but I don't care whether they liked it or not.
I thought it was, number one, I thought that the games were pretty good.
The broadcast stunk. Well, do you mean the 30 minutes of basketball we got throughout the two and a half hour broadcast? Is that what you're implying?
So shrinkflation has come to the NBA All-Star game. Instead of our 48 minutes of basketball, we got... And S did the math as sat and went through the file and did the math.
30 minutes and 30 seconds of actual basketball action on the three games, three games up to 40 that took 30 minutes and 30 seconds of a two and a half hour broadcast. Yeah, there was at least as much, if not more Kevin Hart on the broadcast as there was basketball.
Yes.
Yeah. Yeah. Official screen time for Kevin Hart was 21 minutes. But if you add the talking and the broadcast, it's way over.
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