LeBron James’ Solution to All-Star Rosters Wouldn’t Solve Snub Problem

January 26th, 2013 by Jesse Dorsey Leave a reply »
This year, as happens every year, there are glaring omissions in the All-Star selections, with Brook Lopez and Steph Curry the main guys left out, and LeBron James seems to think that something should be done to fix that.

As LeBron has been in an expansive mood recently (his exuberant hug/tackle after a fan won $75,000 with a half-court shot being the best example), it makes sense that he would take the same approach in selecting an All-Star team.

For as long as there have been All-Star games, there have been omissions, and LeBron's idea to put an end to these glaring, forgetful selections is a pretty basic thought.

Always believe there should be 15 on both rosters so there's no snubs. #East- B.Jennings, J Smooth, PP #West- S.Curry, J.Crawford, M.Gasol

— LeBron James (@KingJames) January 25, 2013 First, I have to say that I can't help but agree with LeBron that the rosters should be expanded to 15 players on each side.

The NBA allows teams to have 15 players on their roster. So it only makes sense to keep that number consistent all the way through, and that should include the All-Star Game.



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