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Big men can jump Feb. 17: Dwight Howard's motivation in winning the NBA All-Star Dunk contest was doing it for all the big men. |
NEW ORLEANS - Look, up in the sky! It’s a bird. It’s a plane. It’s Dwight Howard — super slam dunk champion.
A red cape trailing behind him, Orlando’s man of steel made like Superman and won perhaps the best dunk contest, definitely the most creative, in NBA history to close a memorable All-Star Saturday.
Using a variety of props as well as teammate Jameer Nelson, Howard scored perfect 50s from judges on his first two dunks before the contest was turned over to fan voting for the first time in the final round.
Fans, too, picked the 6-foot-11 Howard, who dispelled an old dunking myth: Big men can fly high.
“It’s really for the big men,” Howard said. “Everybody always says, big men can’t jump and big men don’t look good dunking. I just tried to add a little bit of my personality. With me being so tall, I knew it was going to be tough. I tried to play to the crowd and have fun.”
In any other year, Minnesota’s Gerald Green would have easily walked away with his second straight dunking crown, but he was upstaged by the amazingly athletic Howard, whose performance has to rank up there with anything Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, Vince Carter or even tiny Spud Webb ever did above the basket.
The dunk contest, bland for so many years as the game’s high risers seemed to run out of ideas, was freshened up by some of the most creative aerial assaults in memory.
Howard, Green, Toronto’s Jamario Moon and Memphis’ Rudy Gay all used tape, ladders, teammates and even a tasty dessert to show their stuff.
“I think the dunk contest is back,” said Howard, who was disappointed when he failed to make it out of the first round last year. “I don’t think people want to see the same old dunks. They want to see something else, see some spice.”
Howard started things off with a dunk he has been practicing for two years. Standing on the baseline, he tossed the ball off the reverse side of the backboard, caught it with both hands, and after peering through the glass at the rim, dunked left-handed.
The crowd roared and a celebrity panel of judges including Magic Johnson, Karl Malone as well as Dominique Wilkins, Julius Erving and Darryl Dawkins — three of the game’s most famed dunkers — all gave him perfect 10s.
Not to be outdone, Green tried to blow the field away. Literally.
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“At first I thought he was going to take the cupcake, eat it and then dunk it,” Howard said. “I thought he would have won with that.”
In the second round, McCants sat on the top step of the ladder and handed the ball off to a rising Green, who crushed another dunk.
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“I didn’t have time to get the telephone booth,” he quipped.
Nelson placed a piece of tape to mark Howard’s take-off spot, and after a running start from near mid-court, the Magic’s main man took off just inside the free-throw line and fired down the ball with authority.
In the final round, Green performed two acrobatic dunks, one in only green socks after removing his sneakers. But neither of those could top Howard’s last two efforts.
First, Howard bounced the ball off the floor, tapped it left-handed off the backboard and dunked with his right hand. For Howard’s finale, Nelson affixed a miniature Orlando backboard next to the rim and balanced a ball on it.
Howard flew in from the right side, picked the ball off cleanly and slammed it in. He then only had to wait for fans to text message a result that seemed to be a no-brainer. Howard won in a landslide, receiving 78 percent of the vote.
Earlier, Jason Kapono showed nobody’s close to him from long distance.
The NBA’s best 3-point shooter this season, the Toronto forward with the silky touch won his second straight 3-point Shootout, tying a 22-year-old record with a final round of 25.
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