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WASHINGTON - Earlier in the weekend, as the East
walked through a shell drill, Allen Iverson saw a friendly face along the sideline,
pointed to himself and said, "Look at me. I'm the point guard."
Last night, he was able to point to himself and say, "Look at me. I'm the MVP."
In truth, he emerged as a poster boy for all that Larry Brown insists is right with the
NBA. Iverson, the 76ers' star shooting guard, scored 25 points, including 10 of his team's
last 16, and became the Most Valuable Player of the All-Star Game in a 111-110 victory
over the West.
But this was a team picture if there ever were one. New Jersey's Stephon Marbury scored
the final six points with two spectacular three-pointers in the last 53.9 seconds.
Toronto's Vince Carter blocked a baseline jumper by San Antonio's Tim Duncan with
four-tenths of a second remaining. Atlanta's Dikembe Mutombo swept 22 rebounds, eight in
the fourth quarter.
And Brown, the Sixers' coach, was on the All-Star bench for the first time since 1977. Two
of the players he had on the floor as the East came back from a 21-point deficit - Marbury
and Orlando's Tracy McGrady - hadn't yet been born the last time.
"This whole weekend has all been about the direction of our league," Brown said.
"I've been with the Dream Team, been around Duncan and [Minnesota's Kevin] Garnett. .
.we have so many special young talents.
"I think this game today is a statement. Anybody watching this game on national TV
had to feel good about the NBA. Anybody who has seen Allen - a lot of these kids - grow
has to be thrilled to death. Anybody who wants to be a coach, this is the greatest
testimony for that.
"One, the greatest players tried to win an All-Star Game. Two, the greatest players
didn't give up. Three, the greatest players played the right way. Four, the youngest
so-called maverick stepped up and showed just what he's about."
Save all your questions about what's wrong with the league for another day. When Iverson
stepped back on the floor with Mutombo and Carter with 10:46 remaining and his team down
91-72, he transformed the MCI Center into his personal showcase. The first question he
heard in the postgame news conference was whether he was now "the face of the
NBA."
"I'm one of them, but I think there's just so much great talent in this league,"
Iverson replied. "You know, it's not easy to win a war like this when you have so
many great players on the court at one time.
"It's special, and it's a tribute to my coach and my teammates - especially my
teammates - because without them I would not be here.
"My family, my friends, everybody that's just been with me through my struggles and
pain know it's a tribute, and I think that it is going to be beautiful for years to come,
because every year it seems like we get somebody else with a different kind of God-given
ability to add to this league."
The West was supposed to be bigger, stronger, deeper, even without injured Los Angeles
Lakers center Shaquille O'Neal. The East was supposed to be in dire straits without the
Sixers' Theo Ratliff, Orlando's Grant Hill, both injured, and Miami's Alonzo Mourning,
battling a kidney disease.
"You can't measure the size of anyone's heart," Iverson said. "The best
feeling is to win, to be the MVP in front of my mom, my friends, coach Thompson [former
Georgetown coach John Thompson], the people in D.C., who have been fighting for me from
Day 1. I don't have words to describe how I feel. It still feels like a dream."
To Mourning, it was simply the Iverson he has always known. To the West, it had to be a
nightmare.
"You saw all the answers out there," Mourning said. "Allen is Allen. His
game speaks for itself. At one point, he got a little stagnant out there, hurrying his
shots, but he stayed at it, eventually broke through. . .
"I think this helps everybody develop more respect for his game, what he's capable of
doing, the impact he's capable of having. Everybody thinks he's a ball hog and a scorer.
"The bottom line is, when he has the ball in his hands, you want the ball in his
hands. He made a concrete attempt to make more plays through penetration and the attention
he draws. But when the game gets tight, if he was on my team I'd want it in his hands.
Allen is Allen, you've got to take his game for what it is. He continues to amaze me every
time he steps on the floor."
To Mutombo, it was a matter of blinding speed.
"Something Allen brings [to] the table is his speed," Mutombo said. "It's
so fast, it makes it hard for any defender to stop him, especially a team who does not
have that much speed. . .That's why they call him 'The Answer.' We had so many questions
there on the bench, and he just came out and he responded."
Iverson essentially did what he has been doing all season, offering the type of
performance that has led the Sixers to the league's best record (36-14) and the best road
record (21-6). This time, he unfurled his skill on a national stage.
"Seeing the kid up there [accepting the MVP], you know how far he's come," Brown
said. "That makes a lot of things worthwhile."
But the idea of a victory last night didn't germinate in the fourth quarter. It was there
all the time.
"I mean from the beginning, when we first threw the ball up, because we knew
everybody was saying we could not win. . .because of our [lack of] size," Iverson
said. "But it is not about the size on paper. . .
"Coming into the fourth quarter, I think [Detroit's Jerry] Stackhouse and Vince and a
couple of the other guys, Dikembe, we were all sitting on the side and we kept saying,
'Why not us? Why can't we be the ones to come back from a 19-point deficit in an All-Star
Game?'
"They just kept on playing, playing hard, and we turned it on in the fourth quarter
and we hit some shots and then we started to feed off the crowd, the momentum was there
for us and we were able to do it."
Still, Iverson heard someone along the sideline say the East would do well if the West
only won by 10.
"I kept telling them, 'Bet everything you've got on this game right here,' "
Iverson said. "And, you know, I thought we were going to win it. They thought we were
not going to win, and none of them wanted to bet. So, obviously, they knew something that
God knew."
It's a new day in the league, underscored by the East's victory, by the Lakers' Kobe
Bryant generating 19 points and seven assists for the West, by the play of young stars
that included Garnett, Milwaukee's Ray Allen and others.
"We're never going to be able to replace Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and Wilt
Chamberlain, Bill Russell, guys like Larry Bird," Iverson said. "We're not going
to be able to replace those guys.
"You're asking too much to try to replace something like that. They brought
everything to the game.
"They made it, they made us, able to come with our own identity and our own image and
try to be ourselves. We're not going to be able to put our feet in those shoes. It is just
going to take a collective effort from everybody to try to put their feet in those shoes
and try to make this league what it is. And it is a great league."
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