Young USA Stars beat Stripes in NBA All-Star tourney final
Norman Powell #24 of the USA Stripes Team passes the ball during the game against the USA Stripes Team during the 75th NBA All-Star Game as part of NBA All-Star Weekend on Sunday, February 15, 2026 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. Copyright 2026 NBAE Atiba Jefferson/NBAE via Getty Images/AFP (Photo by Atiba Jefferson / NBAE / Getty Images / Getty Images via AFP)
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Anthony Edwards and Tyrese Maxey sparked the USA Stars over
USA Stripes 47-21 in Sunday's final of the 75th NBA All-Star Game tournament.
Maxey scored nine points while Edwards and Chet Holmgren
added eight each as young Stars talent overwhelmed the veteran-laden USA Stripes
in the championship game at Intuit Dome, home of the Los Angeles Clippers.
"We chose to compete today and we came out on
top," said Edwards, the Minnesota Timberwolves guard who won the NBA
All-Star Game Most Valuable Player award.
The Stars began the final with a 12-1 run, powered by seven
points from Maxey, as the Stripes missed their first 10 shots.
The Stars later added a 15-0 run for a 33-9 advantage and
the Stripes could not muster a rally.
Donovan Mitchell had six points and NBA all-time scoring
leader LeBron James, an All-Star for a record 22nd time, added five for the
Stripes in the final.
Instead of the usual two-team event, NBA stars played a
tournament of four 12-minute games between two US sides and a World group of global
talent.
Concerns about lackluster effort in past All-Star contests
were eased in the new format, which produced hustle, defensive effort plus
competitive spark and a high-energy hunger to win.
"I know a lot of people have been concerned about the
All-Star Game, not seeing as much effort. Today we saw it," said former US
President Barack Obama, who was seated at courtside.
"Whenever you get an international team against an
American team, they want to compete -- and you've got some young guys I think want
to prove something out here."
The World needed to beat USA Stripes in the round-robin
finale to advance, but Kawhi Leonard scored 31 points, including the deciding
three-pointer with 3.5 seconds remaining, for a 48-45 Stripes triumph.
"I made my first one, kept on from there and they just
kept falling," said Leonard, who hit 6-of-7 three-point shots.
'Wemby set the tone'
In the round-robin opener, Edwards scored 13 points and
Scottie Barnes sank the winning three-pointer in overtime as the USA Stars beat
the World 37-35.
Wembanyama had 14 points, six rebounds and three blocks in
an intense contest.
"I ain't going to lie, Wemby set the tone,"
Edwards said. "He came out hard and we had to follow that. We had to pick
it up and we did that."
A tying Edwards three-pointer forced overtime at 32-32. With
the first team to score five points winning, Edwards hit a basket, Wembanyama
answered with a three-pointer and Barnes made the game winner.
"Once it got a little tight, the competition picked up,
guys wanted to win," World's Norman Powell said. "We were going to compete
every single possession."
Game two saw more drama when De'Aaron Fox sank a
three-pointer at the buzzer to give USA Stripes a 42-40 triumph over USA Stars.
An Edwards three-pointer gave the Stars a 40-39 edge until Fox
answered from the left wing.
"You live for these moments," James said.
"That's a big time play for us older heads... We know how to keep our
heads and execute."
Jaylen Brown scored 11 points and James added eight to lead
the Stripes while Edwards and Cade Cunningham led the Stars with 11 points
each.


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