Spurs forward LaMarcus Aldridge has cried foul over the team’s having only one player going to Sunday’s All-Star Game.
Aldridge, speaking to The Vertical, said it wasn’t fair the Warriors will send four players — Kevin Durant, Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green — to the Spurs’ one, in Kawhi Leonard, despite holding the second-best record in the NBA — 42-13 (.764) to Golden State’s 46-9 (.836).
“I’m older, so I’m not going to come home and be mad or anything,” Aldridge told the Yahoo! Sports website. “But I do think that it was wrong for Golden State to have four [All-Stars] and we’re a few games behind and only have one.”
Editor’s Picks
Spurs set mark with 20th straight winning season
Kawhi Leonard scored 32 points and the San Antonio Spurs clinched their NBA-record 20th consecutive winning season with a 110-106 victory over the Indiana Pacers on Monday night.
Pop waiting for Trump to talk to maligned groups
Spurs coach Gregg Popovich says he finds it “disgusting” that President Trump hasn’t attempted to reconcile with groups he disparaged during his campaign.
Rivers: Kerr should cater to Westbrook in ASG
Doc Rivers says Steve Kerr, as coach as the West All-Stars, should probably forget about his own superstar players.
2 Related
Kawhi Leonard scored 32 points and the San Antonio Spurs clinched their NBA-record 20th consecutive winning season with a 110-106 victory over the Indiana Pacers on Monday night.
Spurs coach Gregg Popovich says he finds it “disgusting” that President Trump hasn’t attempted to reconcile with groups he disparaged during his campaign.
Doc Rivers says Steve Kerr, as coach as the West All-Stars, should probably forget about his own superstar players.
Aldridge had been selected to five straight All-Star Games, including last year in his first season with the Spurs.
“It is what it is,” Aldridge said. “I’m in this position and I’m going to enjoy my break and just come back fresh.”
Aldridge, who said he’d spend this weekend’s All-Star break in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, chose San Antonio in free agency in 2015 after nine years with the Portland Trail Blazers.
He was a hot commodity and he was expected to be a building block for the future.
“It was very difficult, because I couldn’t be the guy that I’ve been my whole career,” Aldridge said of last season. “It was very difficult to adjust from being who I was to who I am now. Now, I’m fine. I do what I’m asked to do. I rebound, take shots every now and then. I’m not really asked to be that guy that I was, so I just play the role that they want me to play. Play defense. Do pick-and-pop when they need it, and other than that just play off Kawhi.”
Our editors found this article on this site using Google and regenerated it for our readers.