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1991 Yugoslav Basketball All-Star Game

The 1991 Yugoslav Basketball All-Star Game (also known as 1991 Yu All-Star) was a one-off basketball event in former Yugoslavia. It was held towards the end of the 1990-91 season, and it was the only basketball All-Star Game to take place in former Yugoslavia.

The 1992 edition was cancelled due to the Yugoslav Wars.

Events

The Game

The first Yu All-Star match was held in Bosnia, in Sarajevo's Skenderija Hall on Tuesday, on May 7, 1991. The event was organized by host club KK Bosna and Sarajevo-based Večernje novine daily newspaper as an exhibition showcase.

The organizers decided to time the game in accordance with the NBA rules: four quarters of twelve minutes each rather than the then FIBA customary two halves of twenty minutes each. The Red team were coached by Duško Vujošević and the White team by Željko Pavličević. Overall, the twenty-four best Yugoslav players played in a game that ended 125-114 for the White team.

The topscorer of the game was Žarko Paspalj with 31 points for the Reds, while Aleksandar Đorđević had 24 for the Whites. Toni Kukoč scored 22, Zoran Savić 17 and Arijan Komazec 16. Top assister was Aleksandar Đorđević with 8 and top rebounders were Zoran Savić with 9 and Toni Kukoč with 8.

Rosters

Three-point shootout

Total of 19 players signed up for the shootout that consisted of 25 shots from five different positions in 60 seconds — five racks of five balls each — with each regular ball made worth one point and the last ball in each rack (moneyball) worth two points. In the preliminary qualification, the best five were chosen for the final that took place during the All-Star Game halftime.

The three-point shootout finalists were:

The final's first elimination stage was played in two rounds with each player's best score taken for classification. The two best scores posted were Komazec's and Cvjetićanin's — Komazec had 25 points in his second round while Cvjetićanin had 20 points in his first.

The two went head-to-head for the title in additional two rounds.

Arijan Komazec won due to the better first additional round. In addition to the trophy, he received a money prize of YUD 30,000.

Slum-dunk contest

Four players made the final:

Five judges for the dunk competition were: Žarko Varajić, Mirza Delibašić, Branko Macura, Nedjeljko Oštarčević, Mišo Ostarčević, and Vinko Jelovac.

  • In the first round, Avdić's dunk earned 41 points, Kukoč's 48, Bacalja's 44, and Pecarski's 43
  • In the second round, Avdić had 46 points, Toni Kukoč 46, Zoran Bacalja 50 (behind the back dunk on the second try), and Miroslav Pecarski 45
  • In the third round, Avdić had 46 points, Kukoč 50 (one-handed dunk from the free-throw line), Bacalja 50 (behind the back dunk after a bounce), and Pecarski 46.

Toni Kukoč and Bacalja made the two-man final.

  • In the first round, Kukoč had 47 while Bacalja also had 47.
  • In the second round, Kukoč had 50 (dunked with two balls) while Bacalja had 48. In the third round, Kukoč had 50 (another one-handed dunk from the free-throw line) while Bacalja had 47.

Overall

Results

Bold: Team that won the game.

Three-point contest

Slam-dunk contest

1992 edition

In the summer of 1991, the biggest names of Yugoslav basketball moved abroad, with Dino Radja, Toni Kukoc and Jure Zdovc moving to Italy despite having NBA offers. The ongoing Yugoslav Wars during the 1991-92 season and the withdrawal of the Croatian teams from the league meant that the second All-Star Game would not take place, while the Yugoslav Basketball Federation (KSJ) was dissolved.

Distinctions

FIBA Hall of Fame

Basketball Hall of Fame

FIBA's 50 Greatest Players (1991)

See also

References

Sources