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Did the NBA Fix the All-Star Game? Mixed Reviews After New Format Debut

The knobs were turned, the recipe tweaked, and the NBA sat back and watched the latest version of its embattled showcase event unfold in the Los Angeles area this weekend.

The verdict? It was entertaining until it wasn’t as the NBA learned there actually can be too much of a good thing when it comes to the All-Star Game.

What went right was that one team of young stars, one team of veteran heroes and another of international standouts seemed to return an improved sense of pride to the event.

And 12-minute games, where energy and effort play is needed to move forward, added the sense of urgency that had been lacking in All-Star Games from the past.

But by essentially playing the equivalent high-stakes games that mirrored full-game fourth quarters, there were heavy legs and wayward shots by the time the title-game matchup rolled around.

It was hardly a surprise that the younger USA Stars were the last team standing. Their lopsided 47-21 victory over the veteran USA Stripes failed to deliver the proper crescendo that had been building from the beginning.

With victory and the MVP in hand, though, Anthony Edwards of USA Stars gave the event’s new format his stamp of approval.

“Yeah, I think they ain’t really going to take in what I’m saying, but I like this format,” the Minnesota Timberwolves’ star said. “I think it makes us compete because it’s only 12 minutes, and the three different teams separate the guys. I think it was really good.”

There are still those who want to put the old pieces back together.

“I mean, East-West is definitely a tradition,” said LeBron James of USA Stripes, before playing in his record 22nd All-Star Game. “It’s been really good. Obviously, I like the East and West format. They’re trying something. We’ll see what happens.”

Kawhi Leonard of Team Stripes leaned into the urgency and scored 31 points in 12 minutes to end Team World’s title hopes. He had fans in his home arena chanting “MVP” before running out of gas in the final when he scored one point.

“I thought it was good, but I still think going back to East-West will be great,” Leonard said. “I think guys will compete still.”

As promising as Sunday’s format was, there was plenty of confusion on the court after USA Stripes earned a 42-40 victory over USA Stars on a buzzer-beating 3-pointer from De’Aaron Fox.

“I hit a 3 to get to 40, and we thought the game was over,” Edwards said. “Fox came back and hit a 3, and they won. I kind of felt like we got wigged out, but it’s all good.”

Leonard said Saturday that he wasn’t sure how the round-robin format was going to work. He still had questions Sunday.

“Even as the game’s going on, trying to figure out the records for being 2-1 and how you play that out as well,” Leonard said. “Is it like by points? How many? Point spread or what?”

Kevin Durant of Team Stripes failed to score in the title game and had 12 points on the day but went on the record multiple times begging to stop the criticism madness.

“I just feel like fans and media need something to complain about, and the All-Star Game don’t make them feel like they felt when they were kids,” Durant said this past weekend. “They need something to complain about. I don’t think it’s that big of a deal, to be honest.”

The NBA showed it is listening with its newest format. The league even added a Shooting Stars competition to All-Star Saturday. The addition of an international team in the All-Star Game gave the day an Olympics/Ryder Cup flavor.

There will still be plenty of detractors. Having the veteran USA Stripes play three consecutive high-energy 12-minute games didn’t seem like a good idea. And it wasn’t.

“The format, yeah, I liked it,” Team World’s Victor Wembanyama said. “I liked it. I wouldn’t be against this format in the future, and I wouldn’t be against the regular East versus West either.”

Now comes the wait to see what the NBA does next year as the Suns’ Devin Booker gets set to welcome the All-Star circus Phoenix. Booker validated Sunday’s festivities.

“I think every team honestly wanted to win,” Booker said.

Of course that is easy to say when you did actually win.

“I know the world guys wanted to win,” Booker said. “I know Victor wanted to win bad. You could see it. And I know our team did. Shout-out Kawhi. We were watching that game in the back. That’s probably one of the most special quarters of basketball we’ve witnessed.”

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Fire endeavor to keep unbeaten run alive vs. last-place SKC

MLS: Chicago Fire FC at FC CincinnatiApr 18, 2026; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Chicago Fire FC forward Hugo Cuypers (9) (center) dribbles forward during the second half of an MLS match against FC Cincinnati at TQL Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kareem Elgazzar-Imagn Images

After letting a second-half lead slip away in their last outing, the host Chicago Fire renew their rivalry with fellow Midwestern foe Sporting Kansas City on Saturday night.

While the Fire (4-2-2, 14 points) are unbeaten in their last five matches across all competitions (4-0-1), they blew a 3-1 second-half lead against FC Cincinnati on April 18. Evander’s penalty kick in the 79th minute and Dje D’Avilla’s own goal seven minutes later engineered Cincinnati’s 3-3 come-from-behind draw.

“For us, there were a couple things we did wrong, and a lot of that is correctable. We looked at the video and worked on it. It’s something we want to stay focused,” Fire head coach Gregg Berhalter said.

Though Kansas City (1-6-1, 4 points) is currently at the bottom of the Western Conference, that’s “a little bit misleading,” Berhalter said.

“They have played better at times than the results show, and they pose some problems. For us, it’s being really focused on what we’re trying to do, being aggressive and trying to set the team up for success,” he said.

Sporting KC have dropped five in a row across all competitions, including a 3-0 upset loss to USL Championship side Colorado Springs Switchbacks in the U.S. Open Cup Round of 32 on April 14. They have been outscored 16-3 in that span.

It’s far from what SKC head coach Raphael Wicky anticipated, ahead of his first meeting against the club he helmed for just shy of two seasons in 2020 and 2021.

“When you look at all these games, there’s always moments where we’re good, that we’re in the game, and then very quickly we make a mistake or we concede, and then we’re quickly out of the game,” Wicky said. “So that is always frustrating, but that is where I think we have to keep going.”

Chicago forward Jonathan Bamba (personal matters) will remain out against Kansas City, per Berhalter. Defender Leonardo Barroso (lower-body injury) is out as well.

Wicky was 12-26-14 in 52 matches as the Fire’s head coach.

Hugo Cuypers has netted half of Chicago’s 12 goals. Dejan Joveljic has four of SKC’s seven to lead the visitors.

–Field Level Media

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Better-rested Nashville SC welcome Charlotte FC

MLS: Nashville SC at Charlotte FCApr 11, 2026; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Nashville SC forward Sam Surridge (9) chases the loose ball during the second half against the Charlotte FC at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Scott Kinser-Imagn Images

Two months into the regular season, Nashville SC built the best record in the Eastern Conference while juggling matches in the CONCACAF Champions Cup.

Now, Nashville will have had a rare full week’s rest when it hosts Charlotte FC on Saturday.

Nashville SC (6-1-1, 19 points) had Wednesday off while much of the league was in action. They also didn’t have a midweek Champions Cup fixture for a change: Nashville beat Club America on aggregate last week and will tussle with Mexican power Tigres UANL in the semifinals beginning April 28.

“I think when you actually get a full week of training, you can really focus on yourself for periods of time,” Nashville head coach B.J. Callaghan said. “Obviously when you’re playing every two days, a lot of it has to do with recovery and thinking about what you’re going to do for the opponent.”

Recovery helps, too. Callaghan said Nashville’s top scorer Sam Surridge, who hasn’t played since April 11 due to a hamstring injury, is back at practice and available for selection. He’s tied with Inter Miami’s Lionel Messi for third in the league with seven goals.

That April 11 match was the first meeting between regional rivals Nashville and Charlotte this year. Edvard Tagseth and Patrick Yazbek scored in either half to lift Nashville to a 2-1 road win.

“We didn’t play well in the first half against Nashville. We never got the ball back,” Charlotte coach Dean Smith said this week. “I didn’t think we pressed as well as we could’ve, with the intensity that we needed to. We certainly need to go and do that.”

Charlotte FC (4-3-2, 14 points) have dropped two of three in league play, most recently taking a 4-1 road loss to Orlando City on Wednesday. That was Charlotte’s highest yield of the season, yet Smith insisted his team played better than in its previous match, a 2-1 win over New York City FC. Defender Morrison Agyemang, 21, had his first career goal.

Smith said defender and U.S. men’s national team captain Tim Ream (adductor) will miss one more match but should be ready for May 2 at the New England Revolution.

“I think they’ve had to make a few adjustments with Tim Ream out,” Callaghan said, “but I think what you always get from Charlotte is a really well-coached team, organized in a lot of phases and again, that highlights a lot of — I would say, some of their individual attacking qualities really are able to come out from that.”

–Field Level Media

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Red-hot San Jose Earthquakes seek 1st-ever win over St. Louis City

MLS: Austin FC at San Jose EarthquakesApr 22, 2026; San Jose, California, USA; San Jose Earthquakes forward Timo Werner (11) celebrates scoring the team’s second goal against Austin FC in the second half at PayPal Park. Mandatory Credit: Eakin Howard-Imagn Images

St. Louis City SC has never lost or tied in six matches against the San Jose Earthquakes in their four-year existence.

If current form holds for both teams, that streak figures to end Saturday night when San Jose invades Energizer Park in a fixture of Western Conference squads.

After routing Austin 5-1 on Wednesday in northern California, the Earthquakes (8-1-0, 24 points) boast the top record in MLS and are tied with Vancouver for the best goal differential at plus-18.

Meanwhile, St. Louis (1-4-3, 6 points) is coming off a 4-1 loss last Saturday at Seattle that extended its MLS winless streak to three matches (0-1-2). Not only is it once again struggling to score goals — it has seven in eight matches — but its defense has conceded at least once in every match.

Midfielder Marcel Hartel didn’t have a real answer when asked why the team continues to struggle to finish its chances.

“That’s a good question,” he said. “We speak about it after every game — analyze the goals we concede, the goals we score. We defend good as a collective. … We have to score more goals. We have good opportunities in every game.”

The return of Eduard Lowen could help St. Louis unlock its offense. He played briefly at the end in Seattle and scored in stoppage time.

As for San Jose, its only problem might be overcheering. The team is scoring nearly three goals per match and its defense, an issue last year when it missed the playoffs, is maintaining its shape beautifully.

It’s adding up to another magical second season for coach Bruce Arena. If the Earthquakes earn the Supporters’ Shield, it would be the fourth team Arena has coached that has earned that honor in his second year with that squad.

“We won nine games last year. We have eight now,” he said. “I attribute it simply that they grind it out, they work hard every day and they like each other.”

Oussemi Bouda and Preston Judd each have five goals, while four other players have scored two goals each.

–Field Level Media

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