INGLEWOOD â It takes just one.
And if I told you a chess-playing, voracious-reading, Shaolin monk-Kung Fu-trained, cosmopolitan European was the one?
Well, if you tuned in at all for the NBAâs new-look All-Star Game on Sunday at the Intuit Dome â and I hope you did â you would agree, obviously.
It was Kawhi Leonardâs house and Anthony Edwardsâ hardware, but it was Victor Wembanyamaâs world.
The San Antonio Spursâ dexterous 7-foot-5ish center wanted competitive All-Star play and he got competitive All-Star play: the Frenchman is a true American hero.
Because it was an impossible ask. A 7-foot-something tall task. A wish upon a superstar.
But Wemby got his painfully cool peers to play along, to pick up the tempo â and their defense, often at half court.
He got the risk-averse millionaires and billionaire in the building to take these silly mini-games seriously â instead of coasting for 48 minutes, they refused to take off a single possession of the round-robin series of 12-minute games.
He got them sweating. Sweating the outcome, certainly â and actually, literally .
âI think it was pretty good,â Wembanyama said. â⌠it was a pretty good display of basketball. Better than last year, in my opinion. It was fun.â
Sundayâs exhibition â three truly taut contests leading into the Stars squadâs 47-21 torching of the Stripes in the final â felt like everything Kobe Bryant was talking about when he said on the Knuckleheadsâ podcast in 2019: âFans want to see the best pickup game in the world.â
wanted the best pickup game in the world.
Wemby is a doe-legged monster with an elastic, Gumby-esque 7-foot-4 or- 5 frame (he doesnât even know) and mind-bending skillset. But whatâs going to make the 22-year-old the next is his deliciously insatiable level of compete.
That relentless drive to do and be his best, what we in L.A. call the Mamba Mentality. As we know, thatâs a contagious and inspiring philosophy.
It pervaded the whole starry enterprise Sunday, so Leonardâs 31 points in the Stripesâ 48-45 victory in Game 3 over Wembanyamaâs team of international All-Stars were anything but empty calories.
That offensive explosion from the Clippersâ leading man on his home court held so much more weight because he was being guarded hard, including by Wemby, the human eraser who is averaging a league-leading 2.7 blocked shots per game this season.
âI tried my best,â said Wembanyama, the leagueâs most formidable defender, visibly dejected as he handled a microphone like a toy during his postgame news conference.
And Edwardsâ MVP award â named the Kobe Bryant trophy â means more because of how hard the Ant-Man had to work for it. He wouldnât have, the Minnesota Timberwolvesâ honest and often hilarious shooting guard kept saying, if Wembanyama didnât start it, even letting him know in the tunnel before they took the court: âIâm matched up on you.â
âIâm not gonna lie, Wemby set the tone,â Edwards said during his on-court interview after his Stars eked out a 37-35 overtime victory over Wembyâs World team. âLike, he came out playing hard so itâs hard not to match that â so, [expletive], thatâs what happened. Sorry for my language; thatâs what happened, though.â
Edwards matched up well, finishing with 32 points across three games for the winning team. He answered the call, but he didnât make the call.
That was Wembanyama, who had 14 points, six rebounds and three blocks in the Worldâs first loss and 19 points â including a pair of clutch 3-pointers â in its second.
He did all that, but more, he made it official Sunday: Heâll be the guy. Heâs going to be the guy.
He that guy.
âItâs something thatâs got to be natural, of course,â he said. âObviously social media, the NBA can promote whoever they want.
âBut at the end of the day, itâs going to be the best players and who the people ask for. Being the âface of the league,â itâs something that can be manufactured but only to some extent. Itâs only going to be the best players. This is what itâs all about.â
Or, as he told NBA insider Chris Haynes before tipoff: âSupply and demand, and Iâm here to supply.â