The NBA All-Star Weekend has taken over Los Angeles, and this year is unlike anything the league has done before. The 75th annual All-Star Game is happening Sunday at Intuit Dome in Inglewood, but the format is revolutionary instead of the traditional East versus West matchup, the league is running a round-robin tournament with two U.S. teams facing off against a World team. This is the record seventh All-Star Game to be held in the L.A. area (last hosted in 2018), and the league clearly wanted to shake things up for the milestone celebration.
Here’s how the new format actually works, and it’s genuinely innovative
Two teams of U.S. players will face one World team in four 12-minute games. Each team has a minimum of eight players. Team A plays Team B in Game 1, and the winner advances to face Team C. The loser of Game 1 faces Team C in the penultimate game. The teams with the top two records then meet in the championship. It’s basically the basketball version of a round-robin tournament everyone plays multiple times, the best records get the championship spot, and it keeps the action going throughout instead of just one winner-takes-all game.
The weekend started Friday night with pure entertainment at the Kia Forum in Inglewood
The celebrity game kicked things off with the kind of chaos you expect when actors and musicians get on a basketball court. Then the Rising Stars competition moved to Intuit Dome, where Team Vince defeated Team Melo in a highly competitive game. The night ended with the HBCU Classic featuring Hampton against North Carolina A&T’s men’s basketball teams at the Kia Forum. That’s a solid opening night that honors college basketball while celebrating the league’s best talents.
Saturday night is where All-Star Weekend gets genuinely fun
The 3-point contest and dunk contest are happening, which means you’re getting the athletic spectacle that makes this weekend special. But the league also brought back the Shooting Stars competition, which is basically the all-star showcase of shooting accuracy. What makes this year interesting is that the Shooting Stars competition is featuring NBA alumni Richard Hamilton, Allan Houston, Corey Maggette, and Ron Harper Sr. are all involved. That’s the kind of connection between eras that makes All-Star Weekend feel special.
The new format represents a genuine shift in how the NBA thinks about All-Star competition
The traditional East-West split had become predictable. Adding a World team creates interesting dynamics because suddenly you’ve got international players going up against the best American talent in a format that matters. The round-robin means every game has stakes, not just one championship game. It’s the kind of thinking that transforms a tradition into something people actually want to watch.
What’s also interesting is how much the league is emphasizing community during this weekend
The Rising Stars game is about celebrating the next generation of talent. The HBCU Classic honors historically Black colleges and universities. The Shooting Stars brings back legends. This isn’t just about putting the NBA‘s best players on display. It’s about acknowledging the entire ecosystem that creates basketball at this level.
Sunday’s All-Star Game represents the centerpiece of this weekend, and the new format genuinely changes what we should expect. It’s not East versus West anymore. It’s United States versus the World in a tournament structure that keeps the competition tight. That’s a bigger deal than it might sound. It reframes All-Star Weekend as a global celebration of basketball rather than just an American showcase.
The 75th All-Star Game is happening at exactly the right moment when the league realized its traditions needed evolution, not just repetition. Los Angeles is the perfect backdrop for that kind of reimagining.

