Basketball Hall Of Fame Finalists

© AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File
The Latest: Shaq, Iverson finalists for the Hall of Fame - The Latest on Friday's events at the NBA's All-Star Weekend in Toronto (all times local):

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2:15 p.m.

Shaquille O'Neal and Allen Iverson are finalists for the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

College coaches Tom Izzo, Eddie Sutton, Lefty Driesell, Bo Ryan and Muffet McGraw, and women's star Sheryl Swoopes were also among the finalists announced Friday.

They could be voted as Hall of Famers when the full class is announced in April.

So could Yao Ming, who is already a finalist and could be directly elected from the International Committee.

— Brian Mahoney

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1:58 p.m.

New York Knicks star Carmelo Anthony says he hopes the owners and the players union can come to a new labor agreement without a work stoppage.

Anthony was speaking on Friday as part of the kickoff to All-Star weekend festivities. Either side can choose to opt out of the current collective bargaining agreement until Dec. 15.

Last time the two sides could not come to an agreement, the owners locked out the players that shortened the 2011-12 season by 16 games.

"I hope we can come to an agreement sooner rather than later," said Anthony, who fully endorse NBPA executive director Michele Roberts. "We don't want another lockout. We just have to sit down at the table. Now, it's talking about more important issues than we talked about in the past and being transparent with each other."

— Jon Krawczynski

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1:25 p.m.

Kobe Bryant has gone through an All-Star media day for the final time.

The retiring star of the Los Angeles Lakers took questions for about 30 minutes, laughed and smiled throughout, accepted some gifts from international reporters — including a photo that said "thank you" — and spoke in English, Italian and a little Spanish at times. He even asked a reporter from Taiwan to teach him a phrase in his language.

Topics ranged from his love of storytelling (which he intends to make his next passion after basketball), what he would tell his 8-year-old self (enjoy the moment) and how long he wants to play in the All-Star Game on Sunday night.

Bryant says he would be fine playing just 10 minutes. Fans, however, are probably hoping for far more than that.

— Tim Reynolds

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11:45 a.m.

Chris Paul looked at a teammate, then glared at an opponent. Dwyane Wade made what he thought was a great play, then yelled in disbelief when it didn't work out to his liking.

The games have started at All-Star weekend — and no, not of the basketball variety.

Wade and the sock company Stance hosted a Spades tournament on Thursday night and the card game was attended by plenty of current and former players, including Carmelo Anthony and Allen Iverson.

It was the second annual tournament, and much like last year's debut in New York, the players took the game very — very — seriously.

Before he sat down to play with his teammate (and wife) Gabrielle Union, Wade says players don't turn off the competitive fires that fuel them on the court, explaining that "competitive people like winning, no matter what we do."

— Tim Reynolds

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10:20 a.m.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has opened All-Star weekend by paying homage to the league's history in Toronto.

Silver spoke Friday morning at the NBA All-Star Technology Summit, and began his remarks by reminding attendees that the league's enormous success globally stems in part from what happened in Toronto on Nov. 1, 1946 — when the first game in what was then called the Basketball Association of America was played.

Silver is calling this weekend "a very special one for us in the NBA, a homecoming."

It was in Toronto on that night nearly 70 years ago when the New York Knicks visited and beat the Toronto Huskies 68-66. The game was played at Maple Leaf Gardens — "which, if you're curious, is now a grocery store," Silver says

— Tim Reynolds

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