
It is time for the NBA All-Star Break. Although only All-Star events are being held, there are still plenty of opportunities to bet on your favorite players. NBA All-Star Weekend is full of events where players can put their skills on display, like the Shooting Stars competition—which we can bet on, of course.
You can find the odds for who will win the Shooting Stars competition and other All-Star events at your favorite online sportsbook. Let’s take a closer look at the Shooting Stars odds.

(Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images)
Here are the odds for the four teams taking part in the Shooting Stars competition (FanDuel):
Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns are scheduled to team up with a New York Knicks legend, Allan Houston. Team Cameron will consist of Atlanta Hawks’ Jalen Johnson, Charlotte Hornets’ Kon Knueppel, and NBA veteran Corey Maggette.
Scottie Barnes (Toronto Raptors), Chet Holmgren (Oklahoma City Thunder), and Richard Hamilton (three-time NBA All-Star) will play for Team All-Stars. Team Harper will be a family affair, featuring Dylan Harper (San Antonio Spurs), his brother Ron Harper Jr. (Boston Celtics), and their father Ron Harper Sr. (a five-time NBA champion).
The competition will be in a two-round format. Teams will have 70 seconds to score as many points as they can while shooting from seven designated locations: Right lane layup/dunk (2 points), 18' right baseline (2 points), Right elbow (2 points), Right wing 3-pointer (3 points), Top of the key (2 points), Left corner 3-pointer (3 points), and Long range 3-pointer (4 points).
All three players will need to shoot at each location. The team with the most points after two rounds will be crowned the winner.
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Picking a winner for something like the Shooting Stars competition can be challenging since you do not know how locked in a player(s) will be. Are they gunning to win or just showing up? All-Star events are notorious for questionable efforts, but that usually applies more to the games than to these events.
Brunson and Towns are both solid shooters; Brunson hits 37.4% of his 3-pointers (47% from the floor) and Towns 35.1% (46.6% from the floor). Allan Houston was a solid shooter in his day, hitting 44.4% of his shots and 40.2% from deep.
Barnes and Holmgren do not shoot as well from deep, but both hit over 50% of their shots, and Richard Hamilton was a wizard from the mid-range back in his day. Jalen Johnson may not win it for Team Cameron, but if rookie Kon Knueppel heats up from 3-point range, he might.
As for Team Harper, I might pull for these guys because of the whole family affair thing. But just looking at how Harper Sr. shot back in the day and looking at the college stats for his sons (because neither plays significant minutes in the NBA), their odds should be a lot longer.
I love the story of Dad leading his boys to victory despite the odds, but yeah—don’t count on it.
Johnson is not a spectacular shooter, but he is good enough to hold his own in this competition. Hopefully, Maggette can keep up. But this team will either sink or swim (and win) depending on whether Kon Knueppel heats up from three-point range. I’m willing to bet that he will.
