Before last season, the NBA announced it had amended its All-Star Game balloting procedures by eliminating the center position from consideration, which now allows voters to select three "frontcourt" players rather than two forwards and a center to start the game for each conference instead.
At the time, it was done to keep pace with a changing game in which more and more teams played with smaller lineups while the big man who once dominated the game playing with his back to the basket continues to disappear.
Or does he?
Wednesday's meeting at Target Center showed there's still a place in this game for the center when Timberwolves center Nikola Pekovic and Sacramento's DeMarcus Cousins pushed each other around all night in a battle of brutes.
There might not be a place for either in the starting lineup when West plays East next month because voters worldwide choosing on every social-media platform imaginable overwhelmingly prefer Houston's Dwight Howard. Fans apparently haven't noticed that both Cousins and Pekovic at times have been dominant. Coaches no longer have to include a center when they pick reserves, either.
"I don't know how that's going to go," Wolves coach Rick Adelman said, "but they're both having great years."
Howard was second among all West "frontcourt" players — behind Oklahoma City small forward Kevin Durant and just ahead of Los Angeles Clippers power forward Blake Griffin — in the last batch of balloting results released last week before voting ends Monday.
Starters will be announced Thursday starting at 6 p.m. on TNT before its weekly doubleheader. Coaches' picks for reserves will be announced Jan. 30.