Welcome to FTW Explains: A guide to catching up on and better understanding stuff going on in the world.
Sunday’s NBA All-Star Game was one of the best in recent memory, mostly because of the way it ended – via the Elam Ending.
That phrase was trending for most of the fourth quarter of the the game and had everyone wondering what the meaning and the history was behind this thing called the Elam Ending.
What if we told you it was created by a college professor who was frustrated by the drawn-out ending to basketball games while he was still a senior in college in 2004?
Sounds like a hero, right?
What is this now?
You weren’t the only one thinking that during the game
y’all can lie if you want but i KNOW i wasn’t the only one who had to google “elam ending” lol
— Shea Serrano (@SheaSerrano) February 17, 2020
The easy explanation for the Elam Ending is that it’s a format where the final score necessary to win the game is predetermined. In the All-Star Game they took the team’s score that was leading after three quarters (Team Giannis) and added 24 points (in honor of Kobe Bryant) to that score, which brought us to 157. There is no clock, which means there aren’t a ton of fouls in the final minutes which normally take forever.
Team LeBron ended up winning the game, 157-156, in what was a really fun quarter of exhibition basketball… even if the game-winning shot came on a free throw.
🙌 @AntDavis23 misses the first but MAKES the 2nd free-throw to win the 2020 #NBAAllStar game for #TeamLeBron and earn $300,000 more for @ChicagoScholars! pic.twitter.com/b3vYtfK3EJ
— NBA (@NBA) February 17, 2020
Who invented the Elam Ending?
A fella named Nick Elam, who is a professor of educational leadership at Ball State University. He thought of it while watching a college hoops tournament game take forever to play out the final minutes of a game back when he was a senior at the University of Dayton in 2004. There had to be a better way to finish things up more quickly but without losing any of the drama down the stretch so he came up with one called – the Elam Ending, which was born in 2007.
This ending has been used the past few years by The Basketball Tournament, which is a winner-take all, $2 million tournament that has thoroughly enjoyed the Elam Ending.
Want to know more about this Nick Elam fella?
Of course you do. There are many stories out there about him, as he’s quite popular right now. Here’s one I liked while doing research on this thing:
Seeing a lot of tweets about the Elam Ending. Here's my story from last summer on UD grad Nick Elam. Truly a renaissance man. He somehow also finds time to be a part-time groundskeeper for the Reds. https://t.co/DmtbTtafjS
— David Jablonski (@DavidPJablonski) February 17, 2020
What did players think of the Elam Ending?
They loved it!
Well… the Elam ending worked!
— Spencer Dinwiddie (@SDinwiddie_25) February 17, 2020
Brandon Ingram is a fan of the Elam Ending. He said he wishes he could’ve played a little bit more. Said he was on a minutes restriction but expects to be fully healthy by New Orleans’ first game after the break.
— Christian Clark (@cclark3000) February 17, 2020
What did fans/media think of the Elam Ending?
They loved it! Though some would offer one tweak to it that makes sense:
They definitely need to make it that you can’t win on a free throw in the All-Star game. But the Elam ending clearly is the most exciting method.
— Jared Weiss (@JaredWeissNBA) February 17, 2020
the Elam Ending is incredible and obviously it’s been a huge success at the All-Star Game but yeah the one problem is “you can win on a free throw"
— Rodger Sherman (@rodger) February 17, 2020
Suggestions:
*No FT win in Elam Ending
*Dunk Contest voted based on catalog of dunks, not each /10
*No Reggie
*Charges drawn worth 5 points
*Hair vs hair between the captains
*Riley rule waived for Nurse
*Mascot battle royalThought this was a great All-Star Weekend overall.
— Blake Murphy (@BlakeMurphyODC) February 17, 2020
One thing I saw tweeted which I liked –
Made Free throws in Elam state deduct one point from fouling team vs adding a point to the shooting team. https://t.co/nmTa2RpqCq— Haralabos Voulgaris (@haralabob) February 17, 2020
What if we tweak the ELAM ending so that free throws remove a point from your opponent’s score, so that the game ends on a field goal.
— Spencer Hall / Salt City Hoops (@saltcityhoops) February 17, 2020
The NBA should utilize the Elam Ending in Summer League. Experiment tweaks for the target ending rules and consider using it in a potential midseason tournament. It’s non-traditional but it’s thrilling in TBT and was thrilling again tonight. It could be made better than the norm.
— Kevin O'Connor (@KevinOConnorNBA) February 17, 2020
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