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Date | February 10, 1991 | ||||||||||||||||||
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Arena | Charlotte Coliseum | ||||||||||||||||||
City | Charlotte | ||||||||||||||||||
MVP | Charles Barkley | ||||||||||||||||||
National anthem | Bruce Hornsby, Branford Marsalis | ||||||||||||||||||
Attendance | 23,530 | ||||||||||||||||||
Network | NBC TNT (All-Star Saturday) | ||||||||||||||||||
Announcers | Bob Costas, Mike Fratello and Pat Riley[1] Bob Neal, Doug Collins and Hubie Brown (All-Star Saturday) | ||||||||||||||||||
NBA All-Star Game | |||||||||||||||||||
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The 1991 NBA All-Star Game was an exhibition basketball game between players selected from the National Basketball Association's Western Conference and the Eastern Conference that was played on February 10, 1991, at the Charlotte Coliseum in Charlotte, North Carolina. This game was the 41st edition of the NBA All-Star Game and was played during the 1990–91 NBA season.
The All-Star Weekend began on Saturday, February 9, 1991, with the Stay In School Jam, Legends Classic, the Three-Point Shootout and the Slam Dunk Contest.
This was the first NBA All-Star Game broadcast by NBC after 17 years with CBS.
The All-Star Game returned to Charlotte in 2019, though it was played at the Spectrum Center in Uptown, and broadcast on TNT (the All-Star Game has never been broadcast on ABC or ESPN during the networks' current contract with the league, which began during the 2002–03 season).