• Loading stock data...
Friday, February 13, 2026

Will the NBA Slam Dunk Contest Ever Matter Again?

  • The Saturday night tradition has gone from Michael Jordan to Mac McClung in 35 years.
  • The modern contest favors gimmicky dunks over genuinely jaw-dropping slams.
Obi Toppin goes up for a dunk during the 2022 NBA Slam Dunk Contest.
Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

It’s February 1988. Michael Jordan is slowly walking the length of the Chicago Stadium court as the home crowd’s noise begins to crescendo. The Bulls star is battling against fellow future Hall of Famer Dominique Wilkins in a Slam Dunk Contest that will become an instant classic.

Jordan dribbles in a near-sprint to the opposite basket, plants his left foot on the free-throw line, launches himself at the rim, and throws down a flawless slam dunk — one of the most famous moments in NBA history, All-Star Weekend or otherwise.

Thirty-five years later, in February 2023, the NBA desperately filled out the event’s lineup with an undrafted, largely unknown 6’2” guard — who wasn’t even on an NBA roster.

“That’s crazy, they’re doing that off the G League,” Kevin Durant said on his podcast. “Mac [McClung] is an outstanding athlete, but what are we doing?”

McClung was called up by the Philadelphia 76ers the same day he got the invite. Kenyon Martin Jr., Trey Murphy III, and Jericho Sims will join him in this year’s contest.

No one would blame the average casual fan for being incapable of naming their teams.

The last time a player from that season’s All-Star Game actually participated in the Dunk Contest was in 2017, when the Los Angeles Clippers’ DeAndre Jordan competed.

The question now is whether the Dunk Contest carries any significance beyond representing a piece of nostalgia that…used to be significant — and whether it needs to exist anymore.

How We Got Here

Ironically, the contest began as a stunt. In 1976, the American Basketball Association — trying to find a ratings edge in its battle with the NBA — decided to stage the first professional Slam Dunk Contest during halftime of its All-Star Game. The first winner was Julius “Dr. J” Erving — who threw down a free-throw line dunk 12 years before Jordan.

“Here was my philosophy — dare to be great. Nothing ventured, nothing gained,” Erving said later. “I just wanted to make a nice, soaring play that would get the fans out of their seats.”

The ABA merged with the NBA later that year, but the competition didn’t become a standalone event at All-Star Weekend until 1984, when Larry Nance won the first NBA Slam Dunk Contest — over Erving.

Wilkins won his first contest the next year, beating out rookie Michael Jordan and beginning a friendly rivalry that culminated in the legendary ‘88 edition.

“We knew it was a special contest, but we didn’t know it was going to be that special in the years after,” Wilkins told Front Office Sports last year. “Michael and I competed over 30 years ago, and people still talk about it to this day.”

The Dunk Contests of the ‘90s saw dwindling star power until rookie Kobe Bryant won the competition in 1997. But its waning significance was still so pronounced that the league decided not to hold a Dunk Contest in ‘98, and it was compounded by the lockout in ‘99.

When it returned in 2000, the main attraction was Vince Carter — that All-Star Game’s leading vote-getter and the unquestioned best in-game dunker. The former Toronto Raptor put on one of the greatest performances in Dunk Contest history.

His three iconic dunks — a reverse 360, a between-the-legs alley-oop windmill, and stuffing his entire arm through the rim — breathed new life into the event and impacted the evolution of the dunk itself.

Judge Dread

In sports where the scoring is graded, audiences and judges always want more. The inherent problem with the Dunk Contest is the limits of the dunk and its progression.

Scores in competitive figure skating are given out subjectively based on an objective set of criteria — meaning that the most talented athletes are constantly practicing to both nail what they can do and progress to better elements. For example, last year, Russian Kamila Valieva became the first female figure skater to land a quadruple jump at an Olympics.

The NBA’s version of progression hasn’t been jumping higher, taking off from further behind the free-throw line, or adding 180 degrees; it’s been to get silly. Gimmicks have included blowing out a candle, dunking over a car or celebrity, or wearing a throwback jersey.

“The problem is when you stage stuff like that, you take away the element of surprise. That ‘wow’ factor,” Wilkins says. “Even though you execute the dunk — and they’re very athletic guys in this league, of course — we take a little something away when people see it coming.”

The NBA’s version of judging, meanwhile, has been to award 9s or 10s way too early in the contest and far too often. On the flip side, Dwyane Wade went from celebrity judge to conspiratorial villain when he gave Aaron Gordon a controversial 9, denying him the chance to win the 2020 Slam Dunk crown.

Gordon has thrown down some of the most technically difficult dunks in the contest’s
history — but his dunk legacy is the guy who released a diss track at Wade for being robbed of a meaningless title.

Do Not Enter

For the NBA, the problem gets exacerbated when the best players in the world don’t participate and it becomes maddening considering any superstar could instantly elevate the dunk contest by simply entering.

LeBron James has never participated in a contest. In the mid-2000s, he lampooned his own attitude on the subject in a commercial for Nike’s “The LeBrons” campaign.

“I don’t do that dunk contest stuff,” James says in the ad.

James promised to do the 2010 Dunk Contest, only to back out later.

High-flyers like Russell Westbrook and Ja Morant have also declined to participate.

There’s obviously the narrative of injury risk, even though it’s mostly unfounded and in-game dunks are inherently dangerous themselves. But some former stars point to something else.

“I think they’re maybe afraid to lose,” Wilkins says. “The only way that you know you’re the best is to go against the best. And win or lose, it doesn’t really matter, because years later, they’re still gonna be talking about it.”

“When I first used to watch it, all the best players in the whole NBA used to compete,” 1986 winner Spud Webb told Basketball Insiders. “First, they probably had more pride and wanted to compete or wanted to make the NBA better. Now the guys get paid so much money, they probably don’t care about the dunk contest.”

It says something that the competition’s only three-time champion is 5’9” Nate Robinson — who would never be considered one of the game’s great dunkers.

Where Do We Go From Here?

Controversy may be the only factor keeping the contest relevant. It seems the only way to avoid the Dunk Contest falling into total obscurity is for NBA superstars to compete.

The 3-Point Contest still generates enough big names to be significant. Arguably the best shooter of all time, Steph Curry, is a two-time winner. This year, five of the eight participants are All-Stars: Tyrese Haliburton, Damian Lillard, Lauri Markkanen, Julius Randle, and Jayson Tatum.

If it didn’t matter to the players, Karl-Anthony Towns wouldn’t have made it his mission last year to be the first big-man to win (which he did).

It’s indicative of the way the NBA has changed in recent years: Excluding this season, 3-point attempts per game have increased every season since 2011-12. In other words, the 3-pointer could be the new slam dunk.

Meanwhile, All-Star Game viewership has been consistently trending downward since the ‘90s: The 2021 edition — which wedged the Dunk Contest in at halftime — represented a modern low with just 5.94 million viewers.

Last year’s All-Star Saturday Night was the least-watched in at least 20 years with 4.24 million viewers, per Sports Media Watch.

The NBA was not able to provide a spokesperson to comment on this story.

For now, the league’s solution to the Dunk Contest is to rig Shaquille O’Neal with a special camera that will simultaneously capture the action on the court and his reaction to it.

He’s famously great on camera at dunk contests — his reaction to one of Carter’s dunks at the 2000 contest is a meme decades later. So, that’s…something.

Here’s the greatest irony: If the NBA canceled the event after this year — despite the lack of star power — fans would most likely be outraged.

Maybe the league should take a page out of what it accomplished with the Dunk Contest at the turn of the millennium. Take a couple of years off, then come back with a vengeance, recapturing the event’s cultural significance and the goodwill of fans in a single move.

If a break can’t make the Dunk Contest matter again, it’s only a matter of time before more creative, potentially drastic, changes are needed to keep the once-beloved tradition alive.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Feb 11, 2026; Livigno, Italy; Jaelin Kauf of the United States during freestyle skiing women's moguls final during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Livigno Aerials & Moguls Park

The Surprise Hit of the Winter Olympics: First-Person Drone Views

Tiny drone cameras have reshaped the Olympics viewing experience.
Feb 11, 2026; Milan, Italy; Madison Chock and Evan Bates of the United States skate during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena.

Olympic Figure Skaters Pay Out of Pocket for $9,000 Costumes

For four minutes on ice, stakes are high—and prices even higher.
Nov 29, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Clippers guard Chris Paul (3) brings the ball up court during the first quarter against the Dallas Mavericks at Intuit Dome.

Chris Paul Announces Sudden Retirement After Clippers Trade

Paul is fifth all time in NBA career earnings.
Jan 30, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) reacts after a basket against the Detroit Pistons in the third quarter at the Chase Center.
exclusive

Curry’s Final Under Armour Sneaker Is Here. He Won’t Wear Them in..

Curry last wore Under Armour shoes on Nov. 18.

Featured Today

Epstein Emails Show His F1 Ties Ran Deep

The sex trafficker’s circles included many of the biggest names in F1.
February 6, 2026

Milan’s Olympic Village Is Built for Performance—and Partying

Making Milan’s Olympic Village was a five-year sprint.
February 5, 2026

Welcome to the Prediction-Market Super Bowl

Hundreds of millions of dollars are being traded across many platforms.
Feb 1, 2026; Santa Clara, CA, USA; New England Patriots players arrive prior to Super Bowl LX at San Jose Mineta International Airport.
February 3, 2026

Private Equity Has Reached the Super Bowl

The Patriots are one of four NFL teams with PE investment.

Unrivaled Leans In to NBA Arenas After Making Millions in Philly

The second-year league is thriving on the road while struggling on TV.
February 13, 2026

NFL Wins Ruling to End Public Release of Team Report Cards

Player rankings of team facilities and personnel will no longer be made public.
February 13, 2026

PGA Tour Schedule Revamp Includes Push Into Major U.S. Cities

Some of those plans could be revealed at next month’s Players Championship.
Sponsored

Olympic Hockey Betting Preview: USA and Canada Take Center Ice

Olympic hockey betting odds shift as USA and Canada dominate early action, per BetMGM’s 2026 Winter Games preview.
February 13, 2026

Reds Illustrate the Small-Market Squeeze in MLB’s Revenue Divide

The small-market club stands as a microcosm of baseball’s growing fiscal divide.
February 12, 2026

Manfred: MLB Will ‘Consider Being in Business With Prediction Markets’

The league is actively studying the fast-growing business.
Sep 30, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) greets Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman (5) before the game against the Cincinnati Reds during game one of the Wildcard round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Dodger Stadium.
February 12, 2026

Dodgers $401M Payroll Adds Tension Ahead of MLB Labor Talks

Labor talks are expected to begin in earnest this spring.
February 10, 2026

Grand Slam Track’s Bankruptcy Plan: Paying Athletes and Stiffing Vendors

The plan heavily favors athletes over vendors, but it isn’t final.