The Only NBA Game Ever Called on Account of Hugs
The 1992 NBA All-Star Game was one for the ages, a Magical night no fan of basketball or comeback stories will ever forget…
THE 1992 NBA ALL STAR GAME WAS APPROPRIATELY PLAYED IN ORLANDO, HOME OF THE MAGIC. The sunny Florida locale typically associates magic with animated mice and the Magical Kingdom, but that day the only Magic that mattered was the one on a basketball court.
Magic Johnson was a three-time NBA MVP. He played in nine NBA Finals and appeared in 12 All-Star games. Along with Larry Bird, Isiah Thomas, and Michael Jordan, Magic was unquestionably one of the premier faces of the league. It’s no exaggeration to say Magic and Bird saved the NBA.
But none of that mattered on the afternoon of November 7, 1991.
The sports world watched in shock as Magic Johnson announced his immediate retirement before the stunned media. The season had just gotten underway six days earlier, but Johnson had yet to play. That day, everyone learned why. In a preseason physical, Magic had tested positive for HIV.
We know much more about HIV 28 years later, but it was all so new at the time. I remember watching my television at age nine, aghast at the news. Magic wasn’t just retiring. To many, it felt like a death sentence.
Johnson retired effective immediately, dedicating his life to “battle this deadly disease.” Most figured they’d never see him on a basketball court again.
Now, barely three months later, Magic was suiting up for another basketball game. Despite never playing a game that season, the fans voted Johnson in to the All-Star Game. Once it was determined that Magic’s participation would cause no undue health risk for either him or his opponents, it was decided that he could play.
Not everyone agreed with the decision. Longtime Lakers teammates A.C. Green and Bryon Scott didn’t think Magic should play, and Karl Malone famously worried he was at risk of being contaminated in the game if Johnson had an open wound.
Controversial or not, Johnson would play, and thanks to Tim Hardaway’s selfless decision to give up his starting spot, Magic would start in what everyone assumed would be his last basketball game ever. And even in a game loaded with the NBA’s biggest and brightest stars, there was no question about the spotlight that day.
This was Magic’s show, and everyone else was just a supporting character.
It’s not like the teams in the 1992 All-Star Game weren’t absolutely loaded.
Nine of the 10 starters went on to play for the Dream Team that summer in the Barcelona Olympics. That included Magic Johnson, with Isiah Thomas a controversial exclusion. Magic’s West teammates in blue included Clyde Drexler, Chris Mullin, Karl Malone, and David Robinson. His opponents in white were Thomas, Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Charles Barkley, and Patrick Ewing. Another Dream Teamer, Larry Bird, would also have started if he weren’t out with an injury.
The benches had plenty of ammo, too. Magic’s included NBA legends like Hakeem Olajuwon and John Stockton, James Worthy and Dikembe Mutombo. Tim Hardaway was there, after giving up his starting spot, just a month before giving birth to Tim Jr., now with the Dallas Mavericks.
The 1991–92 season turned out to be a transitional one for the NBA. Magic and the Los Angeles Lakers had played in the NBA Finals the summer before, falling to the Chicago Bulls in Michael Jordan’s first championship. The 80s had been dominated by Magic and Bird, but Johnson was now retired and Bird and Kevin McHale missed much of the season for the Boston Celtics. Dominique Wilkins also missed the whole season with a torn Achilles.
Johnson and Bird would play for the Dream Team that summer, more as figureheads than stars. This was MJ’s league now, and Chuck’s and Hakeem’s and Clyde’s.
Not every player that played that day was a star. It’s hard not to chuckle at some of the inclusions lucky enough to tell their grandkids one day about the time grandpa got to play in Magic’s final All-Star Game.
Kevin Willis made his only All-Star appearance. He was second in the NBA in rebounds with one of his three positive Box Plus-Minus years in 23 NBA seasons. Michael Adams of the Washington Bullets was an injury replacement for Larry Bird. Adams was the NBA’s all-time leader in three-point makes. Journeyman Otis Thorpe made his only All-Star appearance, robbing players like Drazen Petrovic and Kevin Johnson. Thorpe’s lineup introduction recognized him as one of the game’s field-goal percentage leaders who had recently played his 500th straight game. Thorpe played four minutes — but he’ll always remember appearing in this one.
The Eastern starters were announced first, followed by the West. When the final name was announced, the Orlando crowd went berserk.
There was Magic Johnson, with his characteristically bright smile, ready for one final NBA appearance.
The game was about to begin.
IT WAS AN UP-AND-DOWN AFFAIR EARLY, with teams running the fast break back and forth while dizzied fans tried to catch their breath. Magic and Isiah pushed the pace at either end.
Johnson hadn’t played professionally since the Finals the previous summer, but he hardly looked out of shape. Instead, Magic was the one running the show. He hit an early baby hook in the post, a throwback to an iconic moment in Game 4 of the 1987 Finals against the Celtics. The game was so back-and-forth early that Dick Enberg referred to it on the broadcast as a “table tennis match.” Fonder times.
Magic scored 10 early points, and the West went on a 14–0 run to open up a 44–31 lead as the first quarter concluded.
Johnson played most of the first quarter and looked like the player everyone remembered but worried they’d never see again.
Magic was back.
The West continued their dominance in the second quarter, adding another 17–0 run to extend their lead. The 90s may have belonged to the Chicago Bulls and the East, but this night was about Magic.
It’s a strange game to rewatch. On many possessions, Magic and Isiah just dump the ball into the post and watch guys like Brad Daugherty and Kevin Willis go to work. Not all days are fonder.
Scottie Pippen and Patrick Ewing typically donned iconic #33 jerseys, but neither wore 33 on this day. That number went to Larry Bird, even as he watched from the sidelines. Pippen and Ewing split the difference; Scottie wore 30, and Patrick went with 3.
The game’s other Dream Teamer, John Stockton, didn’t even check in until the second quarter. It’s hard to watch Stockton’s muted performance next to Isiah Thomas’s brilliance and not wonder how Stockton got Isiah’s Olympic spot that summer. Thomas was a two-time NBA champion and superstar, but rumors have always persisted that key players like Jordan and Magic didn’t want Isiah on the team. Johnson even blamed Thomas at one point for spreading rumors that Magic was HIV-positive because he was bisexual or gay. The two recently had an emotional reconciliation.
Isiah’s NBA teammate, Dennis Rodman, was one of the second quarter stars. Rodman led the NBA that year with 18.7 rebounds per game, 50% more than all but one other player, his first of seven straight years leading the league. Rodman beasted the boards with 10 in the first half, but the East was no match for the West.
Even with Charles Barkley scoreless at the half, Magic and the West was coasting. They led 79–55 at the half, and Johnson led all scorers with 16 points.
The crowd was abuzz as the players returned for second-half warmups, and not because of Magic.
Two West players came out in Orlando Magic warmup jackets, and in case you’re no geography whiz, Orlando ain’t exactly out West. Clyde Drexler and David Robinson donned blue-and-black Magic warmups, a confusing sight that led fans to wonder if the two had been traded. No such luck for Orlando; the pair had simply lost their team warmups in a luggage snafu. A strange sight, nonetheless.









