
Every year around the All-Star Game, there’s always talk about the players who deserved to be there but didn’t make the team for one reason or another. We remember writing this a post on Damian Lillard being one of biggest all-star snubs we’ve ever witnessed in our three decades of covering the NBA—and still being genuinely bothered by his absence.
Best NBA Players Without All-Star Selection
In the context of this post, Dame will be fine. What about the players that have performed season after season and never once make the All-Star team? These twenty or so players are the Susan Luccis of the NBA (which used to be a good analogy). Meaning that these players have spent years putting the ball in the basket; having amassed the most career points in the league without making one single solitary NBA All-Star Team. Thanks for your recognition. Not. These are your NBA All-Star Snubs 4 Life.
| Player | Points | Highest PPG | Team |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jamal Crawford | 19,244 | 20.6 | New York Knicks |
| Eddie Johnson | 19,202 | 21.5 | Sacramento Kings |
| Jason Terry | 18,881 | 20.9 | Dallas Mavericks |
| Andre Miller | 16,278 | 17.0 | Philadelphia 76ers |
| Derek Harper | 16,006 | 19.7 | Dallas Mavericks |
| Rudy Gay | 15,184 | 21.4 | Sacramento Kings |
| Sam Perkins | 15,234 | 16.5 | Los Angeles Lakers |
| Byron Scott | 15,097 | 21.7 | Los Angeles Lakers |
| Richard Jefferson | 14,904 | 22.6 | New Jersey Nets |
| James Edwards | 14,862 | 16.7 | Indiana Pacers |
| Monta Ellis | 14,858 | 25.5 | Golden State Warriors |
| Mike Bibby | 14,698 | 21.1 | Sacramento Kings |
| Jason Richardson | 14,644 | 23.2 | Golden State Warriors |
| Purvis Short | 14,607 | 28.0 | Golden State Warriors |
| Rod Strickland | 14,463 | 18.9 | Portland Trailblazers |
| Al Jefferson | 14,343 | 23.1 | Minnesota Timberwolves |
| Lou Williams | 14,221 | 14.5 | Los Angeles Clippers |
| Ron Harper | 13,910 | 22.9 | Cleveland Cavs |
| Chuck Person | 13,858 | 21.6 | Indiana Pacers |
| Orlando Woolridge | 13,623 | 25.1 | Denver Nuggets |
| Al Harrington | 13,237 | 20.7 | New York Knicks |
| Jalen Rose | 13,220 | 22.1 | Chicago Bulls |
| Corey Maggette | 13,198 | 22.1 | Los Angeles Clippers |
| Josh Smith | 12,996 | 18.8 | Atlanta Hawks |
| Stephen Jackson | 12,976 | 21.1 | Charlotte Hornets |
| Jamal Murray | 9,623 | 18.0 | Denver Nuggets |
A Couple Jamals
At the top of the list is Jamal Crawford and Jamal Murray
Jamal Murray might actually be the biggest all-star snub considering his impact. Murrary has built a reputation as one of the NBA’s most clutch playoff performers, regularly elevating his game when the stakes are highest. Jamal has scored 40 or more points in multiple postseason games joining a shortlist of legends after unforgettable performances during the Denver Nuggets’ 2020 and 2023 playoff runs. His ability to create his own shot, hit tough midrange jumpers, and thrive under pressure makes him one of the league’s most dangerous postseason guards.
Interestingly, Murray’s scoring outbursts and underdog narrative have even made him a fan favorite among users of Ohio sports betting mobile apps, especially during deep playoff runs when props and over/under bets heat up. His unpredictable scoring spikes make him both a risk and a potential reward—mirroring his All-Star case.
Yet despite his playoff heroics, Murray has never been selected to an All-Star team. That’s largely due to a combination of factors: injuries that have sidelined him during key stretches of regular seasons, Denver’s balanced offensive system that emphasizes Nikola Jokić as the focal point, and the West’s deep guard pool featuring perennial All-Stars like Steph Curry, Luka Dončić, and Devin Booker. Regular-season consistency and availability have often overshadowed his playoff brilliance when it comes to All-Star voting.
Crawford took over the top spot from Eddie Johnson in 2019 for the most points scored without an NBA All-Star selection. Crawford had an early reputation in the league as a player that takes and makes shots on bad teams, but over time his innate ability to get buckets smoothed out and that reputation improved. His case was certainly helped by his game; in particular his amazing one-on-one skills, tight ball-handling, propensity for four-point plays, and the unique ability to come in cold and instantly get hot.
It’s crazy to think that he’ll have amassed nearly 20,000 points in his NBA career and have never made one all-star game. With Crawford in the twilight of his career with the Timberwolves, he’ll remain at the top of this infamous list.
Wrong Time Wrong Place Wrong Position
I’d say a lot of the guys on this list were just unlucky to play on bad teams or play in an era or conference where their position was loaded. For every player that has scored more than 15,000 points and didn’t make an all-star game, I could name three players that wouldn’t have been an all-stars had it not been because of the team they played on, fan votes or a dearth of talent at that position.
One-time all-stars like B.J. Armstrong, Mo Williams, Kevin Willis, A.C. Green, Kyle Korver and Horace Grant benefited from the time, position and place of the league, whereas players like Crawford, Strickland, Lou Williams (who is the all-time leading bench scorer), Rudy Gay, and Richard Jefferson just couldn’t get over the hump even though they’re clearly better talents.

Making the NBA All-Star team as a reserve sometimes is as much about filling a required position and timing as it is about how talented a player was/is. Take a look at this partial list of one-hit wonders (in alphabetical order)
| Player | Season | All Star Appearances |
|---|---|---|
| Danny Ainge | 1988 | 1 |
| B. J. Armstrong | 1994 | 1 |
| Antonio Davis | 2001 | 1 |
| Dale Davis | 2000 | 1 |
| Mark Eaton | 1989 | 1 |
| Horace Grant | 1994 | 1 |
| A. C. Green | 1990 | 1 |
| Tyrone Hill | 1995 | 1 |
| Chris Kaman | 2010 | 1 |
| Kyle Korver | 2015 | 1 |
| Jameer Nelson | 2009 | 1 |
| Charles Oakley | 1994 | 1 |
| Theo Ratliff | 2001 | 1 |
| Otis Thorpe | 1992 | 1 |
| Mo Williams | 2009 | 1 |
| Kevin Willis | 1992 | 1 |
Why No Recognition?
When it comes to making an all-star team, it comes down to timing and position. Here’s a good example of that. As we put this list together we noticed that a couple of these NBA All-Star snubs ended up making an All-NBA team during their career, yet obviously didn’t make the all-star game. Al Jefferson made all-NBA third team in 2014 and Rod Strickland made All-NBA second team in 1998.

In Strickland’s case, he was technically a top ten player in the league yet wasn’t one of the top 24 players at mid-season? That doesn’t necessarily compute. What it does say is the timing of the NBA All Star Game views a player’s numbers differently than how they (and their team) finishes the season. Or how stacked a position may have been in a particular conference. Without further delay, here’s the 25 NBA All-Star snubs that have scored the most points in their careers without making one NBA All-Star Game.
No offense to Charles Oakley, Kyle Korver, and Dale Davis, but no one would lose any sleep if they never made an all-star game. When it comes down to it, surely Crawford, Conley Jr., Lou Williams and Eddie Johnson had more of an impact on the league than a player like Mo Williams, yet Williams and players like Danny Ainge, Davis, and B.J. Armstrong all benefited from being on the right position, at the right team, in the right conference at the right time.