Philly special: V.J. Edgecombe
leads Team Vince to victory at NBA All-Star weekend's Rising Stars
[February 14, 2026]
By GREG BEACHAM
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — V.J. Edgecombe seems quietly confident
he'll be at an NBA All-Star weekend quite soon to play in the main
event.
Until that day arrives, the Philadelphia rookie celebrated his first
trip to this midseason showcase with two game-ending scores and an
MVP trophy in the Rising Stars event.
Edgecombe led Team Vince to victory in the kickoff event for the NBA
All-Star weekend Friday night, scoring 17 points in the semifinal
before hitting two free throws to ice the final.
“We all wanted to compete, and I wanted to win,” Edgecombe said. “I
really hate losing, and we had a chance to win it all, so why not go
out there and win?”
The NBA’s rookies, sophomores and G League prospects opened the
All-Star weekend at the Los Angeles Clippers’ Intuit Dome with this
four-team tournament of three games played to a set point total.
While Edgecombe was the most impactful player, he didn't have the
most memorable bucket: San Antonio guard Dylan Harper ended the
first semifinal by scoring the game-winner over Ron Harper Jr., his
older brother.
Dylan Harper then scored eight more points in the final for Team
Melo while teaming up with his Spurs teammate, Stephon Castle, last
season’s Rookie of the Year and Rising Stars MVP.
Castle made a putback dunk off Jeremiah Fears’ miss to pull Team
Melo within one point of victory, but Edgecombe drew a foul from
Donovan Clingan and coolly hit both free throws to end it at 25-24.
Edgecombe was motivated by the presence of his 76ers backcourt mate,
All-Star Tyrese Maxey, who watched from courtside.
“He (said) he ain't coming to watch if I ain't going to play hard,”
Edgecombe said. “I was like, 'Man, I'm going to play hard so at
least it's not a waste of his time.'”
Indeed, the lackadaisical efforts that have plagued the All-Star
Game in recent years wasn't nearly as prevalent in this Rising Stars
showcase, and Edgecombe said that's largely because of the
motivational efforts of the four NBA veterans who led the teams:
Vince Carter, Carmelo Anthony, Tracy McGrady and Austin Rivers.
When the vets were picking their teams two weeks ago, Edgecombe told
Carter to choose him if he wanted to win.
“(Carter) was telling us, ‘Just go! Just go! Keep playing hard!’”
Edgecombe said. “And we feed off of that. We just started rolling.”
Edgecombe scored nearly half of his team's 41 points — including the
last 10 in a row — while winning the second semifinal. Edgecombe
didn't have to carry his team in the final, but the No. 3 overall
pick in last year's draft still scored its final four points.
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Team Vince guard VJ Edgecombe (77) of the Philadelphia 76ers
celebrates during a final in NBA basketball's Rising Stars event
against Team Melo, Friday, Feb. 13, 2026, in Inglewood, Calif. (AP
Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Family feud
Dylan Harper called game in the first semifinal with a succession of
moves that could have been learned on the driveway at home, bullying
Ron Jr. into the paint before hitting a step-back jumper.
Dylan stuck out his tongue in gleeful celebration of only his second
basket in the semifinal, and their famous father laughed heartily at
courtside.
Ron Jr., a Celtics prospect with 21 games of NBA experience, is six
years older than Dylan, the No. 2 pick in last summer's draft — but
the kid brother knew he could do it.
“You think I’ve never beat him one-on-one (before)?” Dylan asked
with mock exasperation.

Flagg down
The Rising Stars game wasn't a full showcase of the NBA's top young
talent because No. 1 pick Cooper Flagg dropped out of the game due
to injury, as did Washington’s Alex Sarr and Memphis’ Cedric Coward.
Edgecombe hit three 3-pointers during his scoring barrage in the
first semifinal to win his duel with Charlotte's Kon Knueppel, who
scored just four points. The two rookies are the only serious
contenders with Flagg for the Rookie of the Year award.
Hometown hero
The event got off to a rousing start when Clippers prospect Yanic
Konan Niederhäuser dunked a lob from Ron Harper Jr. for the first
basket of the night. The Swiss big man drafted last summer by the
All-Star weekend hosts got raucous cheers from the fans in The Wall,
an extra-steep supporters’ section installed at Intuit Dome by
Clippers owner Steve Ballmer.
Niederhäuser led his losing team with 11 points in the first
semifinal.
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