The NBA All-Star process is a popularity contest, and that doesn’t just mean popularity with fans but with fellow players, too. That’s because since 2016-17, the NBA has active players and media join fans in the voting process for All-Star starters, with players’ votes counting for 25 percent of the overall total.
Naturally, some players started treating the process as a joke, voting for their teammates or friends to be All-Stars, deserving of the honor or not. Just this year, the likes of Jordan Walsh, Christian Wood and Yuki Kawamura received an All-Star vote from a fellow player. Wood hasn’t even played in a game yet this season.
That got us wondering about which players in NBA history have played the most seasons without earning a single All-Star vote from a fellow player. And one of the two players who holds the record for that shocked us.
Austin Rivers played seven seasons in the NBA once fellow players started joining in the All-Star voting process. And in that time, he never got a single All-Star vote from another player, a record he holds with Landry Shamet.
That’s despite Rivers’ two best campaigns in the NBA – 2016-17 and 2017-18 – coming right when players started joining in the All-Star vote. ’18 was the best season of Rivers’ career, with the talented 2-guard averaging 15.1 points and 4.0 assists on 37.8 percent shooting from three that year.
So this was a bit of a head-scratcher for us. Was Rivers really that unpopular amongst his peers that not a single one decided to throw him an All-Star vote, even as a joke? As you’re about to find out below, he’s one of the two best players on this list (and the only player who might have been better on this list, Brandon Knight, was already slowed down by injuries in ’17 when players became part of the All-Star voting process).
And Rivers was a big name, coming out of high school as an elite, well-known prospect, and heading to Duke to play for the legendary Mike Krzyzewski before getting to the NBA as a lottery pick. He’s also the son of long-time NBA player and head coach Doc Rivers.
But maybe it was that nepotistic aspect of Rivers’ journey that made him unpopular with his peers. Or perhaps it was his playstyle, as Rivers became a defensive pest (compliment) in the NBA, one who would talk a fair amount of trash.
Or maybe it was simply by chance that another player never thought to throw Rivers as an All-Star vote.
Whatever the reason was, below, you can check out the full ranking of the NBA players with the most seasons played to never get an All-Star vote from another NBA player.
Petre Thomas-USA TODAY Sports
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 7

Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 7

Bruce Kluckhohn-USA TODAY Sports
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 6

Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 6

David Butler II-Imagn Images
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Soobum Im-USA TODAY Sports
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Kevin Sousa-USA TODAY Sports
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Rick Osentoski-USA TODAY Sports
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Kyle Ross-Imagn Images
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Marc Lebryk-Imagn Images
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Ken Blaze-USA TODAY Sports
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Scott Kinser-Imagn Images
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Ken Blaze-USA TODAY Sports
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5

Petre Thomas-Imagn Images
Seasons without getting an All-Star vote from another player: 5