in late April following the killings in Alawite-minority areas in March.
Since then: 799 ballots cast, 799 listing Antetokounmpo.Jokic appeared on every All-NBA ballot for the fifth consecutive year; it would be six in a row if he hadn’t fallen one vote short of unanimous status in 2020. Jayson Tatum was on every All-NBA ballot for the fourth consecutive season.
James is the first 40-year-old to make an All-NBA team — he turned 40 in December.James has 13 first-team appearances, four second-team selections and four third-team nods.No other player has more than 15 All-NBA selections. Kobe Bryant (11 first-team picks), Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (10 first-team picks) and Tim Duncan (10 first-team picks) are the other members of the 15-time club.
The release of the All-NBA teams wrapped up awards season in the league. A global panel of 100 writers and broadcasters sent their votes to the NBA before the playoffs started.Those awards voted on by the panel included Gilgeous-Alexander winning
, Cleveland’s Kenny Atkinson winning
, Atlanta’s Dyson Daniels winningOn his farm near Humboldt, Tennessee, roughly midway between Memphis and Nashville, Griggs weathered the 2018 trade war during Trump’s first term and said he feels more prepared this time around.
“Back in 2018, prices were about the same as what they are now, and due to the trade war with China, prices dropped around 15%,” he said. “They dropped significantly lower, and they dropped in a hurry, and due to that, we lost a lot of demand from China.”Griggs said exports to China never fully rebounded. But he doesn’t think the impact of the current dispute will be nearly as drastic.
Griggs — who raises approximately 1,600 acres of cotton, corn, soybeans and wheat — said tariffs were just one consideration as he planned out this year’s crops. Growing a variety of crops helps him minimize the risk that comes with weather, volatile prices, and now the prospect of a trade war.In this image from video, Matt Griggs fills up his tractor with fuel on Monday, May 5, 2025 at his farm in Humboldt, Tenn. Griggs, like many American farmers, is paying close attention to the trade war between the U.S. and China, a critical market for soybeans. (AP photo/Kristin M. Hall)