About This Quiz
One of the most important things to understand when watching sports is understanding player positions. In some leagues, like the NFL and MLB, it's pretty easy to recognize a player's position. The guy standing at first base with a glove on plays the position of first base. The person who kicks field goals in an NFL game is the kicker. It's pretty straightforward. Quarterbacks don't play in the running back position, and first basemen don't play in the catcher position. But the NBA isn't so cut and dry.
There was a time in the NBA where the point guard would only play point guard, and the center would only play center, but those days are long gone. Today's NBA is a world where one player on the court might play every single position. The point guard might be seven feet tall, and the center might be 6'7''. It's not unusual to see centers shooting three-pointers and the point guard dunking down low. And to make things more complicated, there are more "unicorn" players in the league like Kristaps Porzingis, LeBron James, Ben Simmons, Luka Doncic and Giannis Antetokounmpo than ever before. These guys are so unique they can play every position, and they frequently do.
For the most part, the point guard is the smallest person on the floor, and the center is the largest. They're labeled with numbers one through five, and they all have a specific role. How well do you know the NBA's biggest stars? We'll give you the star; you give us the position.
Chris Paul rose to fame while still playing in high school. He once scored 61 points in a game to honor his grandfather (aged 61) who had died a few days earlier. The most memorable moment of the game came when Paul purposely missed a free throw so he wouldn't score 62 points.
Steven Adams is known as one of the strongest and toughest NBA players. He was selected by OKC in the first round of the 2013 draft and has played center for the team ever since. He played high school ball in New Zealand and Massachusetts before attending the University of Pittsburgh.
James Harden started his career as a shooting guard playing alongside Russell Westbrook. He then took over point-guard duties on the Houston Rockets and won a league MVP award at the position. He re-teamed with Westbrook for the 2019-20 season.
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Carmelo shot to basketball fame when he led the Syracuse Orangemen to an NCAA championship as a freshman. He was selected in that year's NBA draft behind LeBron James and Darko Milicic. He was the NBA scoring champion in 2013.
Jimmy Butler isn't a pure shooting guard, but he isn't a pure forward either. He's somewhere in between and is one of the league's best perimeter defenders. He was the last pick in the first round of the 2011 draft and has made four All-Star teams since.
The NBA is a fluid game, and it's unlikely for a player only to play one position their entire career, so Joel Embiid is listed as a power forward and a center, but he mostly plays center. He's made two All-Star selections as a center.
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Kristaps Porzingis earned the "Unicorn" nickname because he's a 7'3'' center who can shoot like a shooting guard and dribble like a point guard. He's usually the tallest player on the court and naturally plays the center position, but he's listed as a power forward.
Kevin Durant is 6'10'' with a 7'5'' wingspan and has one of the purest jump shots in the NBA. Most players of his height play low in the paint, but he's a perimeter player who can hang with the guards. He's listed as a small/power forward.
JJ Redick is one of Duke University's most famous players. He never won an NCAA championship, but he was recognized as the country's best college basketball player for the 2005-06 season. He's played shooting guard his entire career.
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Steph Curry is arguably the greatest three-point shooter in NBA history, but he's not a shooting guard. He plays point guard. The Ohio native has played for the Golden State Warriors his entire career and has led the Warriors to multiple rings.
Patrick Beverley stands 6'1'', but if he has to guard someone who is seven feet tall, he can. He's listed as a point guard/shooting guard, but he mostly plays point guard. He will guard whatever position the best player on the opposing team is playing.
Bradley Beal was drafted by the Washington Wizards in 2012 and has played shooting guard for the team his entire career. He first played in the back-court alongside John Wall, but after Wall got injured, the 5'9'' Isaiah Thomas took over at point.
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Nikola Jokic was selected by the Denver Nuggets in the second round of the 2014 draft. The Serbian native stands seven feet tall and has played center his entire career. He made his first NBA All-Star team in 2018-2019.
Because the Golden State Warriors frequently run short lineups, Green sometimes has to play the center position, but he's a natural power forward. In wake of Golden State injuries in the 2019-20 season, it's expected Green will even play point guard for the team.
Oakland native Damian Lillard has played point guard for the Portland Trail Blazers ever since he was drafted sixth overall in the 2012 draft. He won the Rookie of the Year Award in 2013 and has made four All-Star teams during his career.
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Russell Westbrook is a triple-double machine and has averaged a triple-double for three consecutive seasons en counting. He's the only player other than Oscar Robertson (also a point guard) to do so. Robertson did it in the 1961-62 NBA season.
Blake Griffin is a pure power forward, but he can also play center during shorter lineup rotations. He played alongside DeAndre Jordan in L.A. and plays alongside Andre Drummond in Detroit. Those are two of the league's best centers, so he mostly plays power forward.
Trae Young has been compared to Steph Curry ever since his college days at the University of Oklahoma. Young was drafted fifth overall in 2018 and currently plays point guard in the NBA. It's just his second season in the league.
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Vince Carter is 42 years old and is the oldest active NBA player as of the 2019-20 season. The oldest ever NBA player played when he was 45 years and 363 days old. Carter is one of the five oldest players in NBA history.
Kyrie Irving is a floor general and one of the league's best point guards. He's known around the league for his extraordinary ball-handling skills and also plays exceptional perimeter defense. He won a championship playing point guard for the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Kevin Love made up one-third of Cleveland's big three when the team beat the 73-win Golden State Warriors in the 2016 NBA Finals. He plays both center and power forward depending on the lineup. LeBron and Kyrie are gone, but Love still plays in Cleveland.
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Donovan Mitchell was drafted in 2017 and won the dunk contest in 2018. He's listed as a point guard/shooting guard, but he has mostly played shooting guard while on the Jazz. Mike Conley Jr. currently runs point for the team.
Devin Booker is a three-point contest champion and one of the best shooters in the league, so it's only fitting he plays shooting guard most of the time, but he can also play point guard. He's one of only six players in NBA history to score 70+ points in a single NBA game.
There was a time when Giannis was playing point guard for the Bucks, but he's listed as a forward. He's one of the most unique players the league has ever seen and is one of just a few in history that can honestly play every position.
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The other half of the Splash Brothers, Klay Thompson, plays shooting guard in the NBA. Along with Steph Curry and Draymond Green, Thompson was integral to the Warriors dynasty of the mid-2010s. He's expected to miss the entire 2019-20 NBA season.
Kawhi Leonard is a small forward. He played so exceptionally well at the start of his career in San Antonio that he was given a license also to play shooting guard. Today, he's one of the league's best players and can play multiple positions.
Kyle Lowry was selected by the Memphis Grizzlies in the first round of the 2006 NBA Draft. He was then traded to Houston and eventually landed in Toronto in 2012. He won a championship with the Raptors in 2019.
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Kemba Walker stands about six feet tall and has played point guard his entire career. He played three seasons at UConn and won a championship in 2011. He was drafted by Charlotte in 2011 but started the 2019-20 season playing point for the Boston Celtics.
LeBron has played every position on the basketball court in high school and the NBA. He's listed as a small forward and power forward, but he has the privilege of playing whatever position he feels like playing at the moment.
Isaiah Thomas stands 5'9'' and, alongside Kay Felder, is the shortest active NBA player. Thomas is the shortest player to start in the NBA since he won the starting job for the Washington Wizards in the 2019-20 season.
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Victor Oladipo was drafted second overall in a draft class that is one of the NBA's most forgettable. The No. 1 overall pick was a bust, and the best player of the class by far, Giannis Antentokounmpo, was drafted 15th overall.
University of Kentucky star Karl Anthony-Towns was the No. 1 overall draft pick in the 2015 NBA Draft. He played the center position in college and has played center for the Minnesota Timberwolves his entire NBA career.
Believe it or not, Anthony Davis actually played point guard in high school. He had a growth spurt late in school and shot up to 6'10'' and began playing center in college. Today, he's listed as a power forward/center.
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Alongside Damian Lillard, CJ McCollum makes up one of the best back-courts in the NBA. He's listed as a point guard/shooting guard, but when Lillard is on the floor, McCollum almost always plays shooting guard.
Luka Doncic is one of the league's most unique players. He plays point guard and small forward for the Dallas Mavericks, but the Mavs have one of the most unique starting lineups in basketball. They start two point guards and three forwards, so Doncic is free to play multiple positions.
Ben Simmons is a point guard, but since he's 6'10, he also plays small forward. He doesn't have a great jump shot, so he never plays shooting guard, and he's not heavy enough to play power forward. He's one of the league's most unique players.
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Rudy Gobert stands more than seven feet tall with a 7'9'' wingspan. He's played the center position his entire career and is a throwback to old-school NBA centers of the 1990s. He doesn't play on the perimeter at all and is one of the league's best post defenders.
Zion Williamson is one of the heaviest players in the NBA and is listed as a power forward. He has yet to play a regular-season NBA game, so we don't know whether he'll remain a power forward, but he excelled in the position while playing at Duke University.
Jayson Tatum was drafted after Markelle Fultz and Lonzo Ball in the 2017 draft, but he's gone on to have more success than them. He's a natural forward and is listed as a small forward and power forward for the Boston Celtics.
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Paul George stands 6'8'' and has a lanky body frame, making him one of the NBA's best perimeter defenders. He's made six All-Star teams during his decade in the league and currently plays for the LA Clippers.