Yao struggles in All-Star debut

? Yao Ming has seemed comfortable most of his rookie season, showing composure on and off the court.

His first All-Star game might have gotten to him, though.

Voted a starter for the West, Yao had only two points and two rebounds in 17 minutes, sitting out the fourth quarter and both overtimes Sunday night.

“I just sit back and enjoy the game because the whole game, for me, is a fun place,” Yao said through a translator.

Shaquille O’Neal, Tim Duncan and Kevin Garnett were the big men who got most of the playing time down the stretch as the West beat the East, 155-145, in double overtime.

“I was going to see how the game went, if I was going to bring him back or not, basically,” West coach Rick Adelman said. “It was just a situation, we got down eight points or something and looked like it was over with and then we caught them.”

Yao, picked No. 1 overall by the Houston Rockets in last year’s draft, became the first rookie to start in the All-Star game since Grant Hill in 1995. His selection was helped by ballots printed in Mandarin for the first time; he outpolled O’Neal by nearly a quarter-million votes, even though Shaq averages nearly 27 points a game and Yao just 13.

But the 7-foot-6 Yao rarely looked to shoot when he had the ball, making his only attempt. His lone basket was a dunk 65 seconds into the game after an alley-oop pass from Houston teammate Steve Francis.

“It’s got to be really overwhelming for him,” Adelman said of Yao. “His first experience like this and the attention that he garners, you’ve got to give the young man tremendous credit.

“I think he handles everything so well.”

Yao’s highlight of the night might have been winning the opening tip from Ben Wallace, finally stepping into the circle after fellow West starters Duncan and Garnett prodded him.

“He was trying to get one of us to jump for him, and we were trying to convince him that he was 7-8 and he could win the tap,” Duncan quipped. “So it went back and forth for a little while.”

Yao did wear a pair of powder blue low-top shoes, a tribute to Michael Jordan’s alma mater, North Carolina. The brightly colored shoes clashed with the red uniform of the West, but Jordan was making his final All-Star appearance.