Beating the Heat

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  • Mimio0

    Go Heat.
    One game at a time.

  • gepetto0

    David Hasselhoff! David Hasselhoff! David Hasselhoff! David Hasselhoff! David Hasselhoff! David Hasselhoff! David Hasselhoff! David Hasselhoff!

    haha!

  • CincodeMayo0

    Here's your ass Dallas.

    2 to go...LET'S GO HEAT!

  • gepetto0

    Heat win! Great game. Long time fan, couldn't be more elated... Shaq's mad bitches!!!

  • tangereen0

    they sure are, gramma. they sure are.

  • GrammaSeff0

    dallas is getting their ass handed to them

  • CincodeMayo0

    FYI...if you're a Heat fan or an old school b-ball fan, Dan Lebatard is hosting a round table discussion with Glen Rice, Tim Hardaway and Steve Smith as we speak on http://www.790theticket.com. Check it out if you're into that kinda thing.

  • CincodeMayo0

    That's the only reason I want the Mavs to win...so Stern and Cuban have to meet face to face.

    But being a long time Heat fan, I have to root for them.

    Two points, bad ball, whatever. A W's a W. We played bad and the Mavs still lost. It's the playoffs. Dirk, the 90+% FT shooter should've made the shot. They probably would've won in OT if he did.

    I'm not saying we're going to come all the way back and win, but at least from here on out it'll hopefully be an exciting series to watch.

  • tangereen0

    Nice game, Heat. Played your best ball in the first half, still couldn't get a double digit lead.

    Dropped behind by 13, realized that the season was slipping away, and finally stopped that Shaq-first nonsense and gave the ball to Flash so you could get the win...

    By two points.

    It took an uncharacteristic miss by a 90+% FT shooter and GP's first made shot of the series to get this game?

    I can't wait to see Stern's face when he hands the trophy over to Cuban.

  • studderine0

    i thought you meant the heat. as in arizona is fucking hot.

  • CincodeMayo0

    Here's a good wrap up of the game if you missed it. It's a hype piece on Wade by Michael Wilbon, but he's pretty biased and it's a pretty interesting article.

    It's All About No. 3
    By Michael Wilbon
    Washington Post
    Wednesday, June 14, 2006; Page E01

    You can have LeBron James. You can have Kobe Bryant. You can have any pick on the playground . . . anybody from here to China. Just let me
    have Dwyane Wade. When the Los Angeles Lakers began talking trade with the Heat two years ago about sending Shaq to Miami, there was one player Pat Riley wouldn't part with in any deal: D. Wade. And when
    Riley called Shaq with the news that the Big Fella would be headed to South Beach, Shaq held his breath for a second and asked, "Pat, who did you have to give up?"

    As much as Shaq liked the idea of coming to Miami, the thought of not being able to play with Wade made him hold his breath.

    Yes, Wade is that good. He's good enough to change the direction of the NBA Finals when the whole board was tilted toward Texas. He's humble enough to tell everybody the Heat is Shaq's team, even though it's his. He's smart enough to become Shaq's Little Brother, something Kobe wouldn't do. Wade is tough enough to play through the pain of a bruised left knee in a critical championship game Tuesday night, and talented enough to dominate it. Is there anything else?

    Wade picked up his fifth foul with 10:56 to play? So what? Leave him in there. Of course, Riley had to leave Wade on the floor one foul from disqualification. Wade's his best player. Wade's his only hope in
    this series, no matter how desperate that hope is. After Dallas nearly ran Miami off the court with a 34-16 third quarter explosion, Miami turned to Wade, no matter his foul trouble or injured knee.

    The Dallas lead reached 13 before Wade went to work again. He hit a three-pointer when he doesn't even shoot threes. Wade down the left baseline, Wade down the right baseline, Wade out of the corner. Wade
    out of the corner again. Wade down the lane for a dunk off the
    throbbing left leg. Wade, Wade, Wade.

    There's no need of talking about Shaq or Riley or anything else that happened here in Miami Tuesday night. Gary Payton might have given Miami the lead with 9.3 seconds left on his clutch jumper, his only
    shot of the night and just maybe the biggest shot of his long career. But that was secondary.

    Primarily, Wade happened. He happened the same way Jordan did and Isiah did and Bird before that and Magic before that. Wade put his name up there in the bright, bright lights with this one because he won a game virtually by himself. If Payton hadn't hit the shot, Wade would have. He resuscitated his teammates, propped them up to clear
    their foggy heads, then demanded they come with him for the ride. They were dead, Shaq and all the rest of them were dead. Season over. See
    you on South Beach.

    "It didn't look good," Riley said afterward. "It didn't feel good. We were stuck in mud."

    It looked like quicksand, they were sinking so badly.

    Shaq called Wade "big."

    Avery Johnson called Wade "persistent."

    Asked what impressed him the most about his star, Riley said, "He just rises to the occasion. He kept making play after play after play."

    When Dirk Nowitzki, with a chance to tie the score with 3.4 seconds to play, choked on his second of two foul shots -- and you have to call it a choke when a 94 percent playoff foul shooter bricks one with the game on the line -- guess who got the rebound and hit the free throw
    to secure the game?

    You only need one guess. Wade. When Dallas lobbed the ball to the rim in an attempt to tie the game and force overtime with one second left, guess who kept Josh Howard from laying the ball in? You need a hint? Wade, baby. Wade.

    His line for the night: 42 points and 13 rebounds. He made more baskets than anybody in the game, more free throws, and grabbed more rebounds. Wade didn't just change the game, he probably changed the
    series. For the first time, the Mavericks are down in the mouth.

    The natural tendency is to ask whether Dallas choked. The answer is that Wade choked Dallas, put both hands around the Mavericks' throats and squeezed until they simply weren't conscious anymore.

    Wade revealed afterward that Shaq had fallen on his knee early in the second half. "That's a lot of weight," he said.

    But Wade carried dead weight all night, the weight of his teammates.

    Riley said that he thinks his players are "fatigued mentally. I've got to get their minds right in the next couple of days." But their minds and bodies were dead in Game 3, and Wade carried them for all but the
    final couple of minutes when it became apparent that they at least ought to pick up a finger to help, lest one of the great playoff performances of all time go to waste.

    Instead, Miami responded at the last possible moment. The Heat players should carry Wade to practice Wednesday because he put Miami back into championship contention and put the Mavericks, at least temporarily, on their backs. The numbers say Dallas is still up in this series, 2-1, but it has the feel of dead-even the way the Heat players walked into their locker room with their chests puffed out and their pride intact.

    They knew they could have walked out down 0-3, with no chance to come back.

    They could have closed the season with Shaq being outplayed by Erick Dampier, a player Shaq last year called "Ericka." They've got one
    player to thank for bailing them out: Wade. Well, maybe they should thank Riley, too, for leaving Wade in the game once he picked up that fifth foul with nearly the entire fourth quarter to play. Riley might not use his bench. He might not have the most creative offense around.
    He surely doesn't make adjustments as well as several coaches already ousted from the playoffs. But he has a feel for people, certainly a feel for star players. "I know players," Riley said, "I've been around them for 40 years."

    Whatever the instinct, Riley left Wade on the floor, trusted him to not pick up a sixth foul, trusted Wade could deliver the way Magic delivered for Riley in the 1980s. And Wade made Riley's move pay off, justified all that faith from the Hall of Fame coach.

    Dallas is the better team, still. But Dallas is in a little bit of
    trouble now. The Mavericks let a great player off the floor, and may yet live to really, really regret it.

  • Mimio0

    That's so great. Poor Dirk.

  • CincodeMayo0

    As for Hasselhoff, my little brother works for 790theticket.com, a Miami sports talk radio station, and Dan Lebatard does a daily show in the afternoon. They've been non-stop talking about the Hoff, and they're trying to make Hoff faces to hold up behind the basket for Thursdays' game. If you go to the site you can see what they look like.

  • Rand0

    that ending sounds HOTT

  • Mimio0

    Love those Miami fans with the Hasselhoff signs.

  • tiger0

    Don't hate me as i'm cheering for Dallas. I saw the last minute though.

  • CincodeMayo0

    You missed a good one tiger. 13 point come back in the last 2 minutes. Dirk missing the tieing shot.

    I'm not in LA but lived in Miami for almost 18 years. I want my Heat to win. And at this point, if they come back to win it WILL be a good series. Lets hope.

  • tommyb0

    Yeah, after 25 years of watching their sorry asses, I move out of Dallas and now they do something worth while.

    For the record, the Mavs don't do it for me on any other level than the game. Personalities involved don't excite me, and now I live in FL, so, I guess all I'm saying is I just want a good series.

  • tiger0

    damn, I missed that game

  • Mimio0

    The Heat are just starting to figure out how to adjust to the Mavs. I think all the games are going to be close throughout the series from now on. The Mavs played really well last night and still lost. The Heat shot like shit, and still won. That's very telling. The Heat are still in this thing.