Friday, June 3, 2011

My Thoughts on the NBA Finals Part 2

 The 2011 NBA Finals - Part 2

Basketball is a game of runs, and the Dallas Mavericks finished game two on a 22-5 run, stunning the Miami Heat on their home court and evening the series up at 1-1. The Heat were up 88-73 with 7:13 left to play and it appeared nothing would stop Miami from heading to Dallas for the next three games with a 2-0 series lead. A vintage performance from Dwyane Wade, which included an array of step backs, acrobatic layups, and forceful dunks and a versatile effort from LeBron James (though in no way prolific) gave the Miami crowd reason to be confident when a Wade three pointer gave them a 15 point lead and forced a Dallas timeout. Despite blowing the defensive coverage and leaving Mario Chalmers wide open for the game tying three with twenty-five seconds left, Jason Terry was a catalyst in getting the Mavericks back into the game. He scored six straight points out of the timeout and brought Dallas back to life. From there, Dirk Nowitzki did what he has consistently done this postseason – close the game out. Nowitzki scored Dallas’ final 9 points, including the game winning finger roll using his injured left hand with 3.6 seconds to go. Miami’s inability to run any semblance of an offensive set prevented them from generating a good scoring chance against the Mavericks defense. With the game tied at 90, and with approximately forty seconds to go, Wade settled for an off balanced three. When you have Dwyane Wade and LeBron James on the court, two of the very best at attacking the basket and either scoring or drawing contact, why are you settling for poor shots? Nowitzki replied with an uncontested three and following Chalmers’ tying three, he embarrassed Chris Bosh by spinning away from him and finishing at the rim. Wade’s last second shot hit back iron and Dallas won the game 95-93. The Mavericks improbable comeback will undoubtedly sting Miami and should set up a memorable game three on Sunday night in Dallas.

Shawn Marion played a great game, contributing 20 points, 8 rebounds, and 3 assists, all while guarding LeBron James for the majority of his time on the floor. Jason Kidd shot poorly (2/7 FG, 2/5 3PT,) but he impacted the game without needing shots, grabbing 8 rebounds and dishing five assists. Tyson Chandler, Dallas’ interior presence, made the best of his limited touches, scoring 13 points and grabbing 7 rebounds, including 4 offensive boards. DeShawn Stevenson received an eight minute increase in playing time from game one and he responded positively, making 3 three pointers and forcing 3 steals. The Mavericks role players filled their roles admirably. When they play this well, it makes it much harder for the opposing team to compete. Chris Bosh was particularly ineffective, shooting 4/16 from the field and the Heat’s depth issues were easily identifiable today, even considering Mike Bibby’s three point outburst. The common perception in the NBA is that role players perform better at home. Nowitzki must continue his historically efficient play to give Dallas a legitimate chance at winning the series, but if the Mavericks role players can produce consistently, the Heat could be in trouble - regardless of how well Wade and LeBron perform.

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