''I ain't got no worries'' Official 3x NBA championship Miami Heat Season Thread

Brief Keef

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NUPE 1911

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Don't post in the Heat season / off-season thread much these days but popping in to say congrats to all the cats that have been fans of the Heat since before 2006. You guys know who you are. Great series and a title well deserved for LeBron, Wade and the rest of the squad. Very glad to see D. Wade get his third ring!
 

intruder

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  1. Get wade Healthy
  2. Get Wade Healthy
  3. Get a real Center to free up Bosh
  4. Make a decision on Miller's future
  5. Make a decision on Battier' future
  6. Make a decision on Joel's future
  7. Get Wade Healthy
  8. Make a decision on Haslem's future
  9. Make a decision on Birdman's future
  10. Get Wade Healthy
 

Da_Eggman

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All Insider heat article coming

1. The Second Story: LeBron's Long Shot Wins
By Brian Windhorst | ESPN.com

MIAMI -- Ten years ago this week LeBron James stepped into the NBA in a shimmering white suit with an unburdened smile and limitless expectation.

He had the talent for it, he had the personality and he had the charisma, but he didn't really have the game. It took him some time to recognize that, then get his mind around it and focus on what to do about it. But at the end of a decade of pressure and pageantry, James has some battle scars and has figured it out.

He brought home his second NBA championship with the Miami Heat on Thursday night in a 95-88 Game 7 victory over the San Antonio Spurs with a performance that was a fitting testament to the rigorous training he has put himself through over the years to complete the superstar package that has now verified control of the league.

Dwyane Wade, LeBron James, Chris Bosh
Kevin C. Cox/Getty ImagesThat's title No. 2 for this Heatles trio.

The young James couldn't shoot, couldn't shoot a lick. He used to change his form midway through games, would alter how high he would jump on a whim, and fire the ball up from anywhere on the court without always having a reason. When there was a layer of pressure added, that inconsistency ate at his results and dimmed his confidence, a recipe that observers used like a whip to attack his ability to perform in the clutch.

Even when James occasionally got hot, as he did one incredible night in Detroit in 2007, there was a greater chance element than he would've preferred to admit.

He could always dunk with the power that his frame allowed. And he could always flip in shots from impossible angles around the rim, a product of a preternatural gift of touch and ambidexterity. But for a long time he shot like a high schooler, and that was never going to do.

The poetry of these NBA Finals was that James displayed his years of effort in eradicating that younger version against the team that forced him to look in the mirror. After those 2007 Finals, which were basically an unmasking of the James mystique after the in-their-prime Spurs embarrassed him, James found a new dedication to mastering that broken jumper.

He took Cavs assistant coach Chris Jent with him wherever he went over the next few summers as if he were a roadie. When James was on vacation, he and Jent shot. When James was filming a commercial, time was built into the schedule for he and Jent to shoot. When James went to China on business with Nike, it was understood that there always had to be a court and there always had to be some hours to shoot with Jent.

It became an obsession like that 36 percent shooting in his first Finals became an albatross. It wasn't 10,000 hours, it might've been more. And up and up came the numbers, and closer and closer did James come to his ceiling.

MORE ON ESPN.COM

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• Arnovitz: The Heat's appeal
• SportsNation: Are Heat a dynasty?
• Grading Heat-Spurs Game 7
• NBA players tweet react to Wade
• NBA Finals postcards

When he came to Miami, James found a young coach who brought spreadsheets to practice with his whistle. Erik Spoelstra showed James that there was more to great shooting than balance, form and muscle memory. There were some shots that were more efficient than others, there were some places where he would always be comfortable and where opponents would always let him go and they could be seen in all those columns and printouts. James' eyes were opened to looking at the art of the shot in a new way that took him to a cerebral level he'd never even considered before.

Of all the things James has accomplished and all the awards he has won and all the various statistical milestones he has set, one stands above all the others when it comes to illustrating just how much dedication he has put into the task of making himself a professional shooter. For six consecutive years, longer than the average player's career, James has improved his shooting numbers. Season after season, MVP after MVP, and now title after title, James kept toiling away on the craft and sharpening his edge.

This season it touched 56 percent and a glorious 46 percent from 16-23 feet, one of the best in the league. A dazzling 41 percent from 3-point range, which won't make anyone forget Steve Kerr but worthy of a honorary degree when you look back to his teenage numbers, when he couldn't crack 30 percent from that range.

So there it was in Game 7, the Spurs playing the old game plan to let James shoot. It had worked in 2007 and it worked for a while in 2013. If it was the 2007 James, the Spurs would've won and not just because they were seconds away from doing so anyway before a Game 6 collapse. This version of James won't allow it.

Shot after shot he made over the Spurs Thursday night, all the proof he would ever need. Five 3-pointers went through. More midrange shots slammed in, including a 20-footer with 27 seconds left that gave the Heat a vital four-point lead. At the end of the shot clock and with huge stakes, it was as clutch of a shot as James has ever made, a jumper that iced a title.

"I said before the series that I was a better player than I was last time I faced the Spurs," said a champagne-soaked James, with the Larry O'Brien Trophy on his left and the Bill Russell Finals MVP Trophy on his right. "I just trusted all the work that I put into my game."

James had 37 points in Game 7 after 32 in Game 6. Over the past two seasons in these Finals runs, he has carried the Heat through five elimination games, three Game 7s and five series in which they have trailed. He simply couldn't have done it without his immense dedication to improving the weak spots in his game.

Execution of that nature on this level is not something that can be faked or comes from fluke. And it doesn't come without some self doubt. After James struggled shooting earlier in the series when the Spurs' game plan aimed to bring back old memories, James admitted he looked back at his stats from the regular season to remind himself of what to trust.

"Don't abandon what you've done all year," James told himself. "If it's there, take it."

You could see James having to tell himself that again as he watched Spurs players step back during Game 7. Even the fabulous young defender Kawhi Leonard, who announced himself to the world in the Finals with a masterful 19-point, 16-rebound final effort, went with the percentages and issued the dare.
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Over the long haul, that dare is done working on James.

"LeBron is the greatest player in the world," Heat president Pat Riley said after the game. "He deserves everything he gets right now."

James became a millionaire because of his talent, he became a pitchman because so many were drawn to him, but he deserved to become that champion only after putting in all the hard work that was fueled by his failures.

As he headed into the night to celebrate another title, James made two more promises. He'd be back for more of this. And he'd always keep in mind what got him to this moment.

"I want to be, if not the greatest, one of the greatest to ever play this game," James said. "And I will continue to work for that."

Dimes past: May 25 | 26 | 27 | 26 | 28 | 30 | June 1 | 3 | 6 | 8 | 11 | 13 | 16 | 18

Brian Windhorst
ESPN.com

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ESPN.com NBA writer since 2010
Covered Cleveland Cavs for seven years
Author of two books

2. Around The Association


San Antonio Spurs

88
FINAL
Recap | Box score
95
Miami Heat

MVP: LeBron James, of course. The now two-time Finals MVP gave a historic performance, putting up 37 points, 12 rebounds and 4 assists. He hit what appeared to be the dagger, a jumper with 27 seconds left to give the Heat a four-point lead that didn't break.

LVP: Unfortunately for the Spurs, Danny Green had to regress from his extreme 3-point display at some point. The San Antonio guard went 1-for-12 from the field, turned the ball over twice, and looked completely lost when Miami forced him to put the ball on the floor.

Defining moment: With 48 seconds left and Miami leading by two, Tim Duncan went for his trademark sweeping hook through the lane. A shot that we've seen fall so many times finally clanked out on the Hall of Famer, and it was the last clean look at the basket that the Spurs got on the night.
 

Da_Eggman

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LeBron's playoff run one for ages
Updated: June 21, 2013, 2:27 PM ET
By Kevin Pelton | ESPN Insider

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Will LeBron Surpass Jordan?
"Numbers Never Lie": Michael Smith explains that LeBron James is on pace to overtake Michael Jordan as the greatest basketball player of all time.Tags: NBA, Michael Jordan, LeBron James, Numbers Never Lie

When NBA commissioner David Stern presented LeBron James with the Bill Russell NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award after the Miami Heat beat the San Antonio Spurs in Thursday night's Game 7, James cemented his 2013 playoff run's place among the best in league history.

During the Finals, I ranked the 50 greatest individual playoff runs since 1978. It's already time for a rewrite, because James' season cracked the top 10. With an adjusted figure of 7.4 wins above replacement during the playoffs, plus bonuses for a championship and the Finals MVP, James' total postseason score of 8.9 puts him eighth -- just behind Hakeem Olajuwon's 1994 playoffs but ahead of Moses Malone in 1983 (the famous "Fo' Fo' Fo'" run) and Larry Bird's best postseason.

While James wasn't quite as dominant as he was a year ago -- when his role in Miami's title run placed him second only to Michael Jordan in 1991 -- he still managed to more than double the WARP total of any other player during the postseason.

James recorded three triple-doubles, including a pair in the Finals. (He now has four career Finals triple-doubles; only Magic Johnson, with eight, has more.) He demonstrated the defensive versatility to guard bruising big man David West in one series and quicksilver point guard Tony Parker the next. And he saved the best for last, just when critics were ready to write off his NBA Finals performance.

2013 NBA Finals

Follow all the action from the NBA Finals with our series index. 2013 Finals »

The Final Test

A year ago, when James led the Heat to his first championship, he seemed to vanquish doubters who questioned his ability to dominate on the Finals stage. But those same questions resurfaced during this series against a San Antonio defense that seemed to perplex James more than any he had faced since the 2011 Finals loss to the Dallas Mavericks.

By playing off James and packing the paint, the Spurs were able to take away the scores at the rim that are a staple of his game and prevent him from getting to the free throw line. Like the most challenging opponent in a video game, San Antonio's defense was the final test of James' evolution as a player. Through three games -- including a 7-of-21 shooting effort in a Game 3 blowout -- James was failing.

The work James has put in to develop his outside shooting, as chronicled by Tom Haberstroh, was in anticipation of this moment. After briefly doubting himself, James trusted his preparation and the numbers.

"I looked at all my regular-season stats, all my playoff stats, and I was one of the best midrange shooters in the game," he said after Game 7. "I shot a career high from the 3-point line. I just told myself, don't abandon what you've done all year. Don't abandon now because they're going under. Don't force the paint. If it's there, take it. If not, take the jumper."

In Game 6, with the Spurs a quarter away from winning the series, the paint was there. A headband-less James was a force inside, leading a comeback that forced overtime and eventually winning the game. San Antonio responded in Game 7 by sagging off James even further. Time and again, he made them pay from beyond the arc. James hit five 3-pointers, as many as he has ever had in a playoff game in Miami, and finished the most important game of his career with his highest point total of the 2013 postseason (37).

Ultimately, James rated slightly better in terms of player win percentage (the per-minute component of WARP) than he did in 2012, making this his best Finals performance.

Finals Win% WARP
2007 .394 -0.1
2011 .513 0.6
2012 .743 1.5
2013 .751 2.1

During the regular season, I asked whether James was really better than during his prime in Cleveland. The Finals indicated the answer is a resounding yes.

More History Ahead

Between 2012 and 2013, James owns two of the top individual playoff runs of the past three and a half decades, putting him in good company with Jordan and Shaquille O'Neal. Bird also had two top-10 postseasons -- until James knocked the second year out of the top 10, that is.

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Of the 50 playoff runs I ranked, five now belong to James. Only Jordan, with eight top-50 performances in the postseason, has more. That's staggering considering that James is 28. At the same age, Jordan had just three top-50 playoff runs to his credit and had just won his first championship.

Of course, Jordan accomplished more in the postseason after the age of 28 than any other individual in modern history. That's why the comparison to Jordan remains unfair to James, who still has yet to write so much of his story. Yet everything James has accomplished to date makes it impossible to rule out the chance that he will eventually surpass Jordan.

James is on a frightening trajectory. With this postseason, he moved past Bird into fifth place in career playoff WARP. Dating to 1978, just Jordan, O'Neal, Magic Johnson and Tim Duncan remain ahead of James in postseason value.

So we'll keep the list of best individual postseasons in pencil rather than pen. James surely isn't finished making history in the playoffs.
 

Da_Eggman

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Miami Heat: Best shooting team in history?
June, 21, 2013
Jun 21
3:20
AM ET
Haberstroh By Tom Haberstroh
ESPN.com
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MIAMI -- The Miami Heat squad we just witnessed win the NBA title may have been the best shooting team ever.

Of course, it seems a bit opportunistic to come out and say that now, after 12 Heat 3-pointers splashed through the AmericanAirlines Arena nets during the title-clinching 95-88 Game 7 victory. But we shouldn't be surprised that they were able to pour it on against the San Antonio Spurs in the clincher.

Why?

Because the Heat were the most efficient shooting team in NBA history during the regular season. And if this Heat squad leaves a mark in the history books, that should be its legacy above all else.

Sure, we could point to their historic 27-game win streak or the fact that they gave the decorated Spurs team its first-ever exit in the Finals without a title.

But the shooting?

We've never seen anything quite like it.

Let’s put this in perspective. The Heat shot 49.6 percent from the floor, which on its own -- making just about half of their shots their entire season -- seems like an achievement in of itself. But using raw field goal percentage actually understates their historic shooting abilities this season all because of their reliance on the 3-ball.

To illustrate how remarkable the Heat were as a squad, we can call upon effective field goal percentage, which accounts for the simple fact that three points is more than two. The Heat shot 49.6 percent from the floor, but they effectively shot 55.2 percent if we give 3-pointers their proper due.

And that 55.2 percent effective field goal percentage? It’s the top rate in NBA history.

But the most fascinating thing about that record is how they got there: by stealing a page out of the San Antonio Spurs’ book. Namely, by going all-in on corner 3s.

After winning the 2012 title over the Oklahoma City Thunder, the Heat weren't satisfied with their trove of 3-point shooters even though they already employed Shane Battier, Mike Miller, Mario Chalmers and even the 3-point shooting champion from the All-Star break, James Jones. While most called for the Heat to beef up their thin front line, Heat president Pat Riley instead targeted Ray Allen in free agency and pried him away from the Boston Celtics.

The reason? Allen’s masterful shooting, especially from the corners, could vault the Heat’s offense from just good to historically great.

Years ago, the Spurs’ brass realized that corner 3s not only stretched the opposing defense thin, but it also was the most fruitful shot in the game because a design glitch meant that corner 3s were closer than any 3-pointer on the floor. For the past decade, the Spurs have anchored a 3-point specialist in the corner at all times and watched their star trios thrive with the vast space that corner-3 shooters provided.

No, it’s not a coincidence that his past offseason, the Heat decided to double down on the Spurs’ specialty and pluck arguably the NBA’s greatest corner 3 marksmen in history in Allen.

And when we think of one singular moment in the 2013 Finals, what will it be? That’s right, a corner 3. That Allen dagger from the right pocket in Game 6 with 5.2 seconds left.

It rescued LeBron James, who had just turned the ball over twice, from an avalanche of pent-up criticism from around the world. Just after Allen and his teammates watched the yellow rope surround the court for the Spurs' potential title, the corner 3 breathed life back into a Heat team that had just about flat-lined.

For the series, the Heat gave the Spurs a taste of their own medicine, making an astounding 29 3-pointers from the corner, more than twice the total of the Spurs (14). It’s the most corner-3 makes in the Finals on record, beating out the -- you guessed it -- San Antonio Spurs in the 2004-05 season (24 makes). All in all, the Heat shot 51.8 percent from there, compared to the Spurs’ 37.5 percent conversion rate. How 'bout them apples?

Of course, the Heat’s torrid shooting campaign in 2012-13 extended beyond the corners. James shot a career-high 56.5 percent from the floor while shooting above 40 percent from downtown for the first time in his career. Both Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh set career highs in field goal percentage as well.

“We wanted to be a dual threat,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said of his season after Game 7. “The first thing we wanted to do was attack and establish that type of game for our best players. But the pace would create a symbiotic relationship, and it worked great all year.”

And then you have Chris Andersen, whom the Heat picked up off the scrap heap in January. Of the 3,851 instances that a player has shot at least 50 field goal attempts in the playoffs, no one made a higher percentage of them than Andersen. His 80.7 percent conversion crushed the all-time record of 69.6 percent set by Antoine Carr in 1986-87.

But the most memorable shooting performance of Game 7 belongs to Battier, who made six 3-pointers on the night after being benched for his previous Game 7 against the Indiana Pacers due to a spell of cold shooting.

“I believe in the basketball gods,” Battier said at the postgame podium. “I felt they owed me big time.”

The Heat beat the Spurs, but they also beat them at their own game. In Game 7, the Heat made four of their eight corner 3s, two coming from the Finals MVP James and the other from Battier.

The Spurs drew up the blueprint of spreading the floor for a star trio and attacking from the corners. But as we saw in Game 7, and all season long, it was the Heat who perfected it.
 

Da_Eggman

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Soon after the Miami Heat won their back-to-back championship Ira Winderman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel was asked by a reader if the team will stay together so they can defend the title next season.

Winderman responded: "The question comes down to whether (owner) Micky (Arison) looks at this as more of a business or more of a hobby. From a business standpoint, with the impending onerous luxury tax, fiscal decisions are necessary, starting with a potential amnesty of Mike Miller. From a basketball standpoint, the Heat owe the game the right to see how far this team can go as currently constituted, considering the utter joy of Thursday night. That doesn't mean there shouldn't be changes, since every team has to evolve, just as the Heat evolved from last season with the addition of Ray Allen. But the fiscal side could have the Heat bypassing spending another taxpayer's mid-level exception this summer. Ultimately, it comes down to how much Thursday night resonates for Micky, and for how long."

Of the 15 players that made up Miami's season-ending roster, the only locks to not return next season are Jarvis Varnado and Juwan Howard, who might be hired as an assistant coach. Ray Allen, James Jones and Rashard Lewis own players options and only Jones has said he will remain under contract. The Heat own a $4 million team option for Mario Chalmers and it seems like a done-deal that it will be picked up.

The Heat do have major issues with the harsher tax rules over the next few years and they may decide to reduce their liability by using the amnesty provision to remove Mike Miller from the salary cap.

There has been speculation that Chris Bosh might be put on the trade block due to his reduced role and $61.77 million remaining on his contract. It does make a lot of business sense for Pat Riley to at least check around to see what he might get for Bosh.

Chris Andersen brings a spark off the bench and he will likely be offered another minimum deal, which should be accepted.

Henry Abbott
These will be the Heat

"But for those pesky 2010-2011 Dallas Mavericks, the post-Decision Big Three Miami Heat would have never lost a playoff series. As it is, they're a near-perfect 11 of 12 in best-of-seven postseason matchups over three years. LeBron James is 28. Chris Bosh is 29. Even the old guy, Dwyane Wade, is only 31, and is trained by Tim Grover, the guy who kept Michael Jordan winning titles to age 35. Over the last three years Miami has won 46 playoff games, in a league where no other team has won even 30. This is math a kindergartner could do. No, the Heat -- a monstrous playoff victory machine by any measure -- won't be making big changes. Except, somehow, even since the confetti fell in American Airlines Arena Thursday night, three different people have asked me if the Heat will be dealing Bosh, or Wade or making some other big change. The answer is it would be nuts."
 

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Oden’s agent Mike Conley said that Oden expects to talk with Heat president Pat Riley when free agency begins July 1. Oden hasn’t played in the NBA since December 2009 due to knee problems, after being drafted No. 1 overall in the 2007 NBA Draft by the Portland Trail Blazers.

“The Heat need some size, that’s not a secret,” Conley said. “Whether it’s in a backup role or whatever, he could help them. I know they’re interested in him and he’s interested in them. ”The Miami Heat make sense.”

Report: Greg Oden, Heat a potential free agent*match | SI Wire

:lupe:
 

He Who Posts Well

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To all my south Florida brehs, today is the last day for 50% off your orders at Papa Johns.
It just occurred to me. :wow:
 
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