Stars That Should Sacrifice to Sign with Miami Heat

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NBA Free Agents 2012: Stars That Should Sacrifice to Sign with Miami Heat

NBA veterans have been flocking to the Miami Heat since the Big Three united. Each one signed on the dotted line with the belief that South Beach provided them with the best shot to win a title.

The following big-name players would be ideal mid-level exception or even vet-minimum additions for the league’s free-agent hot spot this summer.

4. Marcus Camby

Miami’s largest hole is without a doubt at the center position. Camby would by an incredible upgrade over Joel Anthony and Udonis Haslem. If you’re impressed with the Heat’s defense now, just imagine them with the four-time NBA shot-block leader protecting the rim.

3. Chauncey Billups

LeBron James’ only weakness is his inability to perform in crunch time. Dwyane Wade is clutch, but like Kobe Bryant needed Derek Fisher on the Lakers, Miami would love another last-second option. Mr. Big Shot himself would not only provide them with just that, but he’d be an instant upgrade at the point.

2. Jason Terry

Since joining the Heat, Mike Miller has been a major disappointment. Terry is capable of doing what Miami expected of Miller as instant offense off the bench – except multiply that tenfold. The Jet torched the Heat in the 2011 NBA Finals, and FoxSports’ Chris Tomasson reported that Terry would embrace signing on with the team he helped knock out this summer.

1. Steve Nash

Forget the Los Angeles Clippers – Miami would boast the nickname Lob City with Steve Nash running the break side-by-side with Wade and LeBron. If Nash were to sign on with the Heat, they would truly be unstoppable. And Nash’s defensive liability would be masked by his Miami teammates’ elite athleticism.

It’s no wonder that ESPN’s Tom Haberstroh reported that Nash is interested in signing with the red and black to acquire that elusive championship ring.

By David Daniels (Featured Columnist)

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Jason Terry considering Heat

Category : Miami Heat


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Jason Terry considering Heat

Add Jason Terry to the list of players who can see themselves joining the Miami Heat next season.

Then again, Terry could envision himself calling any NBA city home next season, as he’s already admitted he feels like he’s “auditioning for 29 other teams” during the final months of his contract with the Dallas Mavericks.

However, Terry indicated to Fox Sports Florida before Thursday night’s loss in Miami that the Heat are an especially intriguing potential option.

“Miami is definitely a title contender. For sure,” Terry told the website when asked whether he’d be interested in joining the Heat.

“(Team president) Pat Riley is a great guy and what he’s done with the organization is tremendous.

“No question, they need a veteran shooter, a guy who can score besides LeBron (James) and (Dwyane Wade), and they know they can count on. I’m a guy that’s been in this league 13 years, (averaging) 15 points a night, easy. Off the bench or the starting lineup, it doesn’t matter. So I think I’d be an asset to them.”

Terry didn’t exactly ace this job interview. Wearing gold shoes to celebrate the title the Mavs clinched in Miami last summer, Terry had his worst shooting performance of the season, missing 9 of 10 field goal attempts during a three-point performance.

Terry had his request for a preseason contract extension fall on deaf ears. He is dealing with the reality that his dream of retiring in Dallas isn’t likely to happen.

“My main goal was to come back and retire a Maverick,” Terry told the website.

“After no extension this past offseason, I figure it may be time for me to move on. But you never know. … I would love to (continue) in a Maverick uniform, don’t get me wrong. But we’ll see what happens.

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By Tim MacMahon | ESPNDallas.com

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As Heat deal with James hurting, Mavericks back in Miami for 1st time since winning NBA title

Category : Miami Heat


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As Heat deal with James hurting, Mavericks back in Miami for 1st time since winning NBA title

MIAMI – LeBron James said it was one of the most painful moments that he can remember, one that is weighing heavily on him as the Miami Heat get ready for an NBA finals rematch with the Dallas Mavericks.

No, the Heat forward isn’t talking about losing last year’s title series.

He’s talking about dislocating the ring finger on his left, non-shooting, hand at Indiana earlier this week.

“The only recovery for it, the doctors told me, was rest,” James said. “And I think we all know I’m having none of that.”

Not now, anyway – not with the Mavericks coming back to the building where they celebrated winning a championship a little over nine months ago, and not with the Heat trying to snap a two-game slide that left them looking up at both Chicago and Oklahoma City in the race for the NBA’s best record.

Dallas visits Miami on Thursday night, the second and final meeting of this regular season between the clubs.

The first one: All Miami. The Heat watched the Mavs raise their championship banner on Christmas Day, then built as much as a 35-point lead before settling for a 105-94 victory.

“A bad taste in our mouth,” Mavs guard Jason Terry said.

So as much as the Heat remember Dallas celebrating on their floor, the Mavs remember the opener, too.

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By Associated Press

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Heat’s primary focus not on Mavericks, but themselves

Category : Miami Heat


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Heat’s primary focus not on Mavericks, but themselves

MIAMI – When the opposition is the Dallas Mavericks, the Miami Heat’s focus tends to be singular.

Whether it’s winning the 2006 NBA Finals, falling in the 2011 championship series, or snapping a seven-year regular-season losing streak to the Mavericks with a Christmas Day victory in this season’s opener, Dallas has a way of getting the Heat’s attention.

But Thursday at AmericanAirlines Arena, even with Mark Cuban courtside and Finals tormentors Dirk Nowitzki, Jason Terry and Shawn Marion on the court, introspection will be the order of the night.

“At this point, it doesn’t matter,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said after Wednesday’s practice at AmericanAirlines Arena of arguably the Heat’s biggest interconference rival arriving in town.

“We have to be consumed about our play and how we need to play.”

Such is the case when you’re coming off the first back-to-back double-digit defeats since LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh decided to team up in July 2010.

The last time the teams met, it was all about erasing the sting of dropping the final three games of the 2011 NBA Finals. And it very much was about the Mavericks.

“You watch our Christmas Day game compared to the last two games, of the force and pace that we played with that day, it’s night-and-day different,” Spoelstra said.

“We can control that. We respect the Dallas Mavericks obviously from last year . . . but right now, out of due respect, it’s about us, it’s about getting to our game, our identity.”

Wednesday was about building sweat equality, about knee pads and mouth guards.

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By Ira Winderman, South Florida Sun Sentinel

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Jeremy Lin’s success is due to coach’s system, says Mavericks’ Jason Terry

Category : Online Basketball


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Jeremy Lin’s success is due to coach’s system, says Mavericks’ Jason Terry

NEW YORK – Hours before Jeremy Lin had destroyed the Dallas Mavericks, delivered one more magical Madison Square Garden performance, Jason Terry raised an eyebrow and let loose with a sly smile. He hadn’t come to celebrate Linsanity, but bring it context.

Asked how much of Lin’s historic, hellacious success has been a product of New York Knicks coach Mike D’Antoni’s renowned offensive system, Terry told Yahoo! Sports, “To me, it’s 100 percent what it is.”

Before long, Terry stopped and corrected himself.

“Ninety-five percent,” he said.

There was no nastiness out of Terry, just an old Western Conference guard who’s a little suspicious of it all.

Before Lin had seen the Mavericks’ Shawn Marion guarding him Sunday, before the mid-court traps and blitzes out of the defending champion’s defense had been thrust on Lin, Terry preached caution.

Check back later and let’s see how it goes for the kid. And when later arrived, Lin had 28 points, 14 assists and five steals in the Knicks’ 104-97 victory.

The fourth quarter came, and so did the big shots, the big passes, and the loud, long Linsanity ovations. Once more, Lin had turned the Garden upside down. Once more, he had New York, had a nation, on a yo-yo. And when it was over, Terry hadn’t changed his mind. No Linsanity for Terry. He isn’t alone in the NBA.

In a lot of ways, this is an underestimation of Lin’s ability, but it isn’t an isolated opinion. Terry sees D’Antoni’s system, and he sees inflated stats. It’s a way to dismiss this historic run, and somewhere between Lin’s great ability and D’Antoni’s perfectly fitted system, there’s an ultimate truth.

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By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports

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LeBron’s 37 lifts Heat past Mavs 105-94

Category : Miami Heat


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LeBron’s 37 lifts Heat past Mavs 105-94

DALLAS (AP) – LeBron James and the Miami Heat couldn’t keep the Dallas Mavericks from winning the most recent NBA championship. They did a nice job, however, of getting the Mavs’ title defense off to an ugly start.

James had 37 points, 10 rebounds and six assists as the Heat beat the Mavericks 105-94 Sunday in a game that was hardly ever as close as the final score might suggest.

Maybe the pregame banner-raising ceremony left the Mavs emotionally drained or – more likely – the overhaul of their roster is slow to take hold. The newly minted champs were down by 15 after one quarter, 21 at halftime, and 35 a few minutes into the second half.

Miami made it look easy, scoring at least 30 points in each of the first three quarters. James had the top highlight, tipping an alley-oop pass to Dwyane Wade so he could have the dunk.

Wade had 26 points, eight rebounds and six assists as the Heat cemented their status as the preseason favorite to win it all. Udonis Haslem added nine points and 14 rebounds.

Dallas hardly showed any life until newcomer Lamar Odom was ejected for something he said while arguing a charging call late in the third quarter. Soon after, Jason Terry fueled a surged that got the Mavs within 17 midway through the fourth. Dallas coach Rick Carlisle recognized how unlikely it was that they would come all the way back, so he kept Dirk Nowitzki, Jason Kidd and Shawn Marion on the bench the entire final period. The remainder of the Mavericks’ rally was by deep reserves.

Terry ended up leading Dallas with 23 points. Nowitzki scored 21 in three quarters. Marion scored 12, and Delonte West added 10 in his Dallas debut. West also started the second half in place of another newcomer, Vince Carter.

Carter had five points, two rebounds and three steals in 21 minutes. He took Dallas’ first two shots, an 18-footer and a layup, missing both.

Odom – the NBA’s reigning Sixth Man of the Year, who was acquired from the Lakers a few weeks ago for merely a trade exception – entered to a standing ovation, and got fans roaring again when he made a 3-pointer that tied the game at 11. He missed his next five shots before getting tossed, but still left to loud cheers. He had four points and four rebounds in 13 minutes.

NBA Commissioner David Stern attended the game and took part in the banner raising ceremony. Fans greeted him with boos, perhaps showing disgust over the lockout that delayed the start of the season from Nov. 1 and shrunk the season by 16 games.

Fans had plenty more to cheer, such as Terry proclaiming, “Thirty-one years you waited – 31 years! – to call your team a champion, ladies and gentlemen. A champion!”

Nowitzki, Terry, Jason Kidd and many more players, coaches and staff each got a strand to yank as part of the unveiling of the banner at court level. Nowitzki and Kidd seemed awed as they watched it rise to the rafters. They couldn’t take their eyes off it – or didn’t want to.

Championship tie-ins were everywhere, from the Mavs’ warmup jackets proclaiming them the 2011 NBA Champions to jerseys featuring a patch of the championship trophy, with the words on the front and back of their jerseys all outlined in gold. Terry even wore gold high-tops.

But Dallas was more style than substance, especially compared to a Miami team that returns the core of its rotation.

The Heat scored 18 points in the paint in the first quarter, while the Mavs scored a total of 17 that period – none in the paint. Both Miami’s 18 and Dallas’ 0 are an indication of how badly the Mavs will miss last year’s center, Tyson Chandler.

Miami enjoyed a 15-1 spurt in the second quarter, then a 14-0 run in the third period that included James’ alley-oop tip to Wade. James preceded that highlight with another nifty play, a spin move that freed him for a 17-foot jumper off the glass.

By JAIME ARON, AP Sports Writer

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Nowitzki, new-look Mavs seeking 2nd straight title

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Nowitzki, new-look Mavs seeking 2nd straight title

DALLAS (AP) – Dirk Nowitzki has an idea of what it’s like to be an NBA champion. He learned one of the lessons over the years he spent being teammates with Devean George.

Nowitzki noticed that before practically every game, George found someone warming up on the other side of the court and greeted them with a smile and a hug that seemed warmer than most pregame how-do-you-do’s. Nowitzki eventually asked George why. The answer: they were his teammates, guys he had one an NBA title with during one of those three magical seasons with the Los Angeles Lakers.

“Once you win a championship,” George told Nowitzki, “it’s like a bond. It’s like family forever.”

Nowitzki told that story the first day he met with reporters after the lockout. Although the last time he’d been at team headquarters was for the championship parade, a day when everyone vowed to stick together and try winning it all again, Nowitzki returned knowing the Mavericks would lose several valuable contributors.

So while Nowitzki was going to miss Tyson Chandler bailing him out on defense, J.J. Barea zipping through the lane or nailing a long 3 and Caron Butler taking some the scoring load he also knew those guys would always have a special place in his life.

And, he trusted Mark Cuban and Donnie Nelson to find competent replacements.

Sure enough, the front office plugged holes with some big names, practically swiping Lamar Odom from the Lakers and signing Vince Carter. Adding that pair of 30-somethings, plus 28-year-old backup guard Delonte West, doesn’t completely fill the void, but it’s a good start and an indication that Cuban remains serious about trying to defend the first title in franchise history.

“We weren’t the favorites to win it last year, so nobody really knows what’s going to happen,” Nowitzki said. “Last year, it just worked out. The chemistry was great, guys wanted to win and play with each other. To me, the team is set up kind of the same again with a bunch of older guys that want to win, who’ve seen basically everything in this league and have individual (accolades) but they just want to win together and off each other.”

In a 66-game season, Dallas will be hard pressed to keep up its streak of 50-win seasons. There’s no telling how their aging legs will handle a schedule packed with more games and fewer off-days.

The thing is, the postseason remains the same. So this veteran group understands the ups and downs of the next four months are all about getting ready for the chase of those 16 wins that matter most.

Odom certainly understands. He spent each of the last two seasons trying to defend a championship. His Lakers did it two years ago, then were swept by the Mavs in the second round last season.

“If they thought winning a championship was hard, defending it is going to be … it’s tough,” Odom said. “It changes the mindset of teams, and of your team. It’s tough. But if a team can do it, this one can.”

Coach Rick Carlisle considers the reinvention of this team part of the challenge of repeating.

“We’ve got to reformulate this thing, but the guys coming in are veteran guys and they’ve played in a lot of big games. … They know what it’s about,” Carlisle said. “If you’re a new guy coming to this team, you’ve got to be excited. And you’ve got to be trying to figure out how you’re going to fit in and how you’re going to help this team get in position to repeat. Hey, I like the fact our team has a different look. That’s a great challenge for our coaching staff. And I think our players are energized as well.”

Jason Kidd is going into the final year of his contract but is already talking about playing a few more years. Jason Terry is going into the final year of his deal, but hopes to remain with the Mavericks for the rest of his career. There’s no telling what will happen in the new, post-lockout landscape, especially with Cuban letting Chandler, Barea and Butler go for the sake of gaining salary-cap flexibility.

“The way things fell was unique and you know we certainly did our homework,” said Nelson, the Mavs’ general manager. “We got a little lucky, which is certainly part of things, and we really feel good about this thing.”

Brendan Haywood becomes the starting center, the job he was expected to have last season before Chandler arrived and proved to be a perfect fit. Third-year guard Rodrigue Beaubois could become the exciting, change-of-pace player off the bench that Barea used to be, providing he’s overcome his foot injuries and learned to play enough defense to satisfy Carlisle.

All those things will fall into place over time.

For now, there’s one mystery remaining. The bling.

Never one for tradition, Cuban threatened to do something other than rings. He relented, but because he decided to give players input in the design, the rings won’t be ready for opening night. So there will be at least two celebrations of the title: at the opener on Christmas Day – which just so happens to be against the Heat in an NBA finals rematch – and again whenever the ring ceremony is held.

“We would’ve loved to have raised the banner and got our rings Nov. 1, but we’ve had this little delay,” Nowitzki said. “That (opener) can’t even come fast enough. We’re looking forward to it so much, just to see that banner go up.

“We’re going to see it there for the rest of our careers – for the rest of our lives, really. That always means it was a special season with a bunch of guys that I loved playing with. They are always going to be like family to me, no matter where they play.”

By JAIME ARON, AP Sports Writer

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NBA says Heat to open season in Dallas

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NBA says Heat to open season in Dallas

MIAMI (AP) – For the first time since the shortened 1998-99 season, the NBA finalists from one season will open the following season against one another.

Heat forwards Chris Bosh and Udonis Haslem appreciate the irony.

The NBA has made it official – again – saying Friday that Miami will visit the Dallas Mavericks on Christmas Day, only this time in the season-opener for both clubs. The Mavericks are expected to raise their championship banner before the game.

The matchup is no surprise. It was also part of the NBA’s initially released schedule, the one that had to be changed considerably because of all the time lost during the lockout.

“I think everybody did it on purpose. But, you know, whatever for the ratings, right?” Bosh said Thursday, working under the assumption the long-awaited matchup would still happen as planned. “I use it as motivation. I know they’re going to be pumped up. It’s the worst time to be at home for me. But everything happens for a reason, so we’re going to have to watch it, take it all in and just use that as fuel for the rest of the season.”

Dallas beat the Heat in six games in last season’s finals, winning the title on Miami’s home floor.

Chicago beat Utah in the 1998 NBA finals, then opened the next season on Feb. 5, 1999 against the Jazz – although that was a much-different Bulls team, of course, following the retirement of Michael Jordan at the end of what was the franchise’s sixth championship run. Before then, the last time finalists from one year played Game 1 of the next season against one another was 1957, the Boston Celtics and St. Louis Hawks, according to STATS LLC.

Clearly, emotions will not be in short supply in Dallas on Dec. 25.

“You can only imagine how we’re going to feel, like we have something to prove again,” Mavericks guard Jason Terry told reporters in Dallas on Thursday. “Can these guys do it again? Are they too old? All those questions will have to be answered.”

Haslem said that the Heat have been dealing with the pain of losing the finals throughout the entire offseason. But when asked what the chance to see Dallas in Game 1 of this season – assuming the new collective bargaining agreement actually gets done next week like the league and its players plan – the Miami native didn’t add much in the way of hyperbole.

“I don’t remember what happened last year,” Haslem deadpanned. “To me, it’s just the first game on the schedule, an opportunity to get out there and do what we love to do. … It’s going to be a great matchup. It’s going to be fun.”

By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

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Mavericks top Heat for NBA title

Category : Playoff 2011

MIAMI (AP) – For Dirk Nowitzki, the resume is complete. He’s an NBA champion.

For LeBron James, the agonizing wait continues for at least one more year.

Avenging what happened five years ago in perfect turnabout style, the Dallas Mavericks won their first NBA title by winning Game 6 of these finals in Miami 105-95 on Sunday night – celebrating on the Heat’s home floor, just as Dwyane Wade and his team did to them in the 2006 title series.

Jason Terry scored 27 points, Nowitzki added 21 and the Mavericks topped the Miami Heat 105-95 in Game 6 of the NBA finals on Sunday night. The Mavericks won four of the series’ last five games, a turnabout that could not have been sweeter after seeing the Heat celebrate their first title in Dallas after Game 6 of the 2006 finals.

“Tonight,” Terry said, “we got vindication.”

James did not. Not even close, and a year unlike any other ended they way they all have so far – with him still waiting for an NBA title.

He scored 21 points for Miami, shook a few hands afterward, and departed before most of the Mavs tugged on their championship hats and T-shirts. Chris Bosh had 19, Mario Chalmers 18 and Dwyane Wade 17 for the Heat.

Mavs coach Rick Carlisle joined a highly elite group, those with NBA titles as both a player and a head coach.

Only 10 other men are on that list, including the presumably retired-for-good Phil Jackson, one of Carlisle’s mentors in K.C. Jones, and Heat President Pat Riley – who led Miami past Dallas in 2006, and was the mastermind of what the Heat did last summer by getting James, Wade and Bosh on the same team with an eye on becoming a dynasty.

It might still happen, of course.

But even after 72 wins this season, including playoffs, the Heat lost the last game. And that means this year was a disappointment – except to just about everyone else in the NBA, or so it would seem.

Hating the Heat became the NBA’s craze this season, and the team knew it had no shortage of critics, everyone from Cleveland (where “Cavs for Mavs” shirts were popular during these finals) to Chicago (the city James and Wade both flirted with last summer) and just about every place in between lining up to take shots at Miami.

Given their newfound popularity, meet the new America’s Team.

Sorry, Cowboys – your long-held moniker might have to be ceded to your city’s NBA club. When it was over, Mavs owner Mark Cuban ran onto the court to hug Carlisle, then punched the air and whooped.

Dallas took control in the second half after some wild back-and-forths in the opening two quarters. Miami took its last lead of the game – the season – just 64 seconds into the second half, lost it 16 seconds later and chased the Mavericks the rest of the way.

They never caught them.

Jason Kidd, at 38 years old, got his first championship. Nowitzki got his at 32, Terry at 33. They were featured on the video screen in their building in Dallas during this series on what seemed like a constant loop, each posing with the NBA trophy and looking longingly at it, standing mere inches from it, as if to say “so close, yet so far away.”

No more.

It’s theirs.

Nowitzki sealed it with 2:27 left, hitting a jumper near the Miami bench to put Dallas up 99-89, and some fans actually began leaving. Nowitzki walked to the Mavs’ side slowly, right fist clenched and aloft.

He knew it. Everyone did. Heat coach Erik Spoelstra implored his team to foul in the final minute, and even then, they couldn’t catch the Mavericks.

“All those unique individual stories is what propelled us to this victory,” Terry said.

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By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

Mavs down the Heat, take home their first NBA title

Category : Playoff 2011

With nobody on their side, the Dallas Mavericks finally proved us wrong. They won the NBA Finals on Sunday night, with a 105-95 conquest of the Miami Heat, destroying, in an instant, whatever doubts we still had about this team.

Dallas earned this title, Miami didn’t give it away, and the Mavericks are as deserving a champion as we’ve seen in this league. What a difference a half-decade makes.

It took months for us to find out what the Mavericks knew they had in them from the start. Nobody doubted Dallas’ abilities as a fringe championship contender before the season, but it was just one in a group of strong Finals hopefuls from the Western Conference when the season started.

Losing what many assumed to be its second-best player to a season-ending injury midway through 2010-11, a slow start to finish the regular season that actually had coaches hoping to pair up against Dallas in the postseason, few picking it to win the first round, and a second round meeting with the defending championship Lakers all added to that doubt.

This wasn’t a team of destiny like Miami, on the vanguard like Chicago, or battle-tested like the Lakers, Celtics and Spurs. This was just an expertly coached group of talented players who, working with the whole as greater than the sum of its parts, just had enough to win it all, with nary a caveat to be found.

Some will try to create some. Miami’s top-heavy roster had the home-court advantage, and several chances to pull out wins in each of Dallas’ four Finals victories.

LeBron James, as he’s been all series, was uncomfortable and not much of a contributor down the stretch of Sunday’s Game 6, despite roaring out of the gate with four straight made shots to begin the game.

Dwyane Wade was carrying the team, but he could barely carry the ball at times as he registered five turnovers.

Chris Bosh shot well, making 7-of-9 turns from the floor, but not all that often. And Miami’s depth paled in comparison to Dallas’.

For good reason. Jason Terry was brilliant off the bench with 27 points on 16 shots. DeShawn Stevenson nailed three needed first half 3-pointers. J.J. Barea was a riddle Miami couldn’t solve, as he got to the rim time and time again. Brian Cardinal was huge, coming through with his usual plus/minus (a game-best +18) heroics. Eight assists from 17-year vet and two-time Finals runner-up Jason Kidd. Needed made shots from Ian Mahinmi (!). All over defense from Shawn Marion. Championship ball.

And, late in the game with Miami threatening to make another close game of it, there was Dirk Nowitzki. Jumpers, spinning runners, scores and finishes. Nowitzki struggled with his shot in Game 6, missing 11 of his first 12 from the floor and finishing with 21 points on 27 shots with 11 rebounds. It wasn’t his best, but it was enough, topping off a six-game run that won the 2006-07 NBA MVP the 2011 NBA Finals MVP.

Dirk couldn’t have picked a better set-up to exorcise those demons. Not only did he avenge Dallas’ loss in the 2006 Finals (a series that Miami earned, and Dallas didn’t give away), but he did it in Miami, against Miami, the same Miami. The not altogether sainted Miami.

In a season that has always been about Miami, Dallas made it its own. For the first time since LeBron James took his talents to South Beach, the focus is elsewhere, even in Miami’s defeat. Not because Dallas is the better story, and not because Big Three ennui has finally set in.

No, it’s because Dallas is the better team. Stronger, deeper, smarter and more resilient than 29 others. Deserving champions who should be proud of what they overcame on their way toward taking what was always theirs.

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By Kelly Dwyer