Heat-Celtics Preview

Category : Miami Heat


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Heat-Celtics Preview

For both the Miami Heat and Boston Celtics, resting stars appears to be the priority over any possible improvement in postseason positioning.

The Celtics, though, could have a bit more help Tuesday night as they try for a third win this month over the Heat, who may be without LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh.

Miami only has a slim chance of catching Chicago for the top seed in the Eastern Conference, but Boston has a better shot of getting home-court advantage in its first-round series against Atlanta.

The Celtics (37-27) still opted to rest Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett, Rajon Rondo and Ray Allen in Friday’s 97-92 loss to the Hawks. Pierce and Garnett could return Tuesday, but Allen (ankle) and Rondo (back) remain day-to-day with injuries.

Allen, who has missed seven straight games, sat out Monday’s practice along with Rondo, Mickael Pietrus and Greg Stiemsma.

“If I thought our guys were banged up, I’d sit them. That’s not even a question for me,” coach Doc Rivers told the Celtics’ official website. “I’m taking rest and rhythm over home court.”

While Boston has the No. 4 seed in the East via the Atlantic Division title, it needs to gain a game on fifth-seeded Atlanta over the final two contests in order to start the postseason at home.

The Heat (46-18) would need to win twice and have the Bulls lose two to get the No. 1 spot, a scenario that seems unlikely with Chicago hosting Cleveland in its finale Thursday.

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The Associated Press

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Are the Miami Heat Big 3 ‘Too Friendly’ to Win an NBA Title

Category : Miami Heat


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Are the Miami Heat Big 3 ‘Too Friendly’ to Win an NBA Title?

Based on talent alone, it’s hard to imagine a team better equipped to contend in the postseason than the Miami Heat.

It goes without saying that LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh comprise the most feared trio of All-Stars on any single NBA roster.

And despite the seeming shortage of quality role-players, Miami’s depth is better than advertised thanks to a healthy Mike Miller, the addition of Shane Battier and the improvement of Mario Chalmers.

The Heat’s roster has limitations to be sure, but this club’s most significant Achilles’ heel doesn’t show up on paper at all.

Miami’s 17-13 road record could be blamed on a lot of things, but there’s a good chance the mental makeup of the Heat’s star power is at least partly to blame.

Aside from the usual allegations that LeBron has trouble finishing in the clutch or struggles to show up for defining postseason moments, the real cause for concern is whether this club has the mental fortitude to compete with teams that are driven by the kind of competitive intensity that separates talent alone from championship pedigree.

Of course, none of that would matter unless other contenders had such pedigree.

Unfortunately for the Heat, some of those contenders do.

Who, you ask? Try the Boston Celtics, who beat Miami already twice in April. Boston has arguably the grittiest core of stars in the game, even if they are getting on in years.

No one can hold a candle to Kevin Garnett’s cutthroat approach to every game. No one can argue with Paul Pierce’s willingness to take the big shot.

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By Stephen Babb (Featured Columnist)

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Miami Heat falls at home to Boston Celtics, 115-107

Category : Miami Heat


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Miami Heat falls at home to Boston Celtics, 115-107

Two ways to look at the Heat’s 115-107 home loss to Boston – a team that looked doddering during a blowout Heat win in December and retro 2008 in dusting the Heat twice this month.

One way is to consider it an anomaly. Boston’s 67 first half points were the most they’ve scored in any half and the most the Heat’s allowed in any half this season.

Nobody from Boston seemed to miss. Not point guard Rajon Rondo. Not Kevin Garnett, who went 11 of 14 shooting with equal proficiency whether against Chris Bosh or air.

When a fan hit a half court shot to win a Kia, you half expected him to plop himself down on the Celtic bench.

Boston shot 58.9 percent in the third quarter. It was their worst shooting quarter of a game in which they shot 60.6 percent from the field.

“They shoot like that, it’s going to be tough to beat them,” Heat guard Dwyane Wade said.

Bosh said, “They executed well. They were a step ahead of us the whole time. They kind of knew what our schemes were defensively. They made quick adjustments and got to open spots really quick. [Garnett] is one of the jump shooters in the league from that range. Uncontested jumpers are like layups for him.”

First quarter runs of 10-0 and 8-0 put the Celtics up 33-22 after one and the Heat spent the rest of the night trying to get back into the game.

An old fashioned three-point play – basket and foul – by Mario Chalmers pulled the Heat to 89-86. Chalmers drew a charge on Boston’s Greg Steimsma, then Bosh sank a jumper while fouled by Sasha Pavlovic.

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BY DAVID J. NEAL
DNEAL@MIAMIHERALD.COM

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Celtics a Heat playoff nightmare

Category : Miami Heat


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Celtics a Heat playoff nightmare?

BOSTON – The Miami Heat won’t just be seeing the Boston Celtics in April, the teams essentially will spend the month as roommates.

Three of the Heat’s final 16 games will be against the Celtics, with two of the Heat’s remaining six road games at TD Garden.

The question is whether April will include another game or two against Boston at the start of an opening-round playoff series.

The greater question is whether such a No. 2-vs.-No. 7 opening-round pairing would be as much of a threat as in previous seasons.

Granted, the Heat handled Boston 115-107 in their AmericanAirlines Arena opener on Dec. 27, but a lot has changed for the Celtics since then, besides Paul Pierce returning to the lineup.

Foremost, the situation at center grew so dire that Kevin Garnett now finds himself as Boston’s man in the middle. Beyond that, the depth has been lacking and the injuries have been mounting.

But, still, we’re talking about Garnett, Pierce, Ray Allen and Rajon Rondo, a core that had the Heat desperate for a makeover in April 2010, a makeover that now has the Heat playing from a position of strength with LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh.

The Celtics took that 2010 opening-round series in five games. Last year, the Heat finished off the Celtics in five games in the second round.

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Ira Winderman, Sun Sentinel Columnist

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The Miami Heat’s three big stars feel like elder statesman at the All-Star Game

Category : NBA All-Star Game


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The Miami Heat’s three big stars feel like elder statesman at the All-Star Game

ORLANDO – The man in the suit sat behind his cardboard nameplate and a makeshift microphone.

Then Dwyane Wade surveyed the ballroom, wondering whether he and the bespectacled Heat teammate to his right, LeBron James, had the most All-Star appearances on the Eastern Conference roster.

“I don’t know how many Paul (Pierce) has,” Wade said. “And I know he’s got more years than us in the NBA. It’s got to be a lot.”

It is.

The Celtics forward is in his 14th season, and Sunday will be his 10th All-Star Game.

Wade and James? They’re right behind, with eight selections in nine NBA seasons. Next on the East roster: Miami’s Chris Bosh, with seven.

“We feel like the elder statesmen,” James said. “Not having (Kevin Garnett) around in our locker room, not having Shaq the last couple of years. Tim Duncan, J-Kidd, all those guys who have been a part of All-Star Weekend.”

The East roster includes three first-timers, the same number as the West. Only Kobe Bryant (14 appearances), Dirk Nowitzki (11) and Pierce have been in more All-Star Games than James, Wade and Steve Nash (who also has eight).

This reality had the Heat trio feeling wistful Friday. After all, there’s not much to stress about at the moment. The Miami stars enter the break tied with Oklahoma City for the league’s best record (27-7) thanks to an eight-game winning streak that they punctuated by curbing the Lin-thusiasm on Thursday night with a 14 -point victory against New York.

All eight victories came by double digits.

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By ETHAN J. SKOLNICK, Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

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Miami Heat Should Pursue Kevin Garnett

Category : Miami Heat


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Miami Heat Should Pursue Kevin Garnett

The Miami Heat have enough firepower to win NBA championships without Kevin Garnett, but in my opinion, his acquisition would secure Larry O’Brien trophies for Miami through the end of KG’s Hall of Fame career.

And, it’s not as far-fetched as it sounds.

Boston Celtics’ GM Danny Ainge has said that he will not repeat the errors of Red Auerbach, who Ainge claims regretted keeping the championship nucleus of ’80s in Boston past their primes. Ainge has publicly stated that he is willing to trade any of Big Three, two of whom are in the final year of their contracts.

Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen.

The question is, if the Celtics cannot trade KG and Allen by the end of the 2012 season, why would the two aging stars resign with a team that has made it abundantly clear that they are expendable, for considerably less money, while the team rebuilds?

And further, will both be looking to join a contender for the midlevel exception or the mini-midlevel, or will they be looking for market value for their services?

In Garnett’s case, I am almost positive he will take less money to play for a contender. Garnett is on an extremely short list of NBA players who have signed two $100+ million contracts and has stated that one of his biggest regrets was not leaving Minnesota earlier for a contender. At this point in his career, I doubt that money is his top priority.

That is why I think the Heat should pursue Garnett aggressively before the Los Angeles Lakers, Chicago Bulls, Dallas Mavericks or whichever team Dwight Howard ends up on tries to ink him to a deal.

Now, I know this campaign for KG would be unpopular in Miami. Heat fans hate the Celtics, especially Garnett and Paul Pierce.

By Charles Joel, Yahoo! Contributor Network

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World All-Star Classic to be played in Puerto Rico

Category : Online Basketball


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World All-Star Classic to be played in Puerto Rico

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) – Organizers say Kobe Bryant, Kevin Durant and Dwyane Wade are expected to headline an exhibition basketball game in Puerto Rico on Sunday.

According to a press release, the World All-Star Classic also will feature Amare Stoudemire, Blake Griffin, Carlos Boozer, Chris Kaman, Chris Bosh, Dwight Howard, Kevin Garnett, Kevin Love, Paul Pierce, Rajon Rondo and Tyson Chandler.

NBA players have taken part in many charity exhibition games across the country during the lockout.

A portion of the proceeds from the event will be donated to various charities on behalf of the players and the event.

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Blazers’ Allen sets fire to labor talks

1

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Blazers’ Allen sets fire to labor talks

NEW YORK – Once David Stern had discovered his owners wanted to march one of their biggest spenders into a mediation session and deliver the Players Association a take-it-or-leave-it ultimatum, it came to no surprise that he disappeared to the peace of his Westchester County home. Whatever you want to say about the NBA commissioner, Stern has long craved confrontation. And yet, suddenly, he had a doctor’s note to bail with the oldest and most suspicious of NBA DNP’s: flu-like symptoms.

All hell promised to unleash in the conference room of the Sheraton Hotel on the 52nd Street and Seventh Avenue. So bad that the man who wrote the book on collective bargaining guerilla warfare had retreated to the suburbs and left these unruly proceedings to someone who truly despises confrontation. Nevertheless, Portland Trail Blazers billionaire Paul Allen stepped out of the shadows, declared himself as the hardest line of the hardliners and played the part of the improbable boogeyman in these dysfunctional labor talks.

“Here came the Grim Reaper,” one exasperated union official sighed in a quiet corridor Thursday night.

For all the talk about the Robert Sarvers, the most strident of the hardliners thrust himself to the forefront of fear that this could be a lost basketball season. For the past 15 years, Allen’s been the wildest of wild spenders, the salary cap-buster hell-bent on buying an NBA title. Outrageous contracts, $3 million a pop to purchase late draft picks. And now, the NBA’s board of governors found him the perfect candidate to be the bearer of gloom and doom in Thursday’s meeting, even when a union attorney Jeffrey Kessler said: “I thought we were making progress toward a deal.”

These are the mind games the owners will play with the players, all the way to a January deadline to cancel the season. They’ll be Lucy to the players’ Charlie Brown, pulling that ball away again and again. This is a high-stakes game full of backward agendas and hidden motives. Here’s the scariest part of it all for those who want labor talks to have a puncher’s chance at saving the season: Allen appears to be checking out on the Blazers, and there’s suspicion that his motives center on saving as much money as possible in this CBA to eventually ready his franchise for a sale.

“He’s gone the other way, the complete other way,” a high-ranking league official told Yahoo! Sports. “He’s been the most vociferous lately that [the owners] have given up too much to the players, that they should be holding out for a hard cap, for 40 percent to the players [on the revenue split]. No one has gone after the labor committee harder about this than him.”

Nearly three weeks ago, the players themselves had brought their own fiercely private, peculiar force into the room: the Boston Celtics’ Kevin Garnett. Garnett came out of nowhere in these talks, and owners believed his strident railing derailed momentum toward a deal in early October.

Now, it was management’s turn. It was Allen, who has spent the GNP of third-world countries in pursuit of an NBA title, and now, as one NBA front-office executive calls him: “He’s sort of turned into this era’s Howard Hughes.”

The season’s in genuine jeopardy now because powerbrokers like Allen are uniting with nickel-and-dimers like Sarver in a common cause: How do I get out of NBA ownership with maximum profit, minimal pain? These are simply men gutting costs to eventually get the best price and sell those franchises. In his life, Allen has a history of disengaging people and things once he loses interest, and that appears to be happening now.

“The worst thing for the Blazers are not the injuries, but Paul losing interest,” said a league official connected to the organization. “And once he loses interest in anything, he doesn’t want to deal with it anymore. He can’t win anymore, so he’s going to literally take his ball and go home.”

This is the NBA left to Stern, the players and the fans: Owners like Allen, who are done with it. Over the league, over the love of owning teams. Those aren’t the overwhelming agendas in the room, but it’s a part now. Paul Allen’s made it a huge part.

After 24 hours of mediation over Tuesday and Wednesday, the two sides were making progress. Kessler insisted “something happened in the board of governors meeting.” This was Wednesday night, between the second and third consecutive bargaining sessions, and, yes, something did happen.

Allen walked into the St. Regis Hotel, and the hardliners loved that they suddenly had the biggest spender of all firmly on the side of shutdown, of NBA Armageddon. What’s more, Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck presented a revenue-sharing plan that, sources said, left some in the room confused and uncertain. There was hardly a united front walking out of the room on how that would work, on how it would benefit the league.

The union had its suspicions over that meeting, over the hardliners ruling the day again. This conspired to set a terrible tone for Thursday’s talks, where the owners marched Allen into the room like he was the biggest swinging bat in the room. Allen’s awkward sometimes, hates public discourses and hadn’t come to articulate a case. He was a presence to stand there, the richest American owner in sports warning the players that he was now an ally of the dark side. The owners knew Allen carried a symbolism with him, an unspoken sense that even the biggest, wildest, most reckless of spenders wanted a system to save themselves from themselves. And now, they wanted it completely out of the players’ take. More than a billion dollars in givebacks by the players isn’t enough to even keep talking for some of these owners, and that’s a problem here.

Afterward, Players Association executive director Billy Hunter would say: “They said Paul was there because the owners were of the position that they had given up too much in the negotiations and he was there to reaffirm their position.”

So, the owners told the union they wouldn’t negotiate further issues until they agreed to drop down to a 50-50 split of revenue. Hunter tried to save the discussions, and made a case directly to Allen in the Sheraton conference room. Listen, Hunter said, let’s set aside the revenue split discussion and go back to the system issues: the luxury tax, the Bird rights, exceptions and so on.

Only, Hunter’s words were met with a blank stare from Allen.

“Paul didn’t respond,” Hunter said. “He was just … in the room.”

That’s Allen. No confrontations, no arguments. His old general managers learned this: When he’s done with you, he just stops talking to you. Just ignores you. Just wishes you’d go away. All of this speaks to his growing disconnect to the Blazers. Thirteen years ago, Allen couldn’t wait for the lockout to end. He believed the Blazers were on the cusp of a championship run, and desperately wanted a season. Whatever it cost, he was willing to pay. Damon Stoudamire was a free agent, had a marketplace that wouldn’t have paid him north of $50 million. Allen didn’t care. He wanted everyone in training camp for Day One, wanted them winning out of the gate, and he peeled off an $80 million contract for Stoudamire because, well, he was Paul Allen and he could.

And now, he fired his latest GM, Rich Cho, after just one season. Why? Those within the Blazers believe that it was simple: Cho told Allen the truth. The Blazers aren’t contenders, that they’ll have to take a step back, maybe two, before they can start going forward again.

“He didn’t want to hear that,” one league official with knowledge of the dynamic said. “This disconnect with Rich? It was this: He told Paul the truth. And Allen has no interest in going sideways now. But now [Allen’s] realizing that if he can’t win big in the NBA, well, he doesn’t want to lose money.

“So now, after a health scare, after his team has fallen off, they send him into the meeting to be the messenger of gloom and doom to the players. He’s all right with doing that now, because I don’t think he cares anymore.”

How else do you explain that Allen still hasn’t hired a GM to replace Cho? This lockout could’ve ended, and the Blazers would’ve had no one in place to make such important decisions as getting rid of Brandon Roy with the impending amnesty clause or re-signing Greg Oden.

In the beginning, Blazers president Larry Miller made a run at popular former Suns GM, Steve Kerr, sources said. Kerr, who played in Portland for a season, doesn’t want to be a GM again, and wouldn’t get into talks with the Blazers. Portland then brought several solid, competent candidates into town for interviews and rejected every one of them. Lately, the Blazers have tried to engage several prominent league GMs about discussing the job, and that hasn’t worked. The most recent discussed within the organization, sources said, has been the Utah Jazz’s Kevin O’Connor, but there’s no indication they even reached out to him.

Now, it appears Allen will just let Miller and his recent interim GM, Chad Buchanan, take over the duties for the season. Make no mistake, Allen has slowly, surely stopped looking at the Blazers like his crown jewel, perhaps now considering them as just another industry he needs to get lean before he moves it.

For Allen, that’s great. For the NBA, it’s trouble. Because his agenda – and that of several owners – is making these teams more palatable for prospective buyers. And that’ll come at whatever the consequences to the league’s public standing, relationships with its players, its fans, its future. This has to be disconcerting to Stern, who doesn’t want to lose the season. It’s strange, though: You have one commissioner, Stern, who’s fighting to end this and preserve his legacy. And another, Silver, the deputy, who’s fighting to show these owners that he’s the tough guy they should want as the next in line.

That’s why Silver was willing to come out on Thursday night, throw out a crazy, convoluted tale of events he knew – just knew – the union would have to loudly, bluntly set the record straight on. The NBA knows when the Players Association gets worked up, gets publicly frustrated, the public turns on them. It’s a vicious cycle, and Derek Fisher understands it. “I do,” he told Yahoo! Sports, “and we measure what we’re going to say, but in the end, we have to let our constituents, our players, know our version of things, what really happened.”

So Silver sat there with San Antonio Spurs owner Peter Holt, the chairman of the labor committee, and didn’t seem to notice when his top-ranking labor owner violated one of the NBA’s own lockout mandates, dropping Tim Duncan’s name in the news conference. Holt was talking about the past profitability of his small-market Spurs, and how much Duncan and all those playoff runs had kept the franchise in the black. Holt has never seemed to relish the public stage, but Silver loves it. He’s the pitbull deputy for the ultimate pitbull commissioner, and that meeting on Thursday was like red meat for the hard-line owners.

This was like the Democrats marching a converted Karl Rove into the national convention, or the Republicans turning out a Kennedy. Here was the biggest, swinging bat in the room at the Sheraton in midtown Manhattan, Paul Allen, the highest-priced messenger in the history of collective bargaining talks. And the message was delivered to the players: We’re taking everyone in basketball to hell and back now.

Yes sir, the grim reaper walked into the room, and progress on ending the lockout was obliterated. So planned, so predictable, the man who wrote the playbook on labor guerilla warfare, David Stern, got a doctor’s note and hustled home to the suburbs. All these years Paul Allen listened to those owners complain about how much money he spent trying to win, all these years he was the reason they wanted a lockout, needed a new system. And now, the richest American owner in sports is fighting the fight, shoulder to shoulder, to change a system that he himself had made such a mockery.

Everyone else wants the NBA back in their lives, and slowly, surely its seems that the man responsible for blowing everything up in Times Square wants nothing more than to be done with it all.

By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports

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NBA talks break down over money, games in jeopardy

Category : NBA Lockout 2011


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NBA talks break down over money, games in jeopardy

NEW YORK (AP) – Unable to reach a deal, NBA owners and players walked away from the table and don’t know when they will meet again.

If it’s not in the next few days, they can forget about playing 82 games.

Without an agreement by Monday, the beginning of the regular season will be canceled, and both sides will lose millions of dollars and perhaps countless fans.

“We’re ready to meet and discuss any subject anyone wants to talk about,” Commissioner David Stern said. “We’d like not to lose the first two weeks of the season, but it doesn’t look good.”

Though the financial gap closed slightly, once the players’ association said it wouldn’t entertain the idea of a 50-50 revenue split, the league canceled the remainder of the preseason Tuesday and will wipe out the first two weeks of the regular season if there is no labor agreement by Monday.

“We were not able to make the progress that we hoped we could make and we were not able to continue the negotiations,” Stern said after nearly four hours of talks between owners and players ended without gaining ground on a new deal.

No further meetings are scheduled – union executive director Billy Hunter said it could be a month or two until the next one – making it even more likely the league will lose games to a work stoppage for the first time since 1998-99, when the season was reduced to 50 games.

Stern and Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver said owners offered players a 50-50 split of basketball-related income. That’s still well below the 57 percent that players were guaranteed under the previous collective bargaining agreement, but more than the 47 percent union officials said was formally proposed to them.

The only numbers that matter now, however, are the millions that stand to be lost when arenas go dark.

“The damage will be enormous,” Silver said.

Players had offered to reduce their BRI guarantee to 53 percent, which they said would have given owners back more than $1 billion over six years. They say they won’t cut it further, at least for now.

And they insist the 50-50 concept wasn’t an even split, because it would have come after the league had already deducted $350 million off the top.

“Today was not the day for us to get this done,” players’ association president Derek Fisher said. “We were not able to get close enough to close the gap.”

With superstars like Kobe Bryant, Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett standing behind him, Hunter said the players’ proposal would have made up at least $200 million per season – a sizable chunk of the $300 million owners said they lost last season.

“Our guys have indicated a willingness to lose games,” Hunter said.

The sides are also still divided on the salary-cap structure.

Training camps were postponed and 43 preseason games scheduled for Oct. 9-15 were canceled on Sept. 24. Both sides said they felt pressure to work toward a deal with deadlines looming before more cancellations would be necessary.

Stern said the owners had removed their demand for a hard salary cap, were no longer insisting on salary rollbacks, and would have given players the right to opt out of a 10-year agreement after seven years. But the money split was always going to be the biggest hurdle in these negotiations, with owners insistent on the ability to turn a profit after the league said 22 of its 30 teams lost money last season.

“We want to and have been willing to negotiate, but we find ourselves at a point today where we in some ways anticipated or expected to be, faced with a lockout that may jeopardize portions if not all of our season,” Fisher said.

After hardly budging off their original proposal for 1 1/2 years, owners finally increased their offer to players from 46 to 47 percent of BRI. It was then that the top negotiators discussed the 50-50 concept, and while Stern sounded disappointed that it didn’t work, Silver was more frustrated.

“I am not going to get a good night sleep,” he said. “After this afternoon’s session, I would say I’m personally very disappointed. I thought that we should have continued negotiating today and I thought that there was potentially common ground on a 50-50 deal. I think it makes sense, it sounds like a partnership. There still would have been a lot of negotiating to do on the system elements, but I’m personally very disappointed.”

On what both sides stressed was an important day, the owners’ entire 11-man labor relations committee came to New York to meet with 11 players. They could still work something out before Monday’s deadline, but neither side sounded optimistic.

“Right now, we had our committees, we gave it a really good run, and it didn’t work,” Stern said.

Hunter said the union would hold regional meetings with its players, set up workout centers and help in other ways. And many players – including Bryant, who has been in talks with an Italian team – will have to decide if they want to explore playing overseas.

And without a deal, the battle could go to the courts. Hunter said the union would have to consider decertification, and on Tuesday a federal court judge scheduled a hearing for Nov. 2 to hear arguments in the league’s lawsuit against the players seeking a declaration that the lockout doesn’t violate antitrust laws.

All things both sides hoped to avoid Tuesday.

“It wasn’t to be, and we don’t have any plans right now,” Stern said.

By BRIAN MAHONEY, AP Basketball Writer

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LeBron sends Cleveland a message

Category : Playoff 2011

MIAMI – In the instant the clock bled to 0:00, LeBron James’ instinct hadn’t been to preen, flex and degrade the moment with a barrage of I-told-you-so’s. He had come, a year in the making, crashing down on the Boston Celtics.

And yet before James leaped into the air Wednesday night, before he found Dwyane Wade for a long, long embrace, he sought an empty, swath of basketball court amid the bedlam of a 97-87 Miami Heat victory over the Boston Celtics.

He dropped to his knees, bowed his head and turned his eyes away from the pulsating lights and party music. Finally, LeBron James had beaten them. All alone on the floor, he looked like a man soaked in some sort of salvation.

Beating Boston didn’t inspire bravado out of James, but contrition.

“I couldn’t do it by myself against that team,” James said. “I apologize for the way it happened, but I knew this opportunity was once in a lifetime.”

As moments to make an apology go, it probably won’t please Cleveland that James chose the end of the victorious conference semifinal series that he lost for them a year ago. For all his talent and regular-season productions, this has been a year of failures when everyone’s been examining him most closely. James deserved the criticism that had come his way a year ago. He had earned it, but he had earned this victory with 33 points and his part in a hellacious defense.

In his exit of Cleveland, James failed miserably. Beyond the infomercial on cable television, his enabled behavior had spiraled behind the scenes in Cleveland. And here, James found a stronger organizational structure, but a sluggish transition to winning big games with big plays.

And still, in pro sports today, he’s the next iconic figure expected to win a championship to validate his greatness. With the way James and Wade huddled together here, they need to win several championships. Of course, the Heat can win only one this season, and they’re coming hard for it now. Boston fell apart with Rajon Rondo’s back and elbow, with Kevin Garnett’s tired legs and Jermaine O’Neal rushing to the locker room for treatment. The final two minutes were something straight out of Pat Riley’s wildest dreams. The game was tied 87-87, and the series threatened to return to Boston with the Celtics trailing 3-2.

Together, James and Wade, who finished with 34 points, were magnificent. “Those two guys are monsters,” Celtics coach Doc Rivers said.

The ending came like a jackhammer out of James in the final minutes – with 10 consecutive points to end the game. As closers go, James was Mariano Rivera breaking bats on Wednesday. Out of nowhere, the Heat delivered a torrent of 16 consecutive points to end the game, and release the Celtics’ grip on the game.

“In order for me to move on with my career, we had to go through them,” James said.

For some, this turned into too much of a celebration for a conference semifinal. Truth be told, it spoke of the Heat’s respect for the Celtics. As much as this partnership was unprecedented, it was spawned out of Boston’s ability to make a Big 3 the freshly minted standard for championship success. Boston inspired so much of the reasons James, Wade and Chris Bosh came together.

As thirtysomethings the Celtics had come together in trades. As twentysomethings, the Heat were a creation of free agency. Four years ago, the Celtics had such a breezy regular season. “We went through a seamless year,” Rivers said. “People actually liked us. We hadn’t gone through anything.”

It’s so much of the reason why the Atlanta Hawks pushed the Celtics to seven games to start the ’08 playoffs. The Heat’s struggles turned out to fortify them, test resolve and commitment. Rivers used to groan to his assistant coaches about the criticism of the Heat, because, he said, “I thought it helped them.”

Rivers plans to return as Celtics coach and still thinks a re-tooled Boston franchise can take its shot at the Heat. Maybe – but it will be chasing Miami. Only the Heat will be able to beat the Heat in the next several seasons.

Yes, Boston mattered to the Miami Heat. The Celtics are getting older, breaking down, but they made LeBron James and Miami go through them.

At halftime Wednesday, Wade had been carrying the Heat, James so-so. He made Wade a promise: “I will make sure I show up for you.” He did.

And so, in the biggest Heat moment of the year, James still had his mind on Cleveland and Akron and his home. I apologize, LeBron James said on television, but beating the Celtics here meant never having to say you’re sorry in South Florida.

By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports