The Miami Heat And OKC Thunder Are Untouchable

Category : Miami Heat


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The Miami Heat And OKC Thunder Are Untouchable

No matter what happened later in the day, it would have been next to impossible to top Jeremy Lin and the Knicks on Sunday. Lin is already the biggest story in sports, and as we said last week, what makes him so incredible is that he keeps exceeding the hype.

Next to New York we had two known quantities playing: The Oklahoma City Thunder and the Miami Heat.

We know what to expect from those two, at least for now. Any hype they get can’t be answered until playoff time, and even then, if they don’t win a title their season will be looked at as a failure.

But while everyone waits for May and June and looks toward Lin in February, the Heat and Thunder have quietly been blowing the doors off the rest of the league.

Miami’s won nine of 11 games in February and only one of those wins has been closer than 10 points. Sunday, Orlando that felt the wrath of the Heat, to the tune of a 12-point loss that was a 20-point game late in the fourth quarter.

LeBron James had an effortless 25 points, 11 rebounds, and eight assists, and Dwyane Wade added 27 points. Udonis Haslem had 10 points off the bench. And from the second quarter on, the game was never close.

That’s how most of their season has gone. Save for the occasional aberration, the Heat haven’t just beaten people, they’ve run them off the court.

They lead the league in offensive efficiency (107.4) and they’re tied for first in point differential (+9.1). They’ve got the deadliest fast break in the NBA, Wade and LeBron have been dominant all year, and even Chris Bosh is chipping in whenever they need it.

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By Andrew Sharp – Featured Contributor

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Miami Heat fine with playing out of the spotlight

Category : Miami Heat


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Miami Heat fine with playing out of the spotlight

MIAMI – Last year, every move by the Miami Heat was front-page news.

Whether it was the star player accidentally bumping the coach or tears in the locker room after a loss, the Heat were sure to grab headlines.

How things have changed.

With the league captivated by the rise of New York Knicks point guard Jeremy Lin, the Heat have taken a back seat despite playing perhaps their best basketball of the LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh era.

The Heat have won 17 of 20 since Jan. 17, and quietly own the NBA’s best record. They’re fine with living out of the spotlight. No problem being in the shadows for once.

“We’re comfortable in our world now,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said.

“It could be a lot of noise, or it can be relatively minimal noise. … You can get sidetracked in this league so quickly if you get caught up in all the story lines. Right now, there happens to be other story lines around the league, but we know how quickly things can change and turn on us.”

The Heat, who face the Sacramento Kings on Tuesday at AmericanAirlines Arena, are no longer the league’s best story.

Miami a year ago was easily the most-scrutinized team, drawing mostly criticism because of loading up with the additions of All-Stars James and Bosh.

Now, they barely draw a blip because of Lin, the former D-Leagueplayer-turned-NBA sensation who has once again made Knicks basketball relevant.

An example was when both teams played at the Washington Wizards two weeks ago. The Knicks, sub .500 at the time, drew twice the amount of reporters two days before the defending Eastern Conference champions faced the Wizards.

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By Shandel Richardson, Sun Sentinel
srichardson@tribune.com.

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James, Wade lead Heat over Knicks, 99-89

Category : Miami Heat


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James, Wade lead Heat over Knicks, 99-89

MIAMI (AP) – The New York Knicks, they were all about the 3’s. The Miami Heat, they welcomed back No. 3.

Advantage, Heat.

LeBron James scored 31 points, Dwyane Wade – he of that No. 3 jersey – scored 28 in his return from a sprained right ankle, and the Heat topped the 3-point-obsessed Knicks 99-89 on Friday night.

Chris Bosh scored 13 points and James finished with eight rebounds and seven assists for Miami, which plays host to Chicago on Sunday in a rematch of last season’s Eastern Conference finals.

“Real nice to be back,” Wade said. “Felt great. Felt great.”

Bill Walker scored 21 points for New York, which took 43 shots from 3-point range, the most in the NBA this season and a total that had the Knicks flirting with Dallas’ NBA record of 49 set in 1996.

The Knicks connected on 18 from beyond the arc, Walker making seven of them.

Toney Douglas scored 16 points, Landry Fields had 14 and Amare Stoudemire finished with 12 for New York, which tried more 3’s than 2-point shots (41).

“We shot a lot of 3’s, but we did hit a bunch of them, which kept us in there,” Knicks coach Mike D’Antoni said. “We just couldn’t sustain it all the way through. Give them credit, they’re good.”

Wade shot 11 for 19 from the field in his return, after missing six games with the ankle issue, plus putting up five steals, four assists and two blocks.

The Heat – who have won eight of nine games without Wade so far this season – were outscored 54-6 from 3-point range, but held the Knicks to 36 percent shooting and only 18 points in the final quarter.

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By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

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Preview: New York (7-11) at Miami (13-5)

Category : Miami Heat


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Preview: New York (7-11) at Miami (13-5)

The latest injury to Carmelo Anthony is just another concern the New York Knicks must deal with as they try to break out of their current rough stretch.

Facing the Miami Heat likely won’t make things any easier.

The struggling Knicks could have a hard time Friday night trying for a third consecutive victory over a Heat team looking for its third straight win overall.

Losers in seven of its last eight games and still seeking cohesiveness, New York (7-11) could be the NBA’s biggest early disappointment.

“I can’t really put my finger on it right now,” Anthony said. “I can’t figure it out.”

In addition to a sprained wrist and ankle, Anthony also is now dealing with an injured right thumb.

That latest injury plagued Anthony as he went 0 for 7 from the field and finished with one point during a 111-78 rout of Charlotte on Tuesday.

The next night at Cleveland, he scored 15 points while shooting 5 of 14. While his performance was a bit better, the Knicks could not overcome another subpar game from their star and lost 91-81.

“There’s no frustration,” Anthony said of his health. “I’m thinking about my body. There’s a lot going through my mind right now. It’s a tough situation right now due to the circumstances, but I’ll get it figured out. I’ll tell you that.”

Averaging 26.0 points in 15 career games against the Heat, Anthony had 29 and nine rebounds in a 91-86 win at Miami on Feb. 27, less than a week after the Knicks acquired him from Denver.

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By JEFF MEZYDLO, STATS Senior Writer

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Comeback kid: Curry eager for Heat-Knicks

Category : Eddy Curry


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Comeback kid: Curry eager for Heat-Knicks

MIAMI (AP) – Over the past month, Eddy Curry has toned his body and toned down the rhetoric.

When he signed with the Miami Heat, Curry made no secret that games against one opponent were already circled on his calendar. That opponent was none other than the New York Knicks.

The Knicks paid him about $30 million to basically not play over an three-year stint where his ballooning weight and series of personal issues seemed to be bringing his basketball career to an end.

“I’m looking forward to it,” Curry said in mid-December, just as training camp was starting in Miami. “Looking forward to it. That’s all I’ll say.”

A little over a month later, Curry is a smaller man – he says he’s lost 35 pounds in the last few weeks, raising his total to 65 by his count since starting his comeback attempt, though some estimates suggest he’s dropped even more.

And when asked these days about the Knicks, who visit Miami on Friday for the first of three matchups this season, Curry’s aiming to be a bigger man by insisting the game will not carry any extra significance.

“Every game is no more important than the other until the playoffs come,” Curry said, the No. 4 overall pick in the 2001 draft trying to pretend that he wasn’t aware a matchup against the Knicks was looming. “Whoever we play, I’ll be up for it. Looking forward to it.”

Curry is hardly all the way back, just back on the floor on occasion. He’s appeared in three games with the Heat, scoring six points in 21 minutes. Miami signed him with the long-term in mind, knowing that his weight issues were not fully in check and that there would surely be some rust to shake off his game after appearing in only 10 NBA contests over a three-year span.

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By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

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LeBron gives Riley payback on Bulls

Category : Playoff 2011

CHICAGO – For most of his basketball life, Pat Riley had watched the game’s greatest talent destroy him in the final minutes of Eastern Conference playoff games. It was Michael Jordan who obliterated his championship chases with the New York Knicks.

Now, these somber, silenced Bulls fans were pushing past the emperor of the Miami Heat in Section 120 of the United Center, trudging to the exits. LeBron James had gone pure M.J. in the final, furious minutes and one of those shiny championship rings of Riley’s sparkled as he clapped in the gathering silence on Wednesday night.

This had been the James that Riley and Erik Spoelstra had demanded to see this season: Engaged everywhere, electric with the ball and on the defensive grind. Derrick Rose had come and snatched James’ MVP trophy this season, and now LeBron had unleashed his most resounding counterpunch of the season. Big shots, big stops, big boards in a telltale Game 2. Whatever the Heat needed, James delivered in this 85-75 victory that tied the Eastern Conference finals 1-1.

This was something straight out of Jordan’s postseason playbook for LeBron. He gladly took turns defending Rose, a point guard, and held him to a putrid shooting performance. Miami needed him on the boards after the Heat’s Game 1 rebounding debacle, and he ended up grabbing 10 out of the cluster of brawny Bulls bodies. Most of all, James delivered nine of his 29 points in the final 4½ minutes, including the 3-pointer that pushed the Heat to a late lead they would never lose.

This was clutch, winning basketball out of James. As closers go, this was pure Jordan, pure heartbreak.

“That’s why we put the ball in his hands,” Dwyane Wade said. “He’s going to make the big plays.”

Most of all, James undid the damage of a Game 1 loss to the Bulls. Gone was the Bulls’ lockdown defense on James and Wade on Wednesday night. Gone was the dominance on the offensive boards. Gone was the perfect record that these Bulls had on the Heat this season. And gone is home-court advantage in these Eastern Conference finals.

All along, this was the Bulls’ fear: They couldn’t muster the scoring to fight the Heat over a long series. And when the Heat’s defense makes Rose miss 16 out of 23 shots, holds him to two points in the fourth quarter, Chicago’s doomed. Carlos Boozer is killing the Bulls now, the $75 million man with seven points and a seat on the bench in the fourth quarter. If Chicago can’t get its offense going at the United Center, what’s to think it can shoot much better in Games 3 and 4 in Miami?

This was a night to deliver a message to the Bulls: When the Heat defend at their highest level, the Bulls will struggle to find scorers to survive the James-Wade onslaught. And with Udonis Haslem finally rejoining the Heat as a force for the first time on Wednesday night – 13 points, five boards and two bodacious dunks – the Heat have a rare opportunity to get better this deep into the season.

Riley always believed he could win a championship surrounding those three stars with role players, and it was so easy to see why in Game 2. Two stars beat one in the fourth quarter, the Heat turning to James when the Bulls had clogged the rim on Wade.

Riley had to share the NBA’s Executive of the Year award with Chicago’s Gar Forman, and it’s hard to believe he lost an outright claim to the award on much beyond jealousy and spite. Just give the Bulls one of the Heat’s stars with Rose – James, Wade or even Chris Bosh over Boozer – and you’d probably be fitting them for rings this spring.

Chicago lost out on the three of them, and blew the $75 million on Boozer who seems to shrink with every challenge here. Everything’s played out in a way that’s justified the Heat’s choices.

Riley and Forman shared 11 first-place votes, but three former NBA executives of the year say they voted for Riley. As one says, “It should’ve been unanimous. I’m not close with Pat, but I’m embarrassed how that went.”

As the Heat moved within three victories of the NBA Finals with the series returning to Miami, the sight of Pat Riley standing with his wife, his assistant GM and team owner Micky Arison spoke to the undeniable truth of these modern Miami Heat: For all the talk about Wade as the lead recruiter, the most important selling point of the Heat is that Riley lords over them. That franchise is relevant because of his presence, his stature in the game. Wade sold a partnership to James and Bosh, but Riley engaged everyone in the kind of bigger, broader vision that only he can.

Once, it was Michael Jordan closing out these playoff games in Chicago, breaking Riley’s heart with the Knicks. Everyone stayed and cheered and taunted Riles right off the floor, into the tunnel and toward another playoff exit. Now, everyone was passing Riles in Section 120 of the United Center, moping to the exits as Chicago had suffered a familiar springtime ending here.

Greatness had risen in the fourth quarter and made the game his own in every possible way. Once, it was M.J. Now, it was LeBron James, Riley’s revenge.

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By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports

Anthony’s 29, Amare’s block lead Knicks, 91-86

Category : Miami Heat

MIAMI (AP) – With the game on the line, LeBron James got past Carmelo Anthony.

Not Amare Stoudemire, however.

And just like that, the New York Knicks – with defense, no less – knocked off the Miami Heat.

Chauncey Billups made the go-ahead 3-pointer with 1:01 left, Stoudemire blocked James’ layup try with 7 seconds remaining to protect a one-point lead, and the Knicks finished with a 13-2 run to beat the Heat 91-86 on Sunday night.

“The bigger the game, the bigger the stage, the bigger they play,” Knicks coach Mike D’Antoni said.

Anthony scored 29 points and Stoudemire added 16 points and 10 rebounds. Billups had 16 points for the Knicks, who rallied from a 15-point, first-half deficit and improved to 2-1 since the megatrade with Denver that dramatically changed their roster.

“These games like this are fun,” Anthony said. “It brings the best out of everybody.”

James scored 27 for Miami, which had won seven straight at home. Chris Bosh added 20 points and 12 rebounds, and Dwyane Wade finished with only 12 points for the Heat – who had 20 turnovers, matching the fourth-most forced by New York this season.

“We will have our breakthrough,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “And as painful as this is right now, there will be a time that we break through and we’re able to execute and win a game like this against a quality opponent going down the stretch. What you hope is that the pain of a game like this resonates enough to make a change.”

With New York up by one, Bill Walker turned the ball over with 12.7 seconds left when he was unable to handle an inbounds pass, and Miami had its chance.

James drove on Anthony down the left side of the lane, but Stoudemire swatted the two-time reigning MVP’s try away.

“I watched it the whole way,” Stoudemire said. “I knew what he was going to do.”

Said James: “I felt like I got enough room around ‘Melo … and he just got a piece of it.”

James had another chance, but his potentially tiebreaking 3-pointer missed with 2 seconds left, and the Knicks leaped in celebration.

Miami is now tied with Chicago in the loss column, each with 17 in the tight race in the East. The Heat do have three more wins, but fell a half-game behind Boston for the top spot in the conference.

And it was there for the Heat’s taking, after holding an 84-78 lead with 3:05 left.

New York, as it had all night, came back quickly.

A 9-2 run over the next 3 minutes, capped by Billups’ 3-pointer over Wade’s outstretched arm with 1:01 left, gave the Knicks an 85-84 edge – and few people in the sellout crowd remained seated at that point.

“Mr. Big Shot” lived up to his name, again. James said before the game that he found it comical that some may have considered Billups to be an ancillary part of the Knicks-Nuggets deal.

Down the stretch, Billups took over.

“It’s a shot that I like to shoot,” Billups said. “It’s kind of a far shot, but it’s in my range and I knocked it down.”

Billups added a steal on the next Miami possession and set up Shawne Williams for two free throws and an 87-84 lead. James answered with two free throws, getting the Heat within one again, but Stoudemire’s block kept them at bay.

“I don’t think we played badly,” Bosh said. “I think we controlled the whole game. … We had control of the game. We just didn’t execute down the stretch.”

Mike Miller scored 10 for Miami. Walker had 10 for the Knicks, who won despite shooting 39 percent.

“There’s a reason we keep losing these close games,” Wade said. “So we’ve got to figure it out.”

It was the fourth and final regular-season meeting for the Knicks and Heat, and Wade could only point to one reason why Sunday night seemed so different.

“Melo,” he said before the game.

True, but the scene was anything but mellow.

Predictably, it was a double-feature of sorts – part showdown, part show.

Knicks superfan Spike Lee was having a conversation with Landry Fields during pregame warmups. Actor Michael Clarke Duncan and soccer star Thierry Henry had prime seats, tennis star Venus Williams appeared and Miami’s notoriously late-settling crowd was in place in plenty of time to lustily boo New York’s starters as they were introduced.

“The atmosphere was crazy,” Knicks guard Anthony Carter said.

Oh, there was a game, too.

Shawne Williams blocked Erick Dampier down low 2 minutes into the game. No problem – James simply knocked the ball away from Stoudemire, then threw a no-look, backward-over-his-head pass to Dampier for a dunk. A minute later, James dribbled behind his back to get clear of Billups, slapped the ball to Wade, then received an alley-oop pass back and slammed it with his left hand.

How good was that one? Someone posted the clip to YouTube within 8 minutes.

Miami’s lead was all the way to 51-36 when Bosh scored with 4:25 remaining in the half. Everything changed in a hurry.

New York scored the final 16 points of the half, starting when Billups made a 3-pointer, the first of four by the Knicks before intermission, including another by Billups and a falling-down, beat-the-clock version by Walker at the buzzer to give New York a 52-51 lead at the break.

Another drought to close the third quarter proved costly to Miami.

Up 66-60 when Miller made a 3-pointer with 3:30 left, the Heat went cold for the rest of the period. Anthony elevated over James Jones for a layup with 1:13 left, added a 3-pointer 34 seconds later, and the Knicks were within 66-65 going into the fourth. One quarter later, New York’s loss in Cleveland two nights earlier was forgotten.

“We redeemed ourselves,” Anthony said. “We’re not where we want to be yet. We’ve got a long ways to go.”

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By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer