From their low moment in the NBA Finals, back to the top of the league.
The San Antonio Spurs turned the rematch with the Miami Heat into no match at all.
The Spurs finished off a dominant run to their fifth NBA championship Monday, ending the Heat's two-year title reign with a
104-87 victory that wrapped up the series in five games.
A year after their heartbreaking seven-game defeat, their only loss
in six finals appearances, the Spurs won four routs to deny Miami's
quest for a third straight championship.
''Hard to believe, isn't it? Manu Ginobili said. ''We played at a really high level.''
Kawhi Leonard,
named the finals MVP, had 22 points and 10 rebounds for the Spurs. San
Antonio added this title to the ones the Spurs won in 1999, 2003, '05
and '07. They nearly had another last year, but couldn't hold off the
Heat and lost in seven games.
San Antonio rebounded from an early 16-point deficit by outscoring
the Heat 37-13 from the start of the second quarter to midway in the
third.
The celebration the Heat canceled last season was on by the early second half Sunday.
LeBron James
had 17 first-quarter points to help the Heat get off to a fast start.
But it wasn't enough. He finished with 31 points and 10 rebounds for the
Heat, who lost their spot atop the NBA to the team that had it so long.
The Spurs won four titles in nine years, but hadn't been back on top
since 2007, making Foreigner's ''Feels Like the First Time'' and
appropriate song choice after the final buzzer.
Tim Duncan and coach Gregg Popovich have been here for all of them, and it was the fourth for Tony Parker and Ginobili, who with Duncan are once again the reigning the Big Three in the NBA.
''Just a great team and we do it together,'' Parker said.
Chris Bosh finished with 13 points and Wade just 11 on 4-of-12 shooting for the Heat, providing James nowhere near the help he needed.
The painful conclusion to last year served as the fuel for this one,
powering the Spurs to a 62-win season that topped the NBA and led to a
rematch with Miami, the NBA's first in the finals since Chicago beat
Utah in 1997-98.
Round 2 went to the Spurs, but both teams will challenges to navigate for a rubber match.
San Antonio will face questions - as it has for years - about the age
of its core, and whether Duncan, Ginobili and Popovich want to stick
around. The Heat will brace for the potential free agency of James, Wade
and Bosh, and will need younger, fresher pieces around the three
All-Stars if they all stay.
But this moment belongs to the Spurs. Playing a methodical style for
many years that was predicated on throwing the ball into Duncan made San
Antonio respected, but never beloved. The Spurs were TV ratings
killers, casual viewers finding them not much fun to watch.
But Popovich opened up the offense a few years ago, making the Spurs
an easy-to-like, tough-to-beat group that thrives on ball movement and
3-point shooting.
''You showed the world how beautiful this game is,'' Commissioner Adam Silver told the Spurs during the postgame award ceremony.
A decade and a half after winning their first title in 1999, when
Duncan was in his second season, the Spurs remain the NBA's model
organization, a small-market team that simply wins big and hardly ever
does it with a high draft pick. Instead, the Spurs found players
overseas or in other organizations who would fit the Spurs' way of doing
things and mesh with the Duncan, Parker and Ginobili, the winningest
trio in postseason history.
That included Leonard, acquired in a draft-night trade with Indiana after playing at San Diego State, and Patty Mills, an Australian national who scored 17 points off the bench.
No team has overcome a 3-1 deficit in the finals, but the Heat were
confident they could keep this season going, Bosh saying earlier Sunday
that the Heat were going to win.
It appeared they would do it easily the way the game started, with
James coming out with force on offense and shutting down Parker on
defense as Miami went ahead 22-6.
But it didn't last.
While it took San Antonio a little while to get warmed up, the Spurs
eventually made it look stunningly easy again - much to the delight of
the home crowd, with fans standing, chanting and dancing much of the
second half.
Notes: It was the Spurs' 12th win by 15 or more points, most ever
in a postseason. The Spurs outscored opponents by 214 points in the
postseason. ... Miami had won 11 straight series, tied for the
fifth-longest streak in NBA history.
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