Miami Heat fans
need to be scared, along with the team itself. The San Antonio Spurs played bad
basketball for the final 3 quarters of that game, and still should have won.
Even with LeBron’s dominating performance, and a stellar game coming from Chris
Bosh, the Heat only won by 2. For anyone who was watching, the Heat weren’t
making many mistakes. The Spurs were making a lot of them, and I’m not talking
about turnovers. The Spurs shot 44% from the field and 60% from the line,
compared to Miami shooting 53% from the field and 76% from the line.
First issue with
game 2 was the Spurs offense. In the first and third quarters they were doing
what they do best; move the ball. Tony Parker found every opening there was to
find in the first quarter, and all 5 players were playing smart. They were
staying spaced, dumping it into the post, and displaying that unbelievable
interior passing of theirs. When the post wasn’t open, they would kick it out
for a jumper. For the second and fourth quarter, they were forcing mid-range
jumpers with 15 seconds left on the shot clock. They weren’t running through
their motions, and it allowed LeBron to get going. You cannot play your game
for 24 minutes and hope to beat the Heat. Not with LeBron playing like he was
last night.
He went off in the third quarter. After
relentlessly pounding the paint in the first half, he started burying jumpers
on every possession. It was at that “Give LeBron the ball and let him do
whatever he wants” point. And when LeBron gets in those grooves, you can’t hope
to prevent it, or even contain it. You kind of just have to wait until he cools
off, and do your best to match it on the other end. You can’t double because
the other four players are perfectly spaced on the court, and LeBron would find
the open man for a wide-open three.
Now let’s talk
about Chris Bosh. He was the key to success, in my mind, for Miami last night.
He started off shooting 3-3 from the field; all on drives to the basket. No jumpers. He was being assertive,
rather than waiting for a kick-out pass from Wade or LeBron for a jump shot,
which is what he did all game 1. He was still staying spaced, allowing for Wade
and LeBron to drive, but he wasn’t taking stupid shots. He didn’t take a jumper
until late in the second half, and he eventually hit that huge 3 to give the Heat
a two point lead with 1:17 to go. Then he sealed the deal on a beautiful bounce
pass to Wade with 9 seconds to go to put them up 5. He finished with 18 points,
3 boards, 2 dimes, a steal and a block. His numbers weren’t all that
impressive, but as we all know numbers don’t mean everything.
So the Heat
outplayed the Spurs, we know that. But what I also know is that the officiating
was horrific. All game it was brutal, and it showed down the stretch. I’m
honestly tempted to go back and watch the game and document how many bad calls
there were, for both sides. I’m fine with letting it be physical early on, to
get the game going. But for God sakes the refs were still calling it the same
way in the third quarter! Duncan and Splitter were getting beaten up down low,
and LeBron actually got fouled on a handful of shots and it wasn’t called. And
even though each team recorded 20 fouls, there should have been a whole lot
more on Miami, and a little bit less on San Antonio.
The foul on a
three point shot has been called over 60 times in these playoffs, an NBA
record. Danny Green wasn’t allowed to land on two of his threes last night, yet
nothing was called. It would only be two free throws, but it would have meant
Rashard Lewis would have finished with 5 fouls rather than 3. Another play that
stuck out to me was the Kawhi Leonard “charge” on LeBron. First off, Lewis got
Leonard on the arm before the charging call. Basically, Lewis shouldn’t have
been on the court for nearly as long, and that would have hurt. Now to the
charging part. Leonard was already airborne before LeBron slid in and got set.
Therefore it’s impossible for that to have been a charge, and either the officials
somehow didn’t see it, or they were being generous to LeBron. Either way, it
kept Lewis on the court and it took Kawhi Leonard off, and it was in the third
quarter. Here’s yet another example
of how the refs helped the Heat. Danny Green was straight up defending Dwyane
Wade. He jumped. Wade pump faked. Green came down, still straight as could be.
He landed, and Wade threw his body sideways. Green, still straight up, absorbed
the contact, stumbled backwards, and Wade threw a wild shot up. It resulted in
two made free throws. The fact that Wade, who’s such a great player, needs to
resort to cheap plays like this makes me sick, especially since he could have
easily dribbled through to the paint.
Another Dwyane
Wade call that I freaked out about was the Ginobili “foul.” Wade caught the
ball 5 feet outside the arc and Ginobili took a swipe at the ball. He missed
completely, yet Dwyane Wade jolted his head back and stumbled a bit. Those damn
invisible force fields… The refs called a foul on Ginobili, and it forced
Ginobili to sit down with 3 fouls. Ginobili, by the way, just scored 7 points
prior to that foul.
All of those
calls were pivotal, but they don’t compare to the one play that changed the
game. This play, oddly enough was called correctly. The play I’m referring to
is the Mario Chalmers baseline drive, where he elbowed Tony Parker in the ribs
(Just for the record, I have always strongly disliked Chalmers). I am still
baffled as to how a player can be dribbling full speed, looking for an outlet,
and stop to think to throw an intentional elbow into the side of another
player. Like seriously? People wonder why I don’t respect Chalmers game; it’s
because of plays like these (I applaud the refs for originally calling it a
flagrant just so they could review it, in order to get the call right). What
made me even angrier was watching Chalmers run his foolish mouth to the
official after the review! They made the right call at first, reviewed it, saw
you throw a clear elbow that wasn’t even close
to being a basketball move, and you’re still talking? It’s just unbelievable to
me. Anyways, Tony Parker clearly wasn’t right after that. For the final 6
minutes he was slower, and settled for jumpers rather than attacking the basket
like he normally does. Once he missed those free throws short I knew he was
still feeling it, and so did Pop as he took him out. Trust me from experience;
blows to the ribs are crippling, and tough to take your mind off.
Duncan missed
two free throws after Parker, and that led to a LeBron three-pointer, and the
Spurs didn’t look the same since, getting outscored 13-9 from that point on,
and that includes the garbage three from Ginobili at the very end of the game.
Basically, that
series of events with Chalmers and Parker is what turned the game around, and I
give credit to the Heat for capitalizing. And I’m not going to be ignorant and
say the Spurs lost because of officiating, because there were bad calls both
ways, and because I know more than enough to say with confidence that the Spurs
didn’t play well enough to win. The Heat played a great game, but they need to
be wary. Only winning by two points is scary considering that the Spurs only
played 24 minutes of quality basketball.
Mark my words; the
Spurs will not play that bad again, and Heat will have to play a whole lot
better if they want to win this series.
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