National Post (National Edition)

Butler knocked the arrogance out of the Lakers

HE ALSO MIGHT HAVE RESCUED THESE NBA FINALS

- JERRY BREWER

These NBA Finals remain mostly an internal competitio­n for the Los Angeles Lakers. If they play well, as we saw in the first two games, the Miami Heat cannot beat them. If they leave an opening, however, Jimmy Butler will burst through it with the ferocity he showed in Game 3. No matter how great the mismatch, it's still hard to Butler-proof this series.

So there is drama now, if not full-on uncertaint­y. Because Heat starters Bam Adebayo and Goran Dragic are out with injuries, the Lakers aren't facing a fully stocked challenger, which severely hinders the likelihood that these Finals can reach peak competitiv­eness. Neverthele­ss, L.A. must deal with the relentless Butler. On Sunday, he knocked the arrogance out of the Lakers with his 40-point triple-double. In leading the Heat to a 115-104 victory, Butler left the Lakers frustrated, turnover prone and without swagger, at least for one night.

“Look, how do you ... how else do you say it other than Jimmy Effing Butler?” heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “But this is what he wanted. This is what we wanted. It's really hard to analyze or describe Jimmy until you actually feel him between the four lines. He's a supreme, elite competitor, and we needed it.”

It could have been Butler's and the Heat's best punch. Or it could have bought time for those reinforcem­ents Miami desperatel­y needs. For certain, it's not a sustainabl­e game plan for the Heat to expect more historic Butler performanc­es to even this 2-1 series and pose a legitimate threat to win the championsh­ip. The Heat will have to find more ways to win, if other options still exist for them. But finally, there's a smidgen of doubt about the ultimate outcome.

The Lakers have been pushed (OK, maybe nudged). Their superiorit­y doesn't matter as much as the Heat developing an understand­ing of how they can compete.

“We're just settling down,” Butler said. “I think it's a lot of bright lights. It's a big stage for almost everybody ... Nobody's been here before. But we're coming to realize we belong here.”

There are few players who can leverage hope as well as Butler. Look at him, down two games in the series and barking late in Game 3 after scoring on Markieff Morris, “They're in trouble!” That's Butler, falling to the floor again and again, rising and asking for more, always feeling like he's inching toward a knockout blow.

For Butler, this game stands as a career masterpiec­e nine years in the making. He probably doesn't have another performanc­e like that in him. But the stats — 40 points, 13 assists, 11 rebounds, two steals and two blocks in 45 minutes — are a dramatic representa­tion of the impact Butler has on winning.

He didn't just punctuate his phenomenal, all-around floor game with the kind of scoring explosion we're used to seeing from today's perimeter players. No, Butler did it without attempting a three-pointer, driving over and over into the teeth of the Lakers' athletic, oversized defence, hitting pull-up jumpers, attacking the rim and getting to the free throw line. Who does that? Well, Shaquille O'Neal and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar — two of the greatest centres of all time — are the only contempora­ry players to dominate a Finals game attacking so exclusivel­y inside the arc. Butler is 6-foot-7. He and Kawhi Leonard might be the only two perimeter players in that size range capable of such a punishing offensive effort.

Butler also guarded LeBron James for much of the game and was a huge factor in forcing him into eight turnovers.

Miami has won three NBA titles, but Butler's Game 3 was one of the finest moments in franchise history. He continues to help the Heat redefine themselves, which could pave the way for future glory. Butler could play poorly in the next two games, and the Lakers could close these Finals with back-to-back blowout victories, yet Butler still would be remembered as a fearless competitor whose determinat­ion was an enlivening influence during a difficult NBA season.

“We know how Jimmy is in these moments,” Heat guard Tyler Herro said. “And the world has seen what Jimmy Butler is capable of.”

James, who has a 3-6 Finals record, has finished as the runner-up several times despite stellar performanc­es.

He knows what it's like to do everything one star can reasonably do and still exit in disappoint­ment. James can appreciate how hard Butler is fighting.

“Love it,” he said of playing against Butler. “Love it. One of the best competitor­s we have in our game. We love that opportunit­y. For me personally, I don't know how many more opportunit­ies I'm going to have, so to be able to go against a fierce competitor like that is something I'll look back on when I'm done playing. I'll miss those moments.”

A few chippy in-game exchanges between the two actually qualifies as mutual respect. As Butler witnessed James storm off the court at the end of Game 3, he must have known he accomplish­ed something else: an acknowledg­ment that the Heat, though undermanne­d, are still a problem.

The problem is that Butler won't quit. He is challengin­g the Lakers to elevate — or watch him fulfil his “They're in trouble!” prophecy.

 ?? DOUGLAS P. DEFELICE / GETTY IMAGES ?? In posting a 40-point triple-double on Sunday against LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers, Miami's Jimmy Butler showed observers he is one of the keys to the series.
DOUGLAS P. DEFELICE / GETTY IMAGES In posting a 40-point triple-double on Sunday against LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers, Miami's Jimmy Butler showed observers he is one of the keys to the series.

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