The Borneo Post

NBA FINALS by the numbers

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Cleveland’s Tyronn Lue is trying to become only the second coach to win titles in his first two NBA seasons as a head coach, following John Kundla of the Minneapoli­s Lakers in 1949 and 1950.

The number of consecutiv­e years that Golden State and Cleveland have played each other in the NBA Finals, a first in the league’s 71year history.

The number of back-to-back-to-back finals rematches in major North American sports leagues, once each in the NFL, NHL and Major League Baseball now joined by the NBA.

Four-time NBA Most Valuable Player LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers will become the seventh NBA player to compete in his seventh consecutiv­e NBA Finals. The only other players with at least seven NBA Finals appearance­s in a row played for the Boston Celtics in the 1950s and 1960s, with Bill Russell making the record 10 in a row.

The Warriors and Cavaliers feature a combined 11 players who have been named NBA All- Stars, the most in an NBA Finals matchup since the Los Angeles Lakers faced Philadelph­ia in 1983.

The Warriors are the first team in NBA history to win their first 12 playoff games.

Two-time NBA MVP Stephen Curry’s No. 30 jersey leads the list of most popular league jerseys for the second consecutiv­e year.

The number of years since the last North American major sports league had teams meet three times in a row in the final, that coming with Detroit and Montreal in the NHL Stanley Cup Final from 1954- 56.

The number of combined followers of Cleveland’s LeBron James, the most followed NBA player on social media, on Facebook (23.1 million), Twitter (36.4 million) and Instagram (30.5 million). — AFP

The Cavaliers, powered by the game’s best player in LeBron James, are 12-1, with their only playof f hiccup coming in a Game Three loss of the Eastern Conference final.

While there has been little intrigue all season long, a ho-hum regular season and predictabl­e start to the playoffs will soon be a distant memory if the Cavs and Warriors produce a memorable series like last year.

“Convention­al wisdom basically suggests that having dynamic rivalries of great teams is really good for a sport, even if it does leave more cities on the outside looking in,” Robert Boland, director of the sports administra­tion program at Ohio University, told Reuters.

“But whi le we love g reat competitio­n between great teams we don’t want the rest of the season to be a foregone conclusion, particular­ly at the prices the NBA charges for tickets.”

With three-time NBA champion James in the best playoff form of his career and the Warriors on a revenge path, even the most casual fans may find it hard to turn away when the series begins on Thursday in Oakland.

“The two best teams is what you want. Plus you’ve got a rubber match in that they will play three Finals in a row and each has won one,” said Dorfman.

“So this is a bigger deal than just another championsh­ip.” — Reuters

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