Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘Great things happen to great people’

- Recah Trinidad

A REPORT from Oakland, California, that the defending champion Golden State Warriors were being pegged plus-five favorites over the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 7 of the NBA Finals was received with mixed amusement and disapprova­l around Metro Manila.

Out in the Mandaluyon­g City wet market sports hub, one group in the vegetable section squandered a total of P70,000 after the Warriors surrendere­d the NBA crown to the Cavaliers yesterday. This same group, mind you, had previously hit a minijackpo­t betting on Cleveland in Game 6 of the Finals.

The losing group had honestly believed the two-game winning momentum gained by the Cavaliers, who had had a dismal 0-2 start in the NBAtitle playoffs, would automatica­lly evaporate once the Finals moved back to Oakland for the all-or-nothing Game 7.

On the other hand, fruit and dried-fish push-cart vendors along New Panaderos, off the main market, stuck it out with the Cavaliers. They bagged a hefty bonus after the P1,000 they placed on the under- dog Cavaliers paid a handsome P3,000 dividend each in the E-Gaming outlet.

Reviewing the contrastin­g sentiments, it would appear that countless Golden State fanatics felt the Warriors, despite back-to-back losses that forced the 3-all Finals standoff, would be solid and unbeatable in their homecourt for Game 7.

They lost dismally because those who sided with the underdog Cavaliers treated the event more realistica­lly. How the Cavaliers, who had dropped down a 3-1 Finals hole, clawed back to deal the record-setting Warriors (73-game season wins) a third straight defeat in franchise history also culminated a 52-year hunt for a first

ever championsh­ip for the northern Ohio city. “This is what I came back for,” cried the mighty and magnificen­t LeBron James, who left Miami and returned to his mother pro club two years ago.

Of course, everything had seemed indefinite and unsure in the blazing see-saw Game 7, until the phenomenal Kyrie Irving connected with a towering 3-pointer off Stephen Curry from right quarter, 1:09 left.

“Best player on the planet,” said Irving of James, who scored a triple double (27 points, 11 assists, 11 rebounds) to emerge the Finals MVP for the third time. He had won the award in 2012 and 2013 with Miami.

Cleveland coach Tyronn Lue said James deserves the honor because he has a great heart.

“Great things happen to great people,” Lue extolled.

James, who had just emerged from a joyous romance with the wood court, said he could not wait to come home and hoist the trophies at Cleveland’s home terminal.

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