Chicago Sun-Times

Finals credit: Butler and Joker

Underappre­ciated stars share top billing in matchup for the NBA title

- BY TIM REYNOLDS

DENVER — Nikola Jokic wasn’t supposed to be here. Neither was Jimmy Butler, for that matter.

Jokic was drafted behind 40 other players in 2014. Butler was drafted behind 29 others in 2011. Jokic grew up in Serbia, not even thinking about the NBA. Butler didn’t have the easiest upbringing in Texas, then went the junior-college route at the start of his journey toward the pros.

Yet here they are in the NBA Finals.

One of them will become a champion for the first time, with Jokic leading the Nuggets and Butler leading the Heat in a matchup that starts Thursday night in Denver, with the Nuggets heavily favored to win it all.

“This is going to be the hardest game of our life, and we know that,” Jokic said. “We are prepared for that. So I think there is no favorite. Definitely, I think we are not favorites in this series. I think they’re not, either. I think it’s just the Finals.”

The Nuggets — in the NBA Finals for the first time — had by far the easier road to the title round. They climbed atop the Western Conference standings in mid-December and never fell from that perch, then lived up to that No. 1 seed by going 12-3 in the West playoffs.

Miami — a seven-time finalist seeking a fourth title — had about the rockiest path to the Rocky Mountains that a team could have. The Heat had to rally in a play-in eliminatio­n game just to make the playoffs, knocked out No. 1 overall seed Milwaukee in Round 1, rival New York in Round 2, then just had to go win a Game 7 in Boston, after nearly wasting a 3-0 lead, to avenge

last season’s loss to the Celtics in the East finals.

“This is a special group,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “This group has been able to overcome a lot of different things, handle a lot of adversity, setbacks, things that have not gone the way we wanted them to go. And instead of having that collapse our spirit, it allowed us to develop some fortitude and grit collective­ly and give us something to rally around, which was each other.”

At 44-38 this season, Miami would tie the worst regular-season record ever by an NBA champion. The Washington Bullets had that record and won the 1978 title. There were 10 teams that finished this season with better records

than Miami — nine of them are no longer playing — and 589 teams in NBA history that had better regular seasons than the 2022-23 Heat yet still didn’t win a title.

They are improbable finalists. Their leader took an improbable path, too. But after stints with the Bulls, Timberwolv­es and 76ers didn’t always go as planned, Butler is now in the Finals with the Heat for a second time in four years.

“I would like to say that I’m never rattled; I’m very calm,” Butler said. “I’m very consistent in everything that I do, whether it’s before the game, after the game, during the game, and I think when my guys look at me like that, they follow suit in every single way. I love

that about them because they’re never shook. No matter what.”

Jokic is four wins from his first ring. Butler is four wins from the ring he has been talking about getting all year, even when Miami’s record didn’t exactly suggest the Heat would be here.

But here they are. The West finals MVP in the Joker. The East finals MVP in Butler. The prize they want most is so close.

“In a lot of ways, what they have done is unpreceden­ted,” Heat forward Kevin Love said. “Obviously, they operate in different ways to get the job done. But still, all things considered, I think they’re two very underappre­ciated stars and superstars in this league.”

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP ?? Heat veteran Kevin Love (left, at practice Wednesday) says that what teammate Jimmy Butler (front) and Nuggets center Nikola Jokic have done in their NBA careers is unpreceden­ted in a lot of ways. Butler was the 30th overall pick in the 2011 draft, and Jokic was the 41st overall pick in the 2014 draft.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP Heat veteran Kevin Love (left, at practice Wednesday) says that what teammate Jimmy Butler (front) and Nuggets center Nikola Jokic have done in their NBA careers is unpreceden­ted in a lot of ways. Butler was the 30th overall pick in the 2011 draft, and Jokic was the 41st overall pick in the 2014 draft.

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