Las Vegas Review-Journal

Heat catch breath, relish repeat title

Champions feted at parade, celebratio­n in Miami

- By TIM REYNOLDS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI — The last piece of confetti had landed, the Miami Heat championsh­ip celebratio­n was officially over, and many in the crowd of revelers were starting to make their way to the exits. Players and coaches remained on the stage. They were in no hurry to leave. Every member of the NBA champions stood and watched a giant video board play highlights of Miami’s march through the playoffs, from LeBron James’ MVPcaliber plays on both ends to Ray Allen’s seasonsavi­ng 3-pointer in Game 6 of the NBA Finals and countless moments in between.

“It’s a special group,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “You know what? This season started over nine months ago with that trip to China, and we were able to experience so many cool things together in the regular season. But at times, it just seems to be going by so fast.”

So maybe that’s why the Heat aren’t ready to stop celebratin­g this title just yet.

With an estimated 400,000 people lining the downtown Miami streets, the Heat held their parade and an in-arena rally afterward Monday. James stood atop a double-decker bus with a cigar in his mouth for the parade. Shane Battier blew kisses to the crowd, Dwyane Wade raised three fingers aloft, and Chris Andersen flapped his arms in a nod to his “Birdman” moniker.

“It’s the ultimate,” James told Sun Sports, the Heat broadcast partner. “It’s the ultimate. This is what I came down here, to be able to have a parade at the end of the year. I’m extremely blessed, man. It doesn’t get any better than this.”

Several players held super-soaker squirt guns and sprayed water on fans, confetti dotted the streets, and horns honked from all directions. Heat managing general partner Micky Arison and team president Pat Riley stood in the front of one bus, while Spoelstra — his championsh­ip cap turned backward — waved and clapped at fans.

“Miami parties better than any city in the world,” Spoelstra said. “But it took nine months, nine months of incredible sacrifice, not only by these men right here but everybody in our organizati­on, grinding it out every single day, ups and downs, highs and lows. And to have a culminatio­n like Game 7 in front of all of you here is incredible.”

When Riley got hired by the Heat, he talked at his introducto­ry news conference about his vision of a parade down Biscayne Boulevard. It took Riley until 2006 to deliver on that hope, but now with three parades in eight seasons, the Heat are getting used to these celebratio­ns.

Miami became the sixth franchise in NBA history to win consecutiv­e championsh­ips, after topping the San Antonio Spurs in this year’s finals for the third title overall for the Heat franchise, needing a Game 7 to get it done.

Police reported no major problems, and bomband drug-sniffing dogs were spotted working their way through the crowd. City officials banned fans from carrying backpacks, though several were spotted along the route and some people were searched randomly for security reasons.

 ?? ALAN DIAZ/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chris Bosh holds the NBA championsh­ip trophy while riding with Heat teammates in a parade to honor the repeat champs Monday in Miami. An estimated 400,000 people lined the streets for the celebratio­n.
ALAN DIAZ/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chris Bosh holds the NBA championsh­ip trophy while riding with Heat teammates in a parade to honor the repeat champs Monday in Miami. An estimated 400,000 people lined the streets for the celebratio­n.
 ?? WILFREDO LEE/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? LeBron James, Most Valuable Player of the NBA and the NBA Finals, is showered in confetti Monday.
WILFREDO LEE/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LeBron James, Most Valuable Player of the NBA and the NBA Finals, is showered in confetti Monday.

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