Los Angeles Times

HEAT’S THREE COME UP BIG

James, Wade and Bosh lead late Game 7 surge to defeat Celtics and return Miami to Finals.

- By Ira Winderman

MIAMI 101, BOSTON 88

MIAMI — For the Miami Heat, this was more exhale than exultation.

The team’s hope is that the exulting will follow.

For now, there is the mere satisfacti­on of traversing the long road back to the NBA Finals. With the hope for a better result.

A year after falling two games short of the franchise’s second NBA championsh­ip, the Heat will get its shot at redemption, with Saturday night’s 101-88 Game 7 victory at AmericanAi­rlines Arena finally finishing off the Boston Celtics.

“We wanted to give our fans a big win,” LeBron James said after leading the Heat with 31points. “We look forward to the next challenge.”

While a modest Eastern

Conference championsh­ip celebratio­n followed, this has never been about something so mundane, something James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh achieved last season, their first together as teammates.

This, instead, has, from the moment the NBA lockout ended in December, been about pushing past the sting of last year’s Finals failure against the Dallas Mavericks, when Dirk Nowitzki, Jason terry, Jason Kidd and Mark Cuban exulted on the Heat’s home court and then in the clubs of South Beach.

Saturday was playoff theater at its finest, with Bosh stepping back to hit threepoint shots, James attacking the basket for threepoint plays, Wade again coming on strong in a second half and Miami finally surviving.

“That’s what we talk about,” James said. “It has to be a collective group to win the championsh­ip. Everyone was in tune today.”

In a game that featured 20 lead changes and 10 ties, with the Heat never up by more than two points through the first three quarters, James, Bosh and Wade finally put it away late.

Wade scored 23 point for Miami and Bosh, who made a career-high three threepoint­ers, contribute­d 19.

“He was the X-factor,” Boston Coach Doc Rivers said of Bosh. “He gave them exactly what they needed.”

For the Celtics, who now face a major post-big Three overhaul, with Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett to be free agents, Rajon Rondo again was magnificen­t, with 22 points, 14 assists and 10 rebounds. Paul Pierce, who again fought foul trouble, scored 19 points, Garnett had 14 and Allen 15.

“I just thought we had nothing left,” Rivers said.

The second Finals of the Heat’s Big Three era comes after challenges greater than those it faced in 2011. This time there was the revival of the rivalry with the New York Knicks in the first round, then a tough battle against Indiana , and finally this latest test against a Big Three that eventually reached its expiration date.

Instead of the Heat reconsider­ing its own Big Three as well as the fate of Coach Erik Spoelstra, those questions, at least for now, are put aside in favor of the challenge of the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals, which open Tuesday at Chesapeake Energy Arena.

“They’re really talented,” Rivers said of the Heat. “Erik does a terrific job. I wish he got more credit with what he does with that group.”

Rivers’ Rondo-garnett-Allen-pierce group was vanquished by the Heat for a second straight season. Now comes the challenge of the Thunder’s Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook, James Harden and Serge Ibaka.

The fourth quarter was riveting, with Bosh and Allen matching three-pointers early, James attacking and Garnett posting up.

It came down to a possession-by-possession slugfest.

James’ driving layup gave the Heat an 88-82 lead.

A Brandon Bass jumper got Boston to within 88-84.

Then James, with the shot clock expiring, hit a long three-pointer for a 91-84 lead, effectivel­y ending it.

 ?? Lynne Sladky Associated Press ?? LeBRON JAMES, trying to get by Kevin Garnett, scored 31 for Heat.
Lynne Sladky Associated Press LeBRON JAMES, trying to get by Kevin Garnett, scored 31 for Heat.

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