~~2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs - Spurs Win~~

Who winning that ship???


  • Total voters
    175
Re: ��~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~��

Explain to me how they are overrated when they just came out of the loaded and deep west and are a few missed free throws away from being up 2-0?

Lmaoo and the heat are cramp away from being up 2-0 had Bron didn't leave the game
 
Re: ��~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~��

Lmaoo and the heat are cramp away from being up 2-0 had Bron didn't leave the game
We're both right. It could easily be 2-0 either way. Im just trying to hear how they are overrated from dude.
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Oh, and since I haven't shared my thoughts on Tony Parker...

...he goes into the 'Injury Hall Of Shame' with Paul Pierce. :lol:
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Oh, and since I haven't shared my thoughts on Tony Parker...

...he goes into the 'Injury Hall Of Shame' with Paul Pierce. :lol:

Can't be that hard on Tony his body isn't really cut out for all that shit he be doing, he goes all out and he is no spring chicken either..
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Rio will be alright, there's no need to start Cole over him. Now your fucking with the rotations player mental, team chemistry and etc...

Cole is that energy of the bench with that second unit, the spark off the pine. I thought Indiana fucked with Lance. You need that spark, period. I think those fouls are fucking with Mario mind, Bosh went thru a similar stretch. Seem like everything they do is called a foul.
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Can't be that hard on Tony his body isn't really cut out for all that shit he be doing, he goes all out and he is no spring chicken either..
On top of that you have a fucking tight end vexing you...
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Rio will be alright, there's no need to start Cole over him. Now your fucking with the rotations player mental, team chemistry and etc...

Cole is that energy of the bench with that second unit, the spark off the pine. I thought Indiana fucked with Lance. You need that spark, period. I think those fouls are fucking with Mario mind, Bosh went thru a similar stretch. Seem like everything they do is called a foul.

Don't know Rio been fucking up all playoffs, its like his head isn't in it, he is making mental mistakes on one side of the floor then he is allowing it to affect him on the other side... ONe thing you have to say about Cole is yes he does make mistakes from time to time, but does have a short memory and doesn't have that big of a carry over effect that Rio seems to have..
I don't know, maybe they need to get on his case they way they used to when ever he fucked up, maybe some players need it for motivation..
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Rio will be fine....Its not like one of his teammates smash his chick........:eek:
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Rio will be fine....Its not like one of his teammates smash his chick........:eek:

I hope so, but I would still keep him on a short leash.. Last year we almost blew the series due to Spo inability to realize that both Battier and Haslem skills had diminished and was slow making the proper adjustments..
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

I had to shut my superintendent up with this shit...talking that the Spurs is older shit
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Spurs are older if we focus only on key players, the stats are only skewed because they include bench warmers.
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Spurs are older if we focus only on key players, the stats are only skewed because they include bench warmers.

I knew that was bullshit, before I went to the numbers....
I knew Leonard and Splitter wasn't older that 24, which gives the Spurs two youthful starters!!! I was way off on Tiago...


Here the data...




San Antiono Spurs


  • 9 Parker, Tony PG 32
    2 Leonard, K SF 22
    4 Green, Danny SF 26
    21 Duncan, Tim PF 38
    22 Splitter, Tiago C 29

    33 Diaw, Boris PF 32
    20 Ginobili, Manu SG 36
    3 Belinelli, M SG 28
    8 Mills, Patty PG 25
    5 Joseph, Cory PG 22
    11 Ayres, Jeff PF 27
    16 Baynes, Aron PF 27
    15 Bonner, Matt PF 34
    23 Daye, Austin SF 26
    7 James, D SF 26


Miamj Heat

  • 15 Chalmers, Mario PG 28
    3 Wade, Dwyane SG 32
    6 James, LeBron SF 29
    9 Lewis, Rashard PF 34
    1 Bosh, Chris PF 30

    34 Allen, Ray SG 38
    11 Andersen, Chris PF 35
    30 Cole, Norris PG 25
    22 Jones, James SF 33
    31 Battier, Shane SF 35
    8 Beasley, Michael PF 25
    0 Douglas, Toney PG 28
    7 Hamilton, Justin C 24
    40 Haslem, Udonis PF 34
    20 Oden, Greg C 26
    4 Padgett, David C 29
    20 Richards, Jason G 28
 
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Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Adam Silver: Air conditioning issue not handled well in Game 1 of NBA Finals
SAN ANTONIO -- NBA commissioner Adam Silver, who succeeded David Stern on Feb. 1, said Sunday night that the breakdown of the air conditioning during Game 1 “is certainly not one of my prouder moments of my short tenure” and “wasn’t handled perfectly.”

Silver said that a few minutes before Game 1, the league was told that one of the main circuits that controls the water pump had broken. At&T Center officials told the league they tried to reset it several times and determined late in the second quarter that they could not fix the circuit breaker. But the Heat was not informed of the problem until during the second quarter.

“There always are going to be human and mechanical errors and it’s unfortunate,” Silver said.

Silver said he wasn’t concerned about the possibility this series might be remembered for the malfunction. “I’m glad this isn’t single elimination,” he said.

Silver addressed other issues:
• Asked whether the breakup of the Heat or Thunder would be considered a success for the league under a labor deal designed to create competitive balance, Silver said: “I don’t know if I would necessarily call it a success. Our goal was not to break up teams. But ultimately, any type of cap system in essence is a form of player sharing.

“So to the extent that James Harden leaves Oklahoma City and the Houston Rockets then become a competitive team, that’s a positive thing for the league. Part of the purpose of a cap system is so you don’t see too much talent aggregated in one market.”



THIS AND THAT

• Asked before the game whether he feels normal, James said: “I wouldn’t say normal, but I feel good.”

• Heat center Chris Bosh senses there are still a lot of people who dislike the Heat, and anti-James sentiment expressed on Twitter during his Game 1 cramping episode suggests that, too. But the Heat also has picked up a lot of fans during the Big Three era.

A 12-month ESPN poll of 1,500 Americans indicated the Heat has surpassed the Lakers as the nation’s favorite NBA team. The Heat ranks sixth overall among all U.S. pro sports teams, behind the Cowboys, Steelers, Packers, Yankees and Broncos. The Lakers are now ninth — three spots behind Miami.

• Heat center Greg Oden said he is enjoying this experience, despite playing in only one postseason game heading into Sunday, but that the Heat hasn’t told him whether it wants to re-sign him this summer, and he isn’t inclined to ask.

“Once I get through this year, I will get some rest and figure it out from here,” he said. “I’m trying not to think too far ahead.

“Who doesn’t wish they played more? But I’m happy to be here.”
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Greg Cote: Miami Heat has upper hand, but nothing given in fantastic NBA Finals

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It is in the Heat’s hands now. Everything is. The series. The championship. The three-peat. The history and legacy that is the engine for all of this.

All they have to do is own their home court.

If Miami does not lose in its bayside arena beginning with NBA Finals Game 3 on Tuesday night — if the Heat prevails in the one sanctuary where it has not been hated, doubted or mocked — there will be yet another parade just out front along Biscayne Boulevard.

But if that sounds too easy, it probably is. If you have paid attention to the first two games of a series now 1-1, you have seen two teams likely headed for the full seven games.

I almost felt bad for newbie NBA commissioner Adam Silver as he addressed a congested roomful of national media in San Antonio on Sunday night. He was there to preen. Instead he was being pelted.

It is in the Heat’s hands now. Everything is. The series. The championship. The three-peat. The history and legacy that is the engine for all of this.

All they have to do is own their home court.

If Miami does not lose in its bayside arena beginning with NBA Finals Game 3 on Tuesday night — if the Heat prevails in the one sanctuary where it has not been hated, doubted or mocked — there will be yet another parade just out front along Biscayne Boulevard.

But if that sounds too easy, it probably is. If you have paid attention to the first two games of a series now 1-1, you have seen two teams likely headed for the full seven games.

I almost felt bad for newbie NBA commissioner Adam Silver as he addressed a congested roomful of national media in San Antonio on Sunday night. He was there to preen. Instead he was being pelted.

Shots against the league bow came in the form of questions about the latest in the mess of Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling. When would the sale of the club and his ouster become official? He also was peppered by a salvo concerning the mysterious arena air-conditioning outage that so affected Game 1 of this Heat-Spurs championship series. Was it sabotage? When exactly did he learn of the snafu?

A racist owner and a Finals controversy wrapped in hints of skullduggery — these are not any commissioner’s idea of a comfort zone.

Poor Silver, he just wanted to do a little bragging.

“This Finals is everything basketball fans could have hoped for,” he said in his introductory, lavishing two class organizations of championship pedigree, and two teams stocked with future Hall of Famers chasing their own slice of history.

Silver failed miserably to detour the line of ensuing questions from scandal and controversy to basketball, but credit the effort.

He had a lot to sell.

Heat-Spurs a year ago was a seven-game thrill ride, epic, a classic, Miami rallying impossibly to break San Antonio’s heart after the NBA — oops! — had begun roping off the court for the Spurs’ celebration. It was a terrific Finals.

Heat-Spurs, the rematch, might be even better.

Tied 1-1 as it moves to Miami for Game 3 Tuesday night, it is hard to imagine this Finals won’t also roll a seven and send fans of both teams alternating between euphoria and dejection, or what Heat president Pat Riley once called “winning, or misery.”

No, an NBA Finals needn’t involve Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston or New York to be big or riveting. It can involve a couple of mid-size markets, as long as they pack the pedigree and star power of Miami and San Antonio.

The Heat’s LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Ray Allen will waltz into the Hall of Fame, James among of course the greatest ever. Chris Bosh might make it, too.

The Spurs’ Tim Duncan and Tony Parker also are future first-ballot inductees, Duncan an all-time great.

Miami sharpens aim on a third consecutive championship and fourth crown in nine years.

And as he chases a fifth championship, Duncan, by himself, has played in more postseason games than the Heat in its franchise history. His first NBA Finals were a century ago — 1999, to be exact.

If this feels like a Finals for the ages, it is because these veteran teams are aged to perfection and seemingly have been powerhouses for ages, at least in a sports context.

The Heat wasn’t ready to be champion in 2011, the first of the four consecutive Finals appearances in the LeBron Era. They hadn’t been together long enough. There were dues owed.

Likewise, Oklahoma City wasn’t ready to be champion in 2012, against Miami.

But last season and in this Finals, two champions are at it, each as experienced as the other, each as basketball savvy, each as hungry.

The Heat by splitting the first two games has put itself in a great position to size control of the series if it can win the next two at home.

But does anyone paying attention doubt San Antonio is capable of winning in Miami?

An unexpected catalyst for Miami has been Bosh, second on the team averaging 18 points in the Finals including the last-minute, go-ahead shot in Game 2’s 98-96 win on a selfless pass from James.

Bosh has lived for four years as the least of the Big 3 in public perception. Remember those “Big 2 1/2” jokes? He has at times been seen as soft, passive, as a nearly 7-foot center who doesn’t get many rebounds. A big man on the perimeter, of the court, and of greatness.

Don’t share any doubts about Bosh with coach Erik Spolestra, though.

“He’s arguably our most important player, and it’s not just because of that shot [Sunday],” Spoelstra said. “He has a lot on his plate. He’s a two-way player on both ends, he has to facilitate and space the floor and find opportunities to be aggressive. It’s a tough balance. He’s versatile enough and important enough for us that he’s been able to find that. He’s one of the most stable, mentally tough guys I’ve ever been around. That’s why it raises the hair on the back of my neck when people question him. He has absolute championship DNA.”

Said Bosh: “I really don’t care about criticism,” but he hears it. After LeBron called himself “the easiest target in sports” for all the social-media venom he took over his Game 1 cramping, Bosh said, “I’m probably the second” easiest target.

Miami has a great chance to win the series, and championship, if Bosh continues as the aggressive force we have seen the first two games — the force who attacked and had a monster dunk in each of them.

It all starts with James, though, of course, as it did in Game 2 with his 35 points and 10 rebounds.

The mocking and hatred he felt after the cramping situation reminds us that his harsh, often irrational critics haven’t gone away, they just lay dormant, ready to pounce given any opportunity.

Only at home, in this arena, is he safe from all of that.

If he sends those home fans cheering into the night the rest of this series, Miami will be champion again.
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Greg Cote: LeBron James silences his critics, resuscitates Miami Heat’s three-peat dream

hi-res-c661aabf5ca8f12b539ba213e1fe2ef5_crop_north.jpg


SAN ANTONIO -- His muscles went from cramping to flexing, his body from useless and beyond his control to empowered and fully in charge.

It was a lesson in physiology, in the marvel of human healing.

It wasn’t a miracle, it was LeBron James — although occasionally, like Sunday night, those seem like one in the same, as least to Heat fans.

James was masterful in NBA Finals Game 2 here, after cramps had limited him in the opening loss, and he lifted the Heat to a 98-96 triumph over San Antonio that levels the series at 1-1 as the Finals head to Miami for Games 3 and 4 starting Tuesday night.

He scored 35 points with 10 rebounds. He muscled into the paint. He hit jump shots. He silenced those who had savaged him on social media, mocking, questioning his toughness, belittling his succumbing to cramps. Mostly, what LeBron did was resuscitate Miami’s dream of a three-peat championship.

“Keep it coming. Hate is motivation,” said Dwyane Wade, of all the scrutiny this team endures, and of the criticism of James this week. “Obviously LeBron had it going.”

James called it “very difficult at times, very challenging” to tune out the outside noise, but said, “I know who I’m playing for and what I’m playing for.”

This is the team shaped and steeled by adversity. The LeBron-era Heat came together amid howling derision and coast-to-coast anger, mocked after losing its first Finals together. Everything has seemed an uphill climb for this group, with Miami trailing or stretched to the full seven games in 10 of 16 playoff series.

A 2-0 series hole would have been different, unprecedented, something not experienced in the Big 3 era. Teams in a 2-0 Finals hole have historically won only 9.7 percent of the time.

Lose this game and, as Dwyane Wade had put it, “I’m sure the series would be over, at least from the [opinion of the] outside.”

That is the dire straits, perception or reality, that the Heat avoided Sunday night because James took it upon himself to make it so.

Resilient Miami now has won a remarkable 47 consecutive playoff games since last losing two in a row in 2012, the third-longest such streak in league history — a streak saved by a 13-0 run now immediately following a postseason loss.

“We’ve always been able to come back and figure it out,” Wade said.

Said LeBron: “We’ve experienced it enough. We go into the film room and take account.”

The Spurs’ Tony Parker had foreseen Sunday’s rebound by Miami.

“They’re very strong mentally,” he said. “That’s why they’re the two-time champions. We know they’re very capable of coming back and winning in our place.”

James had been severely limited in Thursday’s Game 1 with severe cramping because of an air-conditioning outage in the arena, perhaps directly leading to Miami’s loss. “My body failed me,” he’d said, using the words “frustration” and “anger” to describe his feelings.

[Quick aside: Thank you, Willis Carrier. You are credited with inventing modern electrical air-conditioning in Buffalo in 1902. Your brainstorm was especially appreciated Sunday night. By Miami fans, at least].

James had been savaged on Twitter and elsewhere, leading him to call himself “the easiest target in sports.”

He’d said before Sunday’s game he still wasn’t 100 percent.

“I wouldn’t say normal,” he described himself. “But I’m ready to go.”

Coach Erik Spoelstra wasn’t sure the LeBron he’d be getting, either.

“I’m not sure,” he’d said. “We’ll read it. We’ll manage.”

They managed. James managed. He made 14 of 22 field goals including 3 for 3 on three-points shots. Miami is now 15-1 in the playoffs when James has at least 30 points and 10 boards. But few of those games have been more impressive than Sunday, given how Game 1 had ended with him on the bench and in pain.

The Spurs could not stop James near the basket or from long range.

“He carried us,” said Ray Allen.

“I trust the homework and dedication I put into the game when the cameras aren’t around,” James described his own confidence. “This was a big-time road win for us.”

San Antonio’s frustration at not being able to control James was seen in a copel of brief in-game TV interviews with coach Gregg Popovich. At halftime Doris Burke asked, “What’s your objective with LeBron?” to which the coach replied, “Are you serious?” Later she asked what the Spurs hoped for the fourth quarter. Popovich deadpanned, “I’d like to see LeBron play poorly.”

He did not cooperate.

He was not alone, though.

Chris Bosh scored 18 points, and Wade and Rashard Lewis both added 14. The defense held the Spurs to 43.9 percent shooting after they’d shot 58.8 in Game 1. Miami even outrebounded San Antonio 38-37.

Bosh’s clutch shot came on a pass from James.

“He’s the most unselfish player I’ve ever played with,” Bosh described James. “Even if he’s hot, he’ll still hit you if you’re open. And that’s what makes this team special, when your best player is willing to sacrifice a shot.”

Heat fans have the right to have exhaled Sunday over a win that avoided a 2-0 hole, and the right to feel good moving forward.

Don’t mistake this series-leveling victory to mean the Heat are now in control, though, or can claim any real momentum. Even heading home for Games 3 and 4 in Miami, it likely isn’t so. These teams are too good, too close. The Spurs are as capable of winning in what the rest of the country calls South Beach as the Heat are of winning in south-central Texas.

Buckle in for a long series. If it could go longer than seven games, it surely would.

Miami has something the Spurs do not, though. Something no other team has.

His name is LeBron. His nickname is King James.
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

These finals have nobody doing a commerical for the spurs

NOBODY

garbage ass market
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Spurs board...

Game 2 chatter:

(An Orlando magic fan)
It wasn't at all a terribly bad game by the Spurs. The Heat/Spurs had many dry spells or mental lapses. Much more the Spurs. No one outside of LeBron and Rashard(because I don't expect him to do shit) played Phenomenal. Wade and Bosh had decent games. That was it.

You look at the box score and LeBron was really the only really catalyst. Then your realize with his lack of assists, it was just HIM. The Spurs might have to double him on those screens or pressure the ball. There's no reason to doubt he can score like that again.

The most the Spurs and fans of the team are taking for granted is that you You cannot settle for a split against the Heat. The stat of not losing consecutive game says that the opponent got a sympathy loss and pussied out like the bitchmade pretending niggas they are. The Miami Heat is a team you have to respect despite all the overt controversy, thread trolling, and all other factual bullshit you see. They go out there and get that shit done.


This settling nonsense is the logic of losers. You don't succeed in life by settling...you put in work. Hell..even winning the lottery requires you to get your ass up to the corner store. The Spurs need to go out there and enforce their will. They should show the opponent how unforgiving they are. Talkers don't do nothing but talk. You have to show me. You let them think they have a chance suddenly to witness an abrupt turn of the tables at your expense because if you know something worse can happen...it can happen. Its has happened.


(Spurs guy)
That Italian son of a bitch Belli is such a scrub tbh. If we still had Gary Neal instead of the wop we would've led the series 2-0 :


(mavs fan)
So you guys worried about game 3? Worried that Lecramp is going to bend Leonard over and score 30 plus again on his sorry ass?

in the finals, each team is worried about every game. game 3 isn't a must win for either team... but game 4 is a must win or whoever loses in game 3

The faster you win on the road, the better.

Spurs must get a split no matter what. If they lose both games, shit is over.

With that said, Spurs win game 3 if Leonard does what he's supposed to and at least 2 of the big 3 play at their usual capacity.
if either team loses both, its over. granted, miami has a better shot of winning 2 home games than the spurs do of winning 2 road games. but i'm not diving off cliffs if the spurs lose game 3
I'm having nightmares already at the possibility of us going down 3-1 and having an amazing game 5 to have an elimination game 6. back on Miami's floor... would we get the luck this time and a chance at a game 7? Maybe this is what this is all leading to...
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Spurs fans are shook daddy

Heat winning game 3,4.... Spurs win game 5 and heat close in game 6
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

That would be nice...another home celebration...if so Heat vs Pacers or Heat vs Thunder to open season

Fuck pooh and em'



Partying on South Beach to close the season, then partying on South Beach to open the season...
there's still a few games to be played tho....we the fans can foreshadow, shit the players can too...long as they back it up...
 
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Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

ALL THESE BANDWAGON SPURS FANS OUT HERE COPPIN PLEAS!

TONITE IN MIAMI...AINT NUTTIN BUT A GANGSTA PARTY

:cool:
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

ALL THESE BANDWAGON SPURS FANS OUT HERE COPPIN PLEAS!

TONITE IN MIAMI...AINT NUTTIN BUT A GANGSTA PARTY

:cool:
I guess it's understandable for either side be confident, this shit could be 2-0 either way. Game 1 had some semi-controversy, take that away we likely see a close finish. So if the Spurs faithful are honest with theirselves, they understand the current situation. Over the past 4 games your team haven't found out an answer for Lebron. Of course you can let him go off, and limited the role players but it's just different because James puts equal amounts of energy towards defense!!! The Spurs haven't figured out what to do with Miami's screen offense also. The good thing is, they're still in a great position tied going into Miami. Erase those missed free throws and things might've been different, just like the Heat feel about the faulty AC system.
 
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Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

I'm not nervous bout this bitch...game two was a critical opportunity for both sides!!!
Man I stood up the whole game...:smh:
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Since the spurs tried their best to be on some cheating shit time for the heat to wash these niggas up properly
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

What did the Spurs do?

Turn the AC off, let the team know before hand there wouldn't be no AC but didn't inform the Heat

Spurs had fans in the locker room, the heat didn't
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Turn the AC off, let the team know before hand there wouldn't be no AC but didn't inform the Heat

Spurs had fans in the locker room, the heat didn't

Hmmm...if true, didn't know this. I don't use that as an excuse though. They were still in position to win that game. Oh well:(

On to game 3 :yes:
 
Re: ~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~

Turn the AC off, let the team know before hand there wouldn't be no AC but didn't inform the Heat

Spurs had fans in the locker room, the heat didn't
i bet ur short fat body ass got a lot of fans too.

So the spurs knew that the "heat" would make the heats players too hot to perform and lbj cramp up in the last mins? The game was close majority of the time. Wouldnt it make sense to be prepared , with fans etc, since ur at home? I know u can be an idiot at times..but stop with the conspiracy bs.
 
Re: ��~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~��

i bet ur short fat body ass got a lot of fans too.

So the spurs knew that the "heat" would make the heats players too hot to perform and lbj cramp up in the last mins? The game was close majority of the time. Wouldnt it make sense to be prepared , with fans etc, since ur at home? I know u can be an idiot at times..but stop with the conspiracy bs.

Old Boston Celtic trick, remember its not a conspiracy if it was done before... Not saying they did it on purpose, just saying it can be done, and there is prescience that it did happen in the past..
 
Re: ��~~2013-2014 NBA Finals Miami Heat Vs San Antiono Spurs~~��

I'm looking for Alaska's own Rio Chalmers and Chi-Town's Finest D Wade to bounce back and have strong performances tonight. :cool:
 
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