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LeBron leads Heat to second straight title

2013-06-21 11:29

By (Agencies)

LeBron leads Heat to second straight title

Miami Heat's LeBron James (C) holds the Bill Russell MVP Trophy as Dwyane Wade (L) holds the Larry O'Brien Trophy while Chris Bosh (2nd R) and Norris Cole celebrate after their team defeated the San Antonio Spurs in Game 7 to win their NBA Finals basketball playoff in Miami, Florida, June 20, 2013.[Photo/Agencies]

MIAMI - The Miami Heat repeated as National Basketball Association (NBA) champions on Thursday with a 95-88 win over the San Antonio Spurs in the decisive seventh game of an epic series.

Miami's LeBron James, the sport's biggest star playing at the peak of his powers, had a game-high 37 points and pulled in 12 rebounds in a dominant performance while Dwyane Wade had 23 points.

James, named most valuable player of the Finals, shot 12-of-23 from the floor, including 5-of-10 three-pointers to lead Miami to their third NBA title and his second just two nights after the Heat's championship defense almost ended abruptly.

San Antonio, chasing a fifth NBA title, were just seconds away from clinching the championship on Tuesday before Miami staged an extraordinary comeback to win in overtime and force a decisive seventh game.

The visitors made a great start on Thursday, opening up a seven-point lead in the first quarter and by three late in the third quarter but came up just short.

Tim Duncan scored 24 points and grabbed 12 rebounds for the Spurs while Kawhi Leonard had 19 in the winner-take-all clash that had whipped basketball fans into a frenzy of excitement during a wildly fluctuating series full of escalating drama.

Courtside tickets for Thursday's game were selling on the secondary market for up to $30,000 and the game lived up to the hype with both teams fiercely contesting every possession.

Miami made yet another slow start and trailed by seven points less than five minutes into the game, a sloppy pass from James allowing Duncan an easy dunk.

A trademark turnaround jumper from Wade indicated the veteran from the Heat's 2006 title-winning team was in an aggressive mood and the introduction of Chris Andersen into the game injected some more energy into the Heat.

A pair of three pointers from Shane Battier brought roars from the crowd as Miami built an 18-16 lead by the end of the opening quarter.

LeBron leads Heat to second straight title

James named NBA finals MVP for second straight year 

James was sensational in Game 7, leading all scorers with 37 points on 12 for 23 shooting, grabbing a team-high 12 rebounds, dishing four assists and snagging two steals in 45 brilliant minutes.

He averaged 25.3 points, 10.9 rebounds and seven assists per game in the series, shooting 44.7 percent from the floor, 35.3 percent from 3-point range and 79.5 percent from the foul line. [Full Story]

Factbox on LeBron James

Born: Dec 30, 1984 in Akron, Ohio (age 28)

Height: six feet eight inches, 250 lbs (113 kilograms)

Drafted first overall by Cleveland Cavaliers in 2003

Nine-time NBA All-Star (2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013). Twice named MVP in All-Star game (2006, 2008)

Kept close

James took a rest for the opening three minutes of the second quarter and the Spurs kept close. With just under seven minutes left in the half, the teams were tied at 27-27, both shooting 11-30 from the field.

The brief rest paid off as James quickly gave Miami a six-point lead - he was fouled while scoring, putting away the free throw and then followed up with a three pointer from deep.

But while the Heat were moving the ball well, typically, San Antonio kept close, helped by a huge three pointer from Gary Neal before a Duncan lay-up leveled the game at 40-40 with 1:55 left in the half.

Wade ended a fine first half performance with a fall-away jump shot to give the Heat a 46-44 lead at the break after scoring 14 points on 7-12 shooting and grabbing six rebounds.

James drained his third three-pointer early in the third quarter but two jumpers from the an impressive Kawhi Leonard, who had grabbed 10 first-half rebounds, ensured the Spurs kept with the pace.

Danny Green, who had been struggling with his shooting, sank a three-pointer to put San Antonio briefly a point ahead with 5:27 left in the third but James responded with two long rangers of his own, his five three-pointers a personal best in an NBA Finals game.

The Spurs led by two but Mario Chalmers beat the buzzer at the end of the third with a 30-footer to take Miami into the final quarter of the season with a 72-71 lead.

A Battier three gave the Heat an early four point cushion and a Wade basket extended the lead to six with 7:14 remaining.

But San Antonio again responded and when Leonard drained a three-pointer it was a two-point game with two minutes left.

Chalmers missed two free throws but with 27 seconds left James delivered the killer blow with a vital jump shot and then made sure of victory when he snatched a Manu Ginobili pass, was fouled and put away both his free throws.

Wade added another from the free throw line before the crowd erupted in celebration.

NBA Finals

Game 1: Spurs rallies to beat Heat in opener

LeBron leads Heat to second straight title

Game 2: Heat beat Spurs to level series

LeBron leads Heat to second straight title

Game 3: Spurs routs Heat 113-77 in Game 3

LeBron leads Heat to second straight title

Game 4: Big 3 help Heat even with Spurs

LeBron leads Heat to second straight title

Game 5: Ginobili sparks Spurs to Game 5 win

LeBron leads Heat to second straight title

Game 6: James, Allen inspire Heat into Game 7

LeBron leads Heat to second straight title

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