2006 NBA Finals

















































2006 NBA Finals
The NBA Finals logo.svg
















Team Coach Wins
Miami Heat Pat Riley 4
Dallas Mavericks Avery Johnson 2
Dates June 8–20
MVP
Dwyane Wade
(Miami Heat)
Television
ABC (U.S.)
Announcers
Mike Breen and Hubie Brown
Radio network ESPN
Announcers
Jim Durham and Jack Ramsay
Referees

























Game 1:
Joe Crawford, Joe DeRosa, Bennett Salvatore
Game 2:
Bob Delaney, Steve Javie, Eddie F. Rush
Game 3:
Dan Crawford, Ken Mauer, Jack Nies
Game 4:
Dick Bavetta, Mike Callahan, Bernie Fryer
Game 5:
Joe Crawford, Joe DeRosa, Bennett Salvatore
Game 6:
Dan Crawford, Steve Javie, Eddie F. Rush
Hall of Famers
Heat:
Gary Payton (2013)
Alonzo Mourning (2014)
Shaquille O'Neal (2016)
Coaches:
Pat Riley (2008)
Officials:
Dick Bavetta (2015)
Eastern Finals
Heat defeated Pistons, 4–2
Western Finals
Mavericks defeated Suns, 4–2

 < 2005
NBA Finals
2007 > 


The 2006 NBA Finals was the championship series of the 2005–06 National Basketball Association season. The Miami Heat won the title in six games over the Dallas Mavericks, becoming the third team—after the 1969 Celtics and the 1977 Trail Blazers—to win a championship after trailing 0–2 in the series. Dwyane Wade of the Heat was named Most Valuable Player of the series.[1]


This series marked the first time since 1971 that the Finals featured two teams playing in their first NBA Finals series. It was the first occasion since 1978 that two teams who had never won an NBA Championship contested the NBA Finals. The two teams met again five years later in 2011, the second Finals appearance for both franchises, with the Mavericks winning the rematch over the Heat.


This was the second NBA Finals matchup of teams from Florida and Texas, after the Houston Rockets and Orlando Magic contested the 1995 NBA Finals. Until the Miami Heat defeated the San Antonio Spurs in the 2013 NBA Finals, it was the last Finals loss by a team from Texas (the Rockets lost in 1981 and 1986) against eight championships (five by the Spurs, two by the Rockets, and one by the Mavericks, who won a rematch of this Finals in 2011).




Contents






  • 1 Background


    • 1.1 Path to the Finals


    • 1.2 Regular-season series




  • 2 Broadcasting


  • 3 Starting lineups


  • 4 Rosters


    • 4.1 Miami Heat


    • 4.2 Dallas Mavericks




  • 5 Series summary


  • 6 Game summaries


    • 6.1 Game One


    • 6.2 Game Two


    • 6.3 Game Three


    • 6.4 Game Four


    • 6.5 Game Five


    • 6.6 Game Six




  • 7 Player statistics


  • 8 Aftermath


  • 9 References


  • 10 External links





Background


The Dallas Mavericks franchise joined the NBA in the 1980–81 season. During the mid-1980s they rose to become contenders in the Western Conference, culminating in a 1988 conference finals appearance, which they lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in seven games. The Mavericks would decline shortly after, and from 1988 until 2000, they missed the playoffs in eleven of those years, including a combined 24–140 record in the 1992–93 and 1993–94 seasons. However, with the sale of the team to Mark Cuban, and the addition of Dirk Nowitzki, the Mavericks slowly returned to playoff prominence. The 2005–06 season would see Dallas reach even greater heights. Led by Nowitzki and coached by Avery Johnson, they won 60 games. In the playoffs, they swept the Memphis Grizzlies, then overcame their Texas archrivals the San Antonio Spurs in seven games, and made their first Finals appearance by ousting league MVP and former Mav Steve Nash and the Phoenix Suns in six games.


The Miami Heat joined the league in the 1988–89 season, but they did not rise to prominence until they hired Pat Riley to be their head coach and president before the 1995–96 season. In Riley's first stint, the Heat were playoff regulars between 1996 and 2001, however, the Chicago Bulls and New York Knicks always thwarted Miami's dreams of a championship or even a Finals berth. However, when the team drafted Dwyane Wade fifth overall in 2003, things started to look up for the Heat. They went 42-40 under interim coach Stan Van Gundy, making the playoffs after a 2-year hiatus. They defeated the New Orleans Hornets in the first round, but they ultimately fell to the Pacers in 6 games.[2] The 2004 offseason saw the addition of Shaquille O'Neal, and with Wade and O'Neal performing well, the Heat won 59 games in the 2004–05 season, as they took the defending champions Detroit Pistons to seven games in the conference finals. The following season, after an early 11–10 start, Van Gundy resigned and Riley returned to coaching. Though injuries and lack of chemistry hobbled the Heat initially, they still managed to win 52 games that season. After a culmination of harmony and momentum came together just before the playoffs, they started their postseason run by defeating the Bulls in six games, then eliminated the New Jersey Nets in five games, and then ousted the Pistons in six games to reach the NBA Finals for the first time in franchise history.



Path to the Finals





























Dallas Mavericks (Western Conference champion)

Miami Heat (Eastern Conference champion)













































































































































#

Western Conference
Team

W

L

PCT

GB
1

c-San Antonio Spurs
63 19 .768 -
2

y-Phoenix Suns
54 28 .659 9
3

y-Denver Nuggets
44 38 .537 19
4

x-Dallas Mavericks
60 22 .732 3
5

x-Memphis Grizzlies
49 33 .598 14
6

x-Los Angeles Clippers
47 35 .573 16
7

x-Los Angeles Lakers
45 37 .549 18
8

x-Sacramento Kings
44 38 .537 19

9
Utah Jazz 41 41 .500 22
10
New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets 38 44 .463 25
11
Seattle SuperSonics 35 47 .427 28
12
Golden State Warriors 34 48 .415 29
13
Houston Rockets 34 48 .415 29
14
Minnesota Timberwolves 33 49 .402 30
15
Portland Trail Blazers 21 61 .256 42

4th seed in the West, 3rd best league record



Regular season;












































































































































Eastern Conference
#
Team

W

L

PCT

GB
1

z-Detroit Pistons
64 18 .780 -
2

y-Miami Heat
52 30 .634 12
3

y-New Jersey Nets
49 33 .598 15
4

x-Cleveland Cavaliers
50 32 .610 14
5

x-Washington Wizards
42 40 .512 22
6

x-Indiana Pacers
41 41 .500 23
7

x-Chicago Bulls
41 41 .500 23
8

x-Milwaukee Bucks
40 42 .488 24

9
Philadelphia 76ers 38 44 .463 26
10
Orlando Magic 36 46 .439 28
11
Boston Celtics 33 49 .402 31
12
Toronto Raptors 27 55 .329 37
13
Charlotte Bobcats 26 56 .317 38
14
Atlanta Hawks 26 56 .317 38
15
New York Knicks 23 59 .280 41
2nd seed in the East, 5th best league record
Defeated the (5) Memphis Grizzlies, 4–0
First Round
Defeated the (7) Chicago Bulls, 4–2
Defeated the (1) San Antonio Spurs, 4–3
Conference Semifinals
Defeated the (3) New Jersey Nets, 4–1
Defeated the (2) Phoenix Suns, 4–2
Conference Finals
Defeated the (1) Detroit Pistons, 4–2


Regular-season series


The Dallas Mavericks won both games in the regular season series:




November 25, 2005






Dallas Mavericks 103, Miami Heat 90



American Airlines Arena, Miami






February 9, 2006






Miami Heat 76, Dallas Mavericks 112



American Airlines Center, Dallas





Broadcasting


ABC had exclusive rights to televise the NBA Finals in the United States.[3]Play-by-play announcer Mike Breen and color commentator Hubie Brown called the action, with courtside reporting by Lisa Salters and Stuart Scott. Radio counterpart ESPN Radio broadcast the Finals, with Jim Durham and Dr. Jack Ramsay calling the action. The featured song, aired throughout the playoffs, was Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers' "Runnin' Down a Dream."


Game 2 of the Finals, which took place the same evening as the 60th Tony Awards, was the most-watched program of June 11, 2006. ABC won the night with 3.5 rating and 10 share, CBS came in fourth with a 1.5/4 for the Tonys.[4] On June 20, Game 6 had a 4.4/13 among viewers aged 18–49.[5]


The finals were shown on Sky Sports in the UK and Ireland.



Starting lineups


Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame‡
































Miami Position Dallas
Jason Williams PG
Jason Terry
Dwyane Wade SG
Marquis Daniels
Antoine Walker SF
Josh Howard
Udonis Haslem PF
Dirk Nowitzki

Shaquille O'Neal‡
C
Erick Dampier


Rosters



Miami Heat












2005–06 Miami Heat roster
Players Coaches


















































































































































Pos. No. Name Height Weight DOB (YYYY-MM-DD) From

SG

5

Anderson, Derek

7000195580000000000♠6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)
194 lb (88 kg)
1974–07–18

Kentucky

SF

49

Anderson, Shandon

7000198120000000000♠6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
208 lb (94 kg)
1973–12–31

Georgia

C

30

Barron, Earl

7000213360000000000♠7 ft 0 in (2.13 m)
250 lb (113 kg)
1981–08–14

Memphis

C

51

Doleac, Michael

7000210820000000000♠6 ft 11 in (2.11 m)
262 lb (119 kg)
1977–06–15

Utah

PF

40

Haslem, Udonis

7000203200000000000♠6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)
235 lb (107 kg)
1980–06–09

Florida

SF

24

Kapono, Jason

7000203200000000000♠6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)
213 lb (97 kg)
1981–02–04

UCLA

C

33

Mourning, Alonzo

7000208279999999999♠6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)
240 lb (109 kg)
1970–02–08

Georgetown

C

32

O'Neal, Shaquille

7000215899999999999♠7 ft 1 in (2.16 m)
325 lb (147 kg)
1972–03–06

LSU

PG

20

Payton, Gary

7000193040000000000♠6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
180 lb (82 kg)
1968–07–23

Oregon State

SF

42

Posey, James

7000203200000000000♠6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)
215 lb (98 kg)
1977–01–13

Xavier

PF

25

Simien, Wayne

7000205740000000000♠6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)
255 lb (116 kg)
1983–03–09

Kansas

SG

3

Wade, Dwyane

7000193040000000000♠6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
220 lb (100 kg)
1982–01–17

Marquette

PF

8

Walker, Antoine

7000203200000000000♠6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)
224 lb (102 kg)
1976–08–12

Kentucky

PG

55

Williams, Jason

7000185420000000000♠6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
190 lb (86 kg)
1975–11–18

Florida

SF

1

Wright, Dorell

7000200659999999999♠6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)
200 lb (91 kg)
1985–12–02

South Kent School (CT)


Head coach

  • Pat Riley

Assistant coach(es)


  • Keith Askins

  • Bob McAdoo

  • Ron Rothstein

  • Erik Spoelstra

  • Bill Foran




Legend



  • (C) Team captain


  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick


  • (FA) Free agent


  • (S) Suspended


  • (DL) On assignment to D-League affiliate


  • Injured Injured




Dallas Mavericks












2005–06 Dallas Mavericks roster
Players Coaches
































































































































Pos. No. Name Height Weight DOB (YYYY-MM-DD) From

PG

10

Armstrong, Darrell

7000182880000000000♠6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
170 lb (77 kg)
1968–06–22

Fayetteville State

C

25

Dampier, Erick

7000210820000000000♠6 ft 11 in (2.11 m)
265 lb (120 kg)
1975–07–14

Mississippi State

SG

6

Daniels, Marquis

7000198120000000000♠6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
200 lb (91 kg)
1981–01–07

Auburn

C

7

Diop, DeSagana

7000213360000000000♠7 ft 0 in (2.13 m)
300 lb (136 kg)
1982–01–30

Oak Hill Academy (VA)

SG

44

Griffin, Adrian

7000195580000000000♠6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)
217 lb (98 kg)
1974–07–04

Seton Hall

PG

34

Harris, Devin

7000190500000000000♠6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
192 lb (87 kg)
1983–02–27

Wisconsin

SF

5

Howard, Josh

7000200659999999999♠6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)
210 lb (95 kg)
1980–04–28

Wake Forest

C

28

Mbenga, D. J.

7000213360000000000♠7 ft 0 in (2.13 m)
245 lb (111 kg)
1980–12–30

Belgium

PF

41

Nowitzki, Dirk

7000213360000000000♠7 ft 0 in (2.13 m)
245 lb (111 kg)
1978–06–19

Germany

PF

33

Powell, Josh

7000205740000000000♠6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)
225 lb (102 kg)
1983–01–25

North Carolina State

SG

42

Stackhouse, Jerry

7000198120000000000♠6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
218 lb (99 kg)
1974–11–5

North Carolina

PG

31

Terry, Jason

7000187960000000000♠6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
185 lb (84 kg)
1977–09–15

Arizona

SF

2

Van Horn, Keith

7000208279999999999♠6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)
220 lb (100 kg)
1975–10–23

Utah


Head coach

  • Avery Johnson

Assistant coach(es)


  • Rolando Blackman

  • Del Harris

  • Joe Prunty

  • Larry Riley

  • Brad Davis




Legend



  • (C) Team captain


  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick


  • (FA) Free agent


  • (S) Suspended


  • (DL) On assignment to D-League affiliate


  • Injured Injured




  • Shaquille O'Neal and Gary Payton became the 6th and 7th players to play in the NBA Finals for three different teams. O'Neal played in the 1995 NBA Finals with the Orlando Magic and four times with the Los Angeles Lakers, while Payton played in the 1996 NBA Finals with the Seattle SuperSonics and with O'Neal on the 2004 Lakers team that lost to the Pistons. The other five players to play in the Finals for three teams are: Danny Ainge, Sam Perkins, John Salley, Horace Grant and Robert Horry.

  • Also, O'Neal and Alonzo Mourning achieved the rare feat of being the former first-round picks from the same year (1992) to win a championship with the same team. O'Neal was the first overall draft pick of the Orlando Magic, while Mourning went second to the Charlotte Hornets.



Series summary




















































Game Date Home Team Result Road Team
Game 1 Thursday, June 8 Dallas Mavericks 90–80 (1–0) Miami Heat
Game 2 Sunday, June 11 Dallas Mavericks 99–86 (2–0) Miami Heat
Game 3 Tuesday, June 13 Miami Heat 98–96 (1–2) Dallas Mavericks
Game 4 Thursday, June 15 Miami Heat 98–74 (2–2) Dallas Mavericks
Game 5 Sunday, June 18 Miami Heat 101–100 (OT) (3–2) Dallas Mavericks
Game 6 Tuesday, June 20 Dallas Mavericks 92–95 (2–4)
Miami Heat

The Heat became the second team since 1985 to sweep the middle three games at home, the 2004 Detroit Pistons being the first. In 1985 the NBA switched the Finals to the 2-3-2 format, which was changed back to the 2-2-1-1-1 format for the 2014 NBA Finals



Game summaries



Game One


Dallas' Jason Terry scored a playoff-high 32 points as the Mavericks overcame a 31–23 deficit at the end of the first quarter.




ABC



June 8
9:00pm ET




1 at the Wayback Machine (archived December 1, 2010)












Miami Heat 80, Dallas Mavericks 90

Scoring by quarter: 31–23, 13–23, 24–24, 12–20

Pts: Dwyane Wade 28
Rebs: Udonis Haslem 8
Asts: Dwyane Wade 6

Pts: Jason Terry 32
Rebs: Josh Howard 12
Asts: Nowitzki, Howard 4 each
Dallas leads series, 1–0.



American Airlines Center, Dallas, Texas
Attendance: 20,475
Referees:

  • No. 17 Joe Crawford

  • No. 14 Joe DeRosa

  • No. 15 Bennett Salvatore







Game Two


Dirk Nowitzki had a stellar 26 point-16 rebound performance, and the Mavericks cruised past the Heat to take a 2–0 series lead.




ABC



June 11
9:00pm ET




2 at the Wayback Machine (archived December 1, 2010)












Miami Heat 85, Dallas Mavericks 99

Scoring by quarter: 17–18, 17–32, 24–32, 27–17

Pts: Dwyane Wade 23
Rebs: Dwyane Wade 8
Asts: Payton, Williams 4 each

Pts: Dirk Nowitzki 26
Rebs: Dirk Nowitzki 16
Asts: Jason Terry 9
Dallas leads series, 2–0.



American Airlines Center, Dallas, Texas
Attendance: 20,459
Referees:

  • No. 26 Bob Delaney

  • No. 29 Steve Javie

  • No. 32 Eddie F. Rush







Game Three




Game 3 of the 2006 NBA Finals


Led by Dwyane Wade's 42 points and 13 rebounds, the Heat rallied from a 13-point deficit with six minutes to go in the fourth quarter. The momentum-changing comeback was capped by a Gary Payton field goal from just inside the three-point line with 9.3 seconds left. Dirk Nowitzki had a chance to tie the game at the free throw line with 3.4 seconds to go, but missed 1 of 2, sealing the win for Miami.




ABC



June 13
9:00pm ET




3 at the Wayback Machine (archived December 1, 2010)












Dallas Mavericks 96, Miami Heat 98

Scoring by quarter: 21–29, 22–23, 34–16, 19–30

Pts: Dirk Nowitzki 30
Rebs: Erick Dampier 9
Asts: Jason Terry 5

Pts: Dwyane Wade 42
Rebs: Dwyane Wade 13
Asts: Shaquille O'Neal 5
Dallas leads series, 2–1.



American Airlines Arena, Miami, Florida
Attendance: 20,145
Referees:

  • No. 43 Dan Crawford

  • No. 41 Ken Mauer

  • No. 35 Jack Nies







Game Four


Dwyane Wade shined again for the Heat with 36 points, and Miami held Dallas to just seven points in the fourth quarter en route to a series-tying, blowout victory. The Mavericks' low-scoring fourth quarter was the lowest ever by any team during the NBA Finals. Jerry Stackhouse caught Shaquille O'Neal with a flagrant foul that resulted in him being suspended for Game 5. Jerry Stackhouse was the final NBA player to be suspended in the NBA Finals until Draymond Green was suspended in the 2016 NBA Finals.




ABC



June 15
9:00pm ET




4 at the Wayback Machine (archived December 1, 2010)












Dallas Mavericks 74, Miami Heat 98

Scoring by quarter: 25–30, 19–24, 23–24, 7–20

Pts: Jason Terry 17
Rebs: Dirk Nowitzki 9
Asts: Jerry Stackhouse 4

Pts: Dwyane Wade 36
Rebs: Shaquille O'Neal 13
Asts: Jason Williams 6
Series tied, 2–2.



American Airlines Arena, Miami, Florida
Attendance: 20,145
Referees:

  • No. 27 Dick Bavetta

  • No. 14 Mike Callahan

  • No. 7 Bernie Fryer







Game Five


Dwyane Wade shot 25 free throws - as many free throws as all the Mavericks combined (a fact that did not sit well with Mavericks head coach Avery Johnson[6]), leading the Heat to their third straight win over Dallas after being down 0–2 in the series.


With 9.1 seconds left in overtime and the Heat trailing by 1 point, they inbounded the ball to Wade, who caught the ball in the air and then landed in the backcourt. Mavericks' team owner Mark Cuban felt Wade had therefore committed a backcourt violation after receiving the ball.


Dallas was then penalized with a controversial foul call that sent Wade to the line to shoot the go-ahead free throws with 1.9 seconds left on the overtime game clock. Wade hit the first free throw, and Dallas Mavericks coach Avery Johnson signaled to his team to call a timeout after Wade's second attempt. Josh Howard then made a timeout gesture with his hands and began to walk off the floor, and the referees called the Mavericks' last remaining timeout, which prevented them from advancing the ball after the second attempt if Wade converted. After the timeout, Wade made the second free throw to give his team a one-point lead, after which Devin Harris missed a Hail Mary half-court shot as time expired. Wade finished the game with 43 points while setting an NBA Finals record for most made free throws in a game with 21.[7]Shaquille O'Neal added a double-double with 18 points and 12 rebounds. Miami converted 32 of its 49 attempts from the free throw line.


Jason Terry led Dallas with 35 points in a losing effort, while Howard added 25. After the game, a frustrated Dirk Nowitzki kicked a ball into the stands and Mavericks owner Mark Cuban caused many "acts of misconduct" resulting in fines of $5,000 and $250,000, respectively, for the two men.[8]




ABC



June 18
9:00pm ET




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Dallas Mavericks 100, Miami Heat 101 (OT)

Scoring by quarter: 21–24, 30–19, 20–27, 22–23, Overtime: 7–8

Pts: Jason Terry 35
Rebs: Josh Howard 10
Asts: Marquis Daniels 4

Pts: Dwyane Wade 43
Rebs: Shaquille O'Neal 12
Asts: Wade, Williams 4 each
Miami leads series, 3–2.



American Airlines Arena, Miami, Florida
Attendance: 20,145
Referees:

  • No. 17 Joe Crawford

  • No. 14 Joe DeRosa

  • No. 15 Bennett Salvatore







Game Six


Behind Dwyane Wade's 36 points, Miami edged Dallas to win their first championship in franchise history as Jason Terry missed a critical 3-pointer that would've sent the game to overtime. Averaging 34.7 points per game in the championship series, Wade was named NBA Finals MVP (Most Valuable Player).




ABC



June 20
9:00pm ET




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Miami Heat 95, Dallas Mavericks 92

Scoring by quarter: 23–30, 26–18, 22–20, 24–24

Pts: Dwyane Wade 36
Rebs: Shaquille O'Neal 12
Asts: Jason Williams 7

Pts: Dirk Nowitzki 29
Rebs: Dirk Nowitzki 15
Asts: Jason Terry 5
Miami wins series, 4–2.



American Airlines Center, Dallas, Texas
Attendance: 20,522
Referees:

  • No. 43 Dan Crawford

  • No. 29 Steve Javie

  • No. 32 Eddie F. Rush







Player statistics




































Legend
  GP
Games played
  GS 
Games started
 MPG 

Minutes per game
 FG% 

Field-goal percentage
 3P% 

3-point field-goal percentage
 FT% 

Free-throw percentage
 RPG 

Rebounds per game
 APG 

Assists per game
 SPG 

Steals per game
 BPG 

Blocks per game
 PPG 

Points per game



Miami Heat










































































































































































Player
GP
GS
MPG
FG%
3FG%
FT%
RPG
APG
SPG
BPG
PPG
Shandon Anderson 4 0 7.7 .333 .000 .500 1.8 0.8 0.0 0.0 1.5
Michael Doleac 1 0 1.2 .000 .000 .000 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Udonis Haslem 6 6 29.2 .500 .000 .300 6.2 0.3 1.2 0.0 6.5
Jason Kapono 1 0 1.5 .000 .000 .000 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Alonzo Mourning 6 0 11.0 .692 .000 .667 3.2 0.0 0.3 1.5 4.3
Shaquille O'Neal 6 6 35.2 .607 .000 .292 10.2 2.8 0.5 0.8 13.7
Gary Payton 6 0 22.3 .368 .143 .333 2.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 2.7
James Posey 6 0 29.5 .419 .400 .769 6.0 0.3 1.0 0.0 7.3
Dwyane Wade 6 6 43.5 .468 .273 .773 7.8 3.8 2.7 1.0
34.7
Antoine Walker 6 6 36.6 .391 .270 .556 5.5 2.2 0.7 0.5 13.8
Jason Williams 6 6 31.3 .360 .345 .636 1.8 4.7 0.5 0.0 8.8

Dallas Mavericks






































































































































































































Player
GP
GS
MPG
FG%
3FG%
FT%
RPG
APG
SPG
BPG
PPG
Darrell Armstrong 1 0 6.3 .000 .000 .000 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Erick Dampier 6 0 24.6 .722 .000 .500 8.2 0.3 1.0 0.7 5.7
Marquis Daniels 6 0 8.8 .545 .333 .800 0.5 1.3 0.0 0.0 2.8
DeSagana Diop 6 6 15.7 .500 .000 .500 3.3 0.2 0.3 0.8 1.7
Adrian Griffin 6 3 13.7 .563 .000 .000 3.2 0.8 0.8 0.0 3.0
Devin Harris 6 3 24.5 .364 .000 .750 0.8 2.8 0.8 0.0 7.3
Josh Howard 6 6 38.4 .388 .263 .808 8.2 1.8 1.2 0.7 14.7
D. J. Mbenga 2 0 4.5 .000 .000 .000 1.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Dirk Nowitzki 6 6 43.7 .390 .250 .891 10.8 2.5 0.7 0.7
22.8
Josh Powell 1 0 3.6 .000 .000 .000 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Jerry Stackhouse 5 0 30.0 .355 .368 .929 3.4 3.0 0.8 0.6 12.8
Jason Terry 6 6 40.0 .478 .317 .733 2.2 3.5 1.8 0.0 22.0
Keith Van Horn 5 0 7.8 .273 .167 .0000 1.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.4


Aftermath


The Mavericks would post the league's best record with 67 victories in the 2006–07 NBA season but were ousted by the eight-seeded Golden State Warriors in a six-game first round of the 2007 NBA Playoffs. The Mavs' playoff defeat marked the first time a top seed was eliminated in a seven-game first round series since it was implemented in 2003. Still, Dirk Nowitzki was named the regular season MVP at season's end. After another playoff loss to the New Orleans Hornets in 2008, in which the Mavericks brought back Jason Kidd, head coach Avery Johnson was fired and replaced by Rick Carlisle. After another two early playoff exits, the Mavericks won 57 games in the 2010–11 season and returned to the Finals.


The Heat would lose convincingly by 42 points to the Chicago Bulls in the opening night of the 2006–07 season, the worst opening-day margin of defeat for a defending champion in NBA history. Injuries would keep the team from surpassing or even equaling last season's total, yet they still won the Southeast Division despite winning only 44 games. The Bulls would oust them in a four-game sweep in the first round of the playoffs, the first such occurrence since 1957. The following year, Miami completed its two-year turnaround from NBA champion to the NBA's worst team by winning only 15 games, equaling the mark set by the team in their inaugural season, which saw Shaquille O'Neal traded to the Phoenix Suns in mid-season and Dwyane Wade missing 31 games. The Heat gradually climbed back to contention in the Erik Spoelstra era, culminating in the much-publicized free-agent acquisitions of LeBron James and Chris Bosh. The Heat won 58 games in the 2010–11 season, and along with the Mavericks, returned to the Finals in 2011.


The 2011 NBA Finals, which was a rematch of 2006, saw the Mavericks win in six games after trailing 2-1 in the Finals. It was the Mavericks' first NBA championship, as well as both teams' second appearances in the Finals. Dirk Nowitzki was named Finals MVP. Like the Heat in 2006, the Mavericks experienced a post-championship letdown, getting swept by the Oklahoma City Thunder in the opening round of the 2012 NBA Playoffs, and then missed the postseason entirely in 2013.


As of 2013[update], this was Miami's fifth championship out of a total of seven among the Big Four sports leagues; the MLB's National League Florida (now Miami) Marlins won the World Series in 1997 and 2003 while the NFL's Miami Dolphins won the Super Bowl in 1972 and 1973. The Miami Heat would go on to win a second championship in 2012 against the Thunder in 5 games and a third championship in 2013 against the San Antonio Spurs in 7 games before falling in 2014 against the same Spurs team in 5 games.



References





  1. ^ "2006 NBA Finals, Heat vs Mavericks". Basketball-Reference.com.


  2. ^ http://nba-historical-teams.pointafter.com/l/284/2003-2004-Miami-Heat


  3. ^ nba.com, NBA Announces 2005–06 Game And Television Schedule, accessed May 5, 2007.


  4. ^ Stropoli, Rebecca (June 12, 2006). "NBA Finals a Slam Dunk for ABC". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved June 10, 2011.


  5. ^ Stropoli, Rebecca (June 21, 2006). "Basketball Gives ABC Some "Heat"". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved June 10, 2011.


  6. ^ Wade's Heroics Have Heat One Win From Title


  7. ^ usatoday.com, No backcourt violation on winning possession, NBA says, accessed May 5, 2007.


  8. ^ espn.com, Cuban fined $250K for actions after Game 5, accessed May 5, 2007.




External links



  • "Official website". Archived from the original on 2010-11-19. Retrieved 2011-12-09.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)












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