2014 NBA Finals...updates

Miami Heat wameniboa sana jana, walikuwa wanashinda kabisa ile game, wakaanza kufanya turnovers chungu nzima matokeo yake Spurs wakafanya vitu vyao. Na huyu King James sijui msimu wake ndio umekwisha au vipi maana kama hawezi kuendelea basi Spurs watachukua kiulaini sana. Pia Owners wa Spurs waache ubahili wa kuendelea kuwa na BB Court ya mwaka 47 wajenge Basketball Ball Court ya kileo ili kuepukana na matatizo kama ya jana yaliyosababisha cooling system kushindwa kufanya kazi na kuwaweka wachezaji, waamuzi na watazamaji katika tanuri.

Fainali ya kwanza leo Spurs Vs Heat, mwaka jana hawa Heat walitunyang'anya tonge mdomoni, muda wa kisasi umewadia.

Wapi shifta Pazi Ab-Titchaz BAK Ogah kadoda RRONDO na Wakuu wengine
 
Mourinho San Antonio Spurs have won a record 11 game-ones tying Chicago Bulls.....BUT for the last three seasons a team which won game one DIDNT WIN THE CHAMPIONSHIP........
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Green na Learnard walidhibitiwa sana sana na LeBron.......na ndio maana ukaona mabadiliko baada ya LeBron kutoka......
 
Ujue wana usongo mkubwa wa kufungwa na Miami Heat katika NBA Finals za 2013, ilibaki sekunde chache tu walitwae taji, hivyo katika NBA Finals za 2014 watakuwa makini mno, ila naamini kama King James hana tatizo na Dwayne, Allan, Bosh, Chalmers, Battier na Rashard Lewis wakicheza vizuri na kupunguza turnovers basi Spurs hawatakuwa na nafasi ya kulitwaa taji.







Mourinho San Antonio Spurs have won a record 11 game-ones tying Chicago Bulls.....BUT for the last three seasons a team which won game one DIDNT WIN THE CHAMPIONSHIP........
 
SAN ANTONIO - The synonym generator at thesaurus.com lists 19 alternatives for "sweltering," none of them sufficient enough to describe the atmosphere inside the AT&T Center for Thursday night's Game 1 of the NBA Finals.

It was swampy, stuffy, oppressive, baking, burning, humid, scorching, stifling and many more decidedly unpleasant things.

The mercury kept climbing-past 90 degrees. The air turned heavier by the quarter. Foreheads and dress shirts turned damp. Floors turned slick with condensation. Across the arena, some 18,000 people rhythmically fanned themselves with their "Go Spurs Go" placards.

Then LeBron James crumpled, the Miami Heat wilted and the San Antonio Spurs prevailed 110-95 in what will be instantly enshrined as one of the most unusual games in NBA Finals history.
Call it the Humidity Bowl.

You can also call it an utter embarrassmefor the NBA, for the Spurs and for whomever is in charge of ensuring that critical electrical systems at the AT&T Center are functioning for a major event.
"The air conditioning system essentially failed," said Rod Thorn, the NBA's president of basketball operations, who became the first league official ever to take the postgame podium. "We think it will be fixed come Sunday," he added, sounding more hopeful than confident.

Thorn said there was never any consideration to stopping or postponing the game.
"What you are looking for is to make sure that the conditions on the court are fine, and in this case there was no one slipping," Thorn said. "Once the game starts, it's in the hands of the referees."

Had the referees felt there was any risk to the players, "then they would have come over and said something to me," Thorn said. "Never did. I never said anything to them regarding the fact that the game should be canceled."

At this point, at least, the NBA is not planning for any contingencies in the event that the air conditioning system remains inoperable.

Commissioner Adam Silver called the matter "unfortunate," but he was in no mood to elaborate. His exasperation and perspiration were both evident.
Were the tropical conditions a factor in the game? Most certainly, though as players on both teams repeatedly noted, everyone had to contend with the same hot, heavy air.


USA TODAY Sports

Yet only James, who has a history of cramping troubles, was severely affected, leaving us with this nagging conundrum: Would the result have been different if not for James' cramps? If not for the inexplicable, unbearable heat in the arena? If not for a crippled air conditioning system? Might we one day remember this as the year that the Heat were beaten by the heat?

It's way too soon for that, of course. The Spurs hold a 1-0 lead, same as they did one year ago in Miami, and we know how that series ended. There is, as they say, a lot of basketball left to play, presumably in much better conditions.
Yet it doesn't make it any less disturbing to see the game's greatest star felled by something as mundane as a faulty compressor. Championships are won and lost by the smallest of things-a rebound, a hesitation, a shot two inches off course, a turned ankle, an untimely cramp.
That this was a wholly avoidable injury, a freak occurrence caused by a freak occurrence, had to make it that much more galling to the Heat, though they betrayed no anger in the aftermath.
"It was an unusual environment," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "It's unfortunate that it was that way."
Coaches and trainers told their players to hydrate, which was about all anyone could do. And still, the temperature kept climbing.
"Guys were tired," said the Spurs' Danny Green. "Guys were dragging. We knew eventually they would get tired, too."
James went down with around four minutes left to play, having just converted a layup that cut the Spurs lead to 94-92. Then Green hit a three-pointer-his third in 77 seconds-and San Antonio quickly pulled away. The Spurs closed the game with a 16-3 run, all with James off the court.

 

Kuna watu wanafuatilia mchezo na wengine wanafuatilia celebrities.

Kama mtu unafuatilia mchezo, huwezi kuacha kufuatilia kwa sababu Jordan kastaafu au Bulls hawapo kwenye chart za juu.
 
LeBron James' Cramps in Game 1 of NBA Finals Inspire 'LeBroning' Meme

By Dan Carson , Featured Columnist Jun 6, 2014




Instagram


Battling dehydration and 90-degree temperatures, the San Antonio Spurs and Miami Heat suffered together through Game 1 of the NBA Finals.
Thanks to a broken air conditioning system at the AT&T Center, the Spurs' home court was more greenhouse than basketball arena on Thursday night, with players on both teams struggling noticeably in the oppressive heat.
No one, however, felt the sting as acutely as LeBron James.
Miami's superstar had to be carried off the court in the fourth quarter after pulling up with what appeared to be severe leg cramps.


It was the second time in the contest James had to leave the game with dehydration issues, and Internet users took full advantage of the situation.
Using the hashtag "LeBroning," social media users began mimicking James' exit from the court and sharing pictures of themselves being carried by friends.
Kyle Koster of BroBible.com spotted a bevy of these images mocking James' involuntary muscle spasms:
forward with Steve Smith's famous "Ice up, son" quote:

Spurs fans and random Internet trolls weren't the only ones who weighed in on James' "toughness."
According to the Sun-Sentinel, former Miami Dolphins player Jonathan Martin tweeted that the Heat star needed to "drink some Gatorade" and get back on the court.
"With that said...C'mon bruh. Drink a Gatorade & get out there," Martin wrote in a now-deleted tweet.
Yup, Martin, who fans stood up for as the victim of bullying, thinks James isn't playing tough enough.
Fittingly enough, Gatorade also took a pot shot at James, who is sponsored by Powerade:


Indeed, the biggest takeaway from Game 1 is that LeBron James can't "take the heat." He's likely the first player in the history of athletics to suffer from debilitating cramps brought on by stifling temperatures.
Jokes aside, James' muscle spasms hurt Miami as much as they did the man. Sharp shooting and a resurgent Danny Green helped the Spurs decimate a James-less Heat in the fourth quarter and cruise to a 110-95 victory. San Antonio now leads the series 1-0.
James told a pool reporter he wanted to reenter the game after cramping up the second time, but coach Erik Spoelstra wouldn't allow it.
"I was going to try to give it a go and Spo said 'No,'" James said, per Jeff Zillgitt of USA Today. "It sucks at this point in time in the season."
James also said he felt more "frustration and anger" than pain, and was already feeling better.
"I'm feeling better than I did when I came off the floor," James said. "So, doing better."
So what now?
Well, the meme machine will continue spinning and James will have to rehydrate. He and the Heat have two days to rest up and get their fluids before Game 2 on Sunday, where they'll look to even things up in San Antonio.
As for the cramping meme, it's nothing a few electrolytes and another championship trophy can't cure. He'll just have to remind everyone what "LeBroning" truly means.












 
Ogah
Turnover ziliumiza sana Spurs. Kila turnover walilipa gharama za point. Vinginevyo Spurs wangeongoza
LeBron ni mchezaji mwenye uwezo, na ndiye hasa anyefanya safu ya ulinzi ya timu pinzani ku-collapse na akina Wade, Bosh, Butler na wengine wanapata nafasi.

LeBr asipokuwepo uwanjani Miami ni nyanya. Siyo team kama ile iliyokuwa Piston ya akina Billups, Ben Wallace, Rashid Wallace etc ambao walikuchukua ubingwa. Ile ilikuwa na team work. Mwisho wa mchezo hakuna mwenye point 30, kila mmoja ana 15,10, 9 n.k.

Miami ya akina Bosh na Wade haina kazi bila LeBron.
 
Ni kweli kabisa Mkuu sawa na Da Bulls ya enzi zile bila Michael Jordan au LA Lakers bila Kobe. Basketball ni Team sports lakini kuna baadhi ya wacheza kama akina Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant na King James uwepo wao tu uwanjani huongeza confidence ya wachezaji wengine na kuamini kwamba watashinda na hii husaidia sana katika kuongeza viwango vya uchezaji wao.

 

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Lebron James dah inabidi tu nikubali jamaa ndio tofauti ya Spurs na Miami Heat bora tu apate tumbo la kuharisha kila Game akiamuwa kucheza peke yake hakuna anayemshika nimemvulia Kofia ila bado naiaminia Spurs. 1-1
 
Ha ha ha ha ha nimesoma article hapo juu eti"the heat were beaten by the heat"
 



No cramps, no problem: LeBron James leads Heat past Spurs in Game 2 of the NBA Finals
LeBron James made 14 of 22 shots against the Spurs.

 



As Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra looks on, forward LeBron James (6) reacts against the San Antonio Spurs during the second half in Game 2 of the NBA basketball finals on Sunday, June 8, 2014, in San Antonio.

 





Kawhi Leonard and Tiago Splitter of the San Antonio Spurs during Game Two of the 2014 NBA Finals between the Miami Heat and San Antonio Spurs at AT&T Center on June 8, 2014 in San Antonio.

 



LeBron James of the Miami Heat takes a shot over Tony Parker #9 of the San Antonio Spurs during Game Two of the 2014 NBA Finals at the AT&T Center on June 8, 2014 in San Antonio.




Tony Parker of the San Antonio Spurs shoots against Ray Allen #34 of the Miami Heat in Game Two of the 2014 NBA Finals at AT&T Center on June 5, 2014 in San Antonio.

 



Mario Chalmers of the Miami Heat dribbles the ball against the San Antonio Spurs during Game Two of the 2014 NBA Finals on June 8, 2014 at AT&T Center in San Antonio.




Chris Bosh of the Miami Heat reacts against the San Antonio Spurs during Game Two of the 2014 NBA Finals at the AT&T Center on June 8, 2014 in San Antonio, Texas. The Miami Heat defeated the San Antonio Spurs 98-96.


 


Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat shoots against Kawhi Leonard of the San Antonio Spurs during Game Two of the 2014 NBA Finals between the Miami Heat and San Antonio Spurs at AT&T Center on June 8, 2014 in San Antonio.




Here is the opening tipoff where the Miami Heat goes up for the ball against the San Antonio Spurs during Game Two of the 2014 NBA Finals on June 8, 2014 at AT&T Center in San Antonio.

 
Cookies are required to use this site. You must accept them to continue using the site. Learn more…