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May 28, 2011

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Heat burn Bulls to reach finals

THE Miami Heat star players cast off their struggles and staged a furious finish to beat the Chicago Bulls 83-80 on Thursday and advance to the National Basketball Association finals.

The soaring comeback from a 65-77 deficit in the last three minutes in Chicago propelled the Heat to the NBA finals against the Dallas Mavericks, a repeat of the 2006 championship series which Miami won 4-2.

Led by their Big Three of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh, Miami went on a closing 18-3 run to stun the Bulls and complete a 4-1 triumph in the best-of-seven series for the Eastern Conference title.

James, who missed nine shots in a row before catching fire at the end, led the Heat with 28 points as Miami swept the last four games after dropping the opener in Chicago.

Wade, who committed nine turnovers, contributed 21 points including a key 4-point play, and Bosh scored 20, supplying some cushion with the last two free-throw points.

League MVP Derrick Rose topped Chicago with 25 points, but his desperate 3-point heave as time expired was blocked by James.

"Defense. Staying together," James told a courtside reporter about how the Heat overtook the Bulls. "Just buckled down defensively and executed."

The Bulls contributed to their own demise by unraveling in the closing minutes. They turned the ball over, failed to get off decent shots and allowed Miami a 4-point play when Rose fouled Wade as he sank a 3-pointer.

"We've had several of these games in the playoffs and the regular season where we've finished off with our defense on 12-0, 14-0 runs," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said.

After James, Wade and Bosh joined forces in Miami by deciding to sign as free agents with the Heat, they became a love-or-hate team in the NBA, even as they went through growing pains in learning how to play together.

They showed they had come of age by charging past the young Bulls, who had beaten them in all three regular season meetings and who had never lost more than two in a row this season.

"It's disappointing," Chicago coach Tom Thibodeau said. "We came up short at the end. We have to learn from it."

The game was a tight defensive struggle similar to the previous four contests with Chicago leading by four after the first quarter, by seven at the half and by five heading into the fourth.

The Bulls, getting a boost from bench players Kurt Thomas and Ronnie Brewer, charged to 12-point lead and looked like they were sending the series back to Miami for a Game 6.

Then the tide turned.

Miami has home court advantage in the finals and will host Game 1 on Tuesday.



 

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