Terry cashes checks mouth writes

By JONATHAN FEIGEN
jonathan.feigen@chron.com

DALLAS — Through three games of the NBA Finals, the Miami Heat had generally shut down Jason Terry. But they could not shut him up. Few ever do.

Terry openly doubted whether LeBron James could keep up with him through the series, saying he would wear James out. “We’re going to see if he can do it for seven games,” Terry said.

He sniffed that the Miami defense, then controlling the series, was not as strong as the defense Dallas conquered in the first round. “Portland, by far, has the best D,” Terry claimed. He pledged again and again that the shots that had been clanging would begin to fall.

By the time he drove the Mavericks past the Heat on Thursday, he seemed ready to declare that James’ muscles were fake and that, with Dallas leading the NBA Finals 3-2, Mark Cuban needed to pack just one T-shirt for the trip to Miami.

“We all know Jet is a confident young man,” Dallas’ Dirk Nowitzki said. “He always has a lot to say to us in the locker room. He’s always talking. He’s just an energetic guy. He loves to talk, and he loves to hear himself talk.”

Terry does not deny it. As the forerunner of the recent wave of Seattle-bred NBA talent, he comes from the Gary Payton school of on-court decorum.

“It’s something I grew up with, watching my idols like Gary Payton and guys like that,” Terry said. “Being from the inner city, it’s just a part of my game.”

It was not, however, part of the Mavericks’ style or an easy mix with Nowitzki. When Steve Nash, Nowitzki’s closest friend in the league, left Dallas for Phoenix, the Mavericks signed Terry to provide a needed jolt of backcourt scoring. He was never expected to coolly run the offense as Nash had, but through their first season together, Nowitzki struggled with the change in style.

“We have a kind of love/hate relationship,” Nowitzki said. “We ride each other a lot. We talk to each other a lot. We argue a lot, even during games, but it’s all because we want to win.”

At times they come off like a weird German television version of Shrek and Donkey, with Nowitzki the put-upon, stoical hero bouncing between annoyed and amused as Terry runs his mouth.

Terry, however, has come as close as anyone to becoming the Mavericks’ second star, Nowitzki’s co-closer and a key to the series. After Dallas’ Game 3 loss, their second in the series and the second in which James shut down Terry in the fourth quarter, Nowitzki challenged Terry every bit as much as Terry had called out James.

“Jet hasn’t really been a crunch-time, clutch player for us the way we need him to,” Nowitzki said. “He’s a big reason why we’re here, because he’s one of the great fourth-quarter players we have in this league. But they’ve been able to really take that away.”

That changed in both games since, with Terry twice bolting past James in the closing minutes of Game 4 and shooting over him in Game 5. On Thursday, he added six assists, including an outstanding pass to set up Jason Kidd for a late 3-pointer.

“If you look at the whole playoffs, he’s been playing terrific all-around basketball,” Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle said. “With a great player like .?.?. Dirk, a guy of that magnitude, everybody wants to try to find who the No. 2 scorer is. Jet is a great scorer, he’s a great shooter, and he’s a great player.”

More than anything, he thinks of himself as a player with too much confidence to be denied, especially by himself.

“Regardless of what’s going on throughout three quarters of the game, in the fourth quarter I know I’m depended on to come through,” Terry said. “It’s my job. All season long, ever since I’ve been a Maverick, I’ve been the guy in the fourth quarter they depended on to either make plays or make shots. I really relish in that role.”

Sickly Nowitzki overcomes fever to lead Dallas to Game 4 triumph

Sitting at the podium after the game, Dirk Nowitzki’s signs of illness were obvious.

He wasn’t wearing a dapper suit like the NBA marketing folks would have preferred. Instead, he was still wearing his sweat-drenched uniform with his warm-up top zipped tightly around his neck.

In between wheezing coughs, Nowitzki tried to explain how he was able to score 21 points to lead Dallas to an 86-83 victory over Miami and square the best-of-seven NBA Finals at two games apiece.

“Hopefully I’ll get some sleep tonight, take some meds and be ready to go on Thursday,” Nowitzki said, his sniffles noticeable throughout the post-game interview.

Nowitzki played with a temperature that was reported by ABC-TV to be 101 degrees before tipoff. He looked pale and drawn throughout the game after barely sleeping the night before the  game.

And still, the illness couldn’t conquer him — even during a stretch where he missed 10 of 11 shots after hitting his first three attempts of the game.

Nowitzki finished with a flourish, scoring 10 points during a pivotal 21-9 game-finishing run by the Mavericks to salt away the victory. Nowitzki hit the clinching layup with 14.4 seconds that put away the game and was the biggest shot of the night.

“The average person, you know, has sick days and battling 100-something (fever), it’s just tough to get out of bed,” Dallas center Tyson Chandler told the Associated Press. “This guy is playing against the best athletes in the world.” 

The Mavericks overcame a 32-point effort from Miami guard Dwyane Wade, who fumbled away a chance to win the game on the Heat’s final possession. But an even bigger surprise was the continued struggles of LeBron James, who was limited to eight points on 3-for-11 shooting. It snapped a streak of 434 consecutive games of double-figure scoring for him.

James’ disappearance down the stretch — no points and only one shot in the fourth quarter — was a marked contrast from Nowitzki. The Mavericks’ key player kept going despite being battling the debilitating bout of the flu.

“This is the Finals. You’re going to leave it out there,” Nowitzki said. “Like I said earlier in the series — it’s June. … You have to go out there and compete and try your best for your team, so that’s what I did.”

STUDS

Dallas F Dirk Nowitzki: Overcame a sapping sinus infection and a fever to score 21 points, grab 11 rebounds and was plus-7 in the Mavericks’ 86-83 victory over Miami in Game 4 of the NBA Finals.

Dallas G Jason Terry: Went for 17 points, three assists and three steals in the Mavericks’ victory over Miami.

Dallas F Shawn Marion: Provided 16 points and four rebounds in the Mavericks’ triumph over the Heat.

Dallas C Tyson Chandler: Muscled for 13 points and 16 rebounds, provided a steal and was plus-7 in the Mavericks’ victory over  the Heat.  

Dallas G Jason Kidd: Despite not scoring, he provided a fierce defensive effort against LeBron James. Additionally, James notched three rebounds, three assists and three steals in the Mavs’ win over Miami and was a team-best plus-12.

Miami G Dwyane Wade: Filled the scoresheet for 32 points, six rebounds, two assists, two steals and two blocked shots in the Heat’s loss at Dallas.

Miami C Chris Bosh: Notched 24 points and six rebounds in the Heat’s loss to Dallas.

DUDS

Miami F LeBron James: Produced a career playoff low with only eight points in the Heat’s loss to Dallas. James had  four turnovers and was 3-for-11 from the field.

Dirk says slumping Jet needs to start producing

For all of  the talk and his celebrated tattoo of the Larry O’Brien Trophy, Dallas guard Jason Terry hasn’t been much of a producer in the NBA Finals so far.

Those struggles led Dallas forward Dirk Nowitzki to call out Terry during his meeting with the media on Monday, saying that he needed to produce more if the Mavericks have any hopes of winning an NBA championship.

The biggest reason for Terry’s struggles has been that the bigger and stronger LeBron James has been guarding him during most of the fourth quarters in Dallas’ two losses in the series. Terry is 0-for-7 from the field in those two games in the fourth quarter.

“They keep sticking him [James] on Jet in the fourth quarters and he’s been doing a good job,” Nowitzki told reporters in . “Jet hasn’t really been a crunch-time, clutch player for us the way we need him to.”

Nowitzki and Terry ranked among the most productive NBA duos in the fourth-quarter production during the regular season. Despite his early struggle, Terry remains confident he will be able to rebound quickly.

“They know to take me out of the fourth quarter, which they didn’t do in Game 2,” Terry said of the Heat’s choice to return to James on him defensively, “then they got a good chance.”

Added Terry: “Let’s see if [James] can defend me like that for seven games.”

The Mavericks will have little hope of upsetting the Heat without a big contribution from Terry.

A good time to start would be in Tuesday’s Game 4.