Mavs set to answer rest or rust question

By DOUGLAS PILS
dpils@express-news.net

The Dallas Mavericks seek to solve a never-ending debate Tuesday in the Western Conference finals.

Tipping off against the Oklahoma City Thunder or Memphis Grizzlies, it will have been 10 days since the Mavericks swept the two-time defending champion Lakers.

The riddle: Is it better to rest, or did Dallas lose valuable momentum only a six-game playoff winning streak can provide?

Pundits belabor the question. Players and coaches deflect it. Only the games answer it.

Since the NBA made the conference semifinals a best-of-7 test of wills in 1968, 18 teams have reached the conference or NBA Finals with a sweep while their next opponent fought to close out a six- or seven-game series.

The sweepers are 10-8 in the following series, and eight won NBA titles. However, the sweepers have lost the past three.

Last year, the Magic blanked the Hawks only to fall to the Celtics, who took six games to beat the Cavaliers.

In 2009, the Cavs routed the Hawks before losing to the Magic, who battled seven games with Boston.

In 2005, the Heat swept the Wizards, then lost in seven to the Pistons, who had a six-game win over Cleveland.

The last conference semis sweeper to advance past a team that faced a challenge was the 2003 Nets, who beat the Pistons after they had survived the 76ers in six.

Then the Spurs beat the Nets in the NBA Finals.

The Spurs are the most recent of the 10 winners to claim the title. In 1999, they swept the Lakers, then the Blazers, who had a six-game series with the Jazz, before hoisting their first Larry O’Brien Trophy.

As for the riddle, Dallas has nine players with 10 or more years in the league, so the rest theory seems to fit.

But consider how Dallas knocked out Los Angeles. It made 20 of 32 3-pointers in Game 4. Does a team smoking the nets at that rate really want rest? The chances of Dallas coming back anywhere near that hot seem remote.

Two characteristics of the eight teams who lost the next round and the two winners who failed to win the title are lack of championship experience and/or running into a team of destiny.

Aside from the four sweepers noted above who failed to win it all, the other six are the 1978 and 1985 76ers, the 1968 and 1989 Lakers, the 1996 SuperSonics and the 1998 Jazz.

Philadelphia in 1985 and L.A. in 1989 weren’t far removed from titles, but they fell to the Celtics, who were in the middle of four straight Finals, and Chuck Daly’s Pistons, respectively.

Point guard Jason Kidd, a 17-year pro and member of the 2003 Nets, is the closest thing Dallas has to championship experience, but it won’t face a team that has any in the Western finals.

That leaves the destiny part of the equation. We won’t know until later if the Thunder or Grizzlies fit the notion, but teams usually don’t leap from No. 4 or No. 8 seeds to titles.

Destiny could be Mavs star Dirk Nowitzki, 32, trying to erase his name off the list of great players without a title.

Hakeem Olajuwon was 31 when he got his first. Kevin Garnett was 31.

However, it’s more likely that the team of destiny — the one with LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh — will be waiting in the Finals, making the riddle’s solution pointless.

“The Heatles” boost Miami to 3-0 series lead with S&D efforts

When Dwyane Wade, LeBron James and Chris Bosh united last summer, their goal was an NBA championship.

“The Heatles” took another step to that goal with a strong collective effort in Miami’s 100-94 Game 3 victory at Philadelphia, giving the Heat a 3-0 lead in the series.

Wade delivered a monster game with 32 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists. James tallied 24 points, 15 rebounds and six assists. And Bosh chipped in with 19 points, six rebounds and three blocked shots.

“This is what we envisioned,” James told reporters after the game.

The victory pushed the Heat to the brink of becoming the first team to finish out a series. Miami will get its chance at noon Sunday.

“We’re a desperate team right now,” James said. “We want to continue to play that way.”

Their big nights earned them all a place on Thursday’s Studs and Duds.

STUDS

Miami G Dwyane Wade: Went for 32 points, 10 rebounds, eight assists and two blocked shots in the Heat’s 100-94 Game 3 victory over Philadelphia.

Portland G Wesley Matthews: Tallied 25 points, three assists, two rebounds, two steals and was plus-5 in the Trail Blazers’ 97-92 victory over Dallas.

Miami F LeBron James: Notched 24 points, 15 rebounds, six assists and was plus-8 in the Heat’s victory over  the 76ers.

Chicago G Derrick Rose: Scored 23 points,  including the go-ahead layup with 17.8 seconds left,  to power the Bulls to an 88-84 Game 3 victory over Indiana. Rose also added four steals, three rebounds and two assists and was plus-6. 

Chicago F Luol Deng: Went for 21 points, six rebounds and six assists and was a team-best plus-9 in the Bulls’ victory over the Pacers.

Portland F LaMarcus Aldridge: Scored 20 points and grabbed four rebounds in the Trail Blazers’ victory over the Mavericks.

Miami F Chris Bosh: Produced 19 points, six rebounds, three blocked shots and was plus-6 in the  Heat’s victory at Philadelphia.

Portland G Brandon Roy: Came off the bench to produce 16 points, four assists and was a team-best plus-7 in the Trail Blazers’ victory over Dallas.

Portland G Andre Miller: Went for 16 points, seven assists and was plus-6 in the Trail Blazers’ triumph over the Mavericks.

Chicago C Joakim Noah: Tallied 11 points, 10 rebounds, four blocked shots and was plus-6 in the Bulls’ victory at Indiana.

Dallas G Jason Terry: Came off the bench to score 29 points, seven assists and was plus-7 in the Mavericks’ loss at the Trail Blazers.

Dallas F Dirk Nowitzki: Went for 25 points, nine rebounds and two assists in the Mavericks’ loss at Portland.

Philadelphia F Elton Brand: Notched 21 points, 11 rebounds and was plus-1 in the 76ers’ loss to Miami.

Indiana F Danny Granger: Scored 21 points, grabbed four rebounds, produced two assists and snatched two steals in the Pacers’ loss to Chicago.

Philadelphia G Jrue Holiday: Tallied 20 points and eight assists in the 76ers’ loss to Miami.

DUDS

Indiana G Paul George: Went 1-for-9 from the field and was minus-2 in the Pacers’ loss at Chicago.

Philadelphia F Thaddeus Young: Limited to four points on 1-for-8 field-goal shooting, had two turnovers and was minus-7 in the 76ers’ loss to Miami.  

Indiana F Tyler Hansbrough: Clanked through a 3-for-12 effort from the field and was a team-worst minus-13 in the Pacers’ loss to the Bulls.

Dallas G Jason Kidd: Went 3-for-9 from the field with five turnovers and was minus-1 in the Mavericks’ loss at Portland.

Indiana’s offense: The Pacers shot 37.9  percent from the field and converted only one 3-pointer in their loss to Chicago.

Mike Monroe: Playoff urgency like never before

The NBA playoffs begin today with an undertone of urgency seldom seen.

Every player knows a lockout is looming. Within days after handing over the Larry O’Brien Trophy to the 2011 NBA champion, David Stern will pronounce that a business model that generates billions of dollars is broken because too many go to employees who wear baggy shorts, not business suits.

After Friday’s Board of Governor’s meeting in New York, Stern promised the league soon will make a new offer to the players’ union.

Nobody expects a breakthrough, not after deputy commissioner Adam Silver’s reiteration that the league’s goal in negotiations with the National Basketball Players Association hasn’t changed. The owners continue to seek a new system for sharing all those billions because, Silver said, “the system is unsustainable.”

Of course, billionaires continue to line up to buy into this broken system, undercutting Silver’s contention. On Friday the league heard from one billionaire begging the Board to approve his purchase of the Pistons, one of one of the league’s worst ?Eastern Conference teams, and from another willing to buy the Kings, one of the West’s bottom feeders, for the privilege of keeping it in a market Stern deems too mis? guided and miserly to deserve a franchise.

Meanwhile, players nearer their 39th birthdays than their 30th — Tim Duncan (days shy of 35), Shaquille O’Neal (39), Jason Kidd (38), Antonio McDyess (36), Kurt Thomas (38), Andre Miller (35), Marcus Camby (37) — wonder if these playoffs might afford their last best chance at ultimate NBA glory.

No player needs additional motivation to fuel the incremental drive that produces playoff success, but the notion that there may not be another opportunity to win a championship until 2013 compels an extra measure of focus.

Duncan understands, perhaps more than most. He won’t turn 35 until April 25, but his left knee and ankle feel older. His contract runs only through a 2011-12 season jeopardized by the potential work stoppage.

The fact his team will have home-court advantage through the Western half of the playoffs underscores for Duncan the special nature of this playoff run.

“Every game, every playoff run, everything is special right now,” he said. “This is the end of my career here, the last couple years. I’m not taking anything for granted.”

The Board of Governors told Spurs owner Peter Holt — and others on the Labor Relations Committee that Holt chairs — that it wants them to have the new proposal ready to present to the union in a few weeks.

The commissioner insists he is optimistic, but mostly because of his own nature.

“I’m an eternal optimist,” he said. “I hope the proposal will indicate to the players that there’s some modicum of flexibility in our approach, and we’re trying to engage the union in dialogue.”

He also understands that what’s at stake is every ounce of goodwill and momentum forged with the league’s fans through one of the more remarkable seasons in league history. TV ratings and attendance are up, and the league’s three biggest markets all have teams worth the attention and loyalty of the citizenry.

“I think fan sentiment going into the playoffs and Finals is going to be terrific,” Stern said. “If we don’t have a new collective bargaining agreement by the end of the old agreement on June 30 I think the fans will be disappointed in us and the union.”

Disappointed falls far short of reality.

Disgust comes much closer.

Let the playoff games begin. They may be the last we see for a long while.

mikemonroe@express-news.net