Terry’s emotion, points fuel stunning Dallas rally

By JAIME ARON
Associated Press

MIAMI — Jason Terry didn’t like Dwyane Wade strutting his stuff in front of the Dallas Mavericks bench, and let him know it.

So what if the Miami Heat were up by 15 points with 7:14 left and had plenty to celebrate? Terry and the Mavericks weren’t about to go down 2-0 that easily.

Terry fired back with the first six points in a 22-5 run that ended with the Mavericks pulling off one of the most stunning rallies in NBA finals history, beating the Heat 95-93 on Thursday night. The next three games are in Dallas.

Terry went scoreless in the second half of the opener, and was a miserable 4 of 16 for the series before his key roll down the stretch. He scored eight points in the furious rally, finishing with 16 points, five assists, two steals and a huge smile.

It was especially sweet for him to stick it to the Heat, their fans and Wade because he and Nowitzki are the only players left from the 2006 Mavs who blew the finals by losing three straight games in Miami.

In ’06, the Mavericks didn’t have the resolve to recover when things were slipping away.

This postseason, they have proved time and again that they can.

Sure, they blew a 23-point lead against Portland, but they won their next seven. In Game 4 of the conference finals, they overcame a 15-point deficit with a little more than 5 minutes left, something they certainly were thinking about when down by the same margin but with even more time on the clock Thursday night.

Terry is one of the club’s emotional leaders. His fiery attitude and on-fire performance down the stretch were as crucial for Dallas as Dirk Nowitzki playing through an injured finger on his left hand.

Spurs are early 20-to-1 choice to win 2012 NBA title

Despite posting the second-best regular-season record in the NBA in the past season, the wise guys in Vegas don’t have much early respect for the Spurs heading into the upcoming 2012 season.

The Spurs are listed as a next season, according to early odds posted by the online betting website Bodog.com. It ranks seventh among all NBA teams. (Hat tip to Ben Maller.com)

Miami at 5-to-2 is the early favorite. The Los Angeles Lakers are listed at 11-to-2. Chicago is at 6-to-1. Oklahoma City is 8-to-1. Defending World Champion Dallas is 10-to-1 and Boston is 12-to-1.

Here’s a complete list of the odds heading into what appears to be a long lockout.

Future Line for winning the 2012 NBA title

 Source: Bodog.com 

 What about it Spurs Nation?

Would you make a bet on the Spurs’ chances next season? Or does another team on that list appear to be a better choice?

Don Newman interviews with Phoenix about vacant assistant job

Spurs assistant coach Don Newman has interviewed with the Phoenix Suns about an added assistant coaching position on Coach Alvin Gentry’s staff.

The Arizona Republic reported that Newman talked with Gentry in a job that the Phoenix coach hopes will improve his team’s leaky defense.

Gentry also has talked with former Chicago assistant and current scout Pete Myers and Houston assistant Elston Turner, who was a finalist for the Suns’ head-coaching job in 2008. The Republic also said that Gentry may meet with Lakers assistant Jim Cleamons and other coaches who have been involved in the conference finals, such as Dallas’ Dwane Casey, Oklahoma City’s Maurice Cheeks and Miami’s Bob McAdoo.

The Suns are hoping to boost their defense after allowing the NBA’s fifth-worst defensive percentage (47.2) in 2010-11. Phoenix general manager Lon Babby has approved allowing Gentry to hire a veteran coach without losing any of his four current assistant coaches.

“I’m going to run it like a football team, and he’ll be a defensive coordinator,” Gentry told the Republic. ”We’ll spend a ton of time meeting the next two to three months to see how we can put changes to be better.

“What I decided was we just needed someone from the outside with a new voice and outlook. It’s not anything against who we have. Dan Majerle played for Pat Riley and was all-defensive, and I do have confidence in Bill Cartwright and the other guys, but we need a new approach because if we’re ever going to be good, we need a whole new voice to be consistent.”

Newman was hired by the Spurs before the start of the 2004-05 season and has worked seven seasons with the franchise.

It wouldn’t be a surprise if he left for what appears to be a better job on the surface than what Newman has with the Spurs. But there appears to be stiff competition for the position among several top assistants from around the league.