Miller returns, scores 18 in win over Spurs
MIAMI — First half, all San Antonio. Second half, all Miami — and then some. LeBron James had 33 points and 10 assists, Chris Bosh scored 30 points — the 6-foot-11 forward going coast-to-coast for a dunk to punctuate his effort — and the Heat used a historic third-quarter turnaround to erase what was a 17-point deficit and beat the Spurs 120-98 on Tuesday night, snapping a three-game slide in an most unpredictable manner.
MIAMI — First half, all San Antonio.
Second half, all Miami — and then some.
LeBron James had 33 points and 10 assists, Chris Bosh scored 30 points — the 6-foot-11 forward going coast-to-coast for a dunk to punctuate his effort — and the Heat used a historic third-quarter turnaround to erase what was a 17-point deficit and beat the Spurs 120-98 on Tuesday night, snapping a three-game slide in an most unpredictable manner.
“We have a great luxury with three players who can do special things when you need it,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said.
Miami shot 68 percent in the second half, outscoring the Spurs 71-35 after halftime.
Mike Miller made his season debut for Miami after continuing to recover from hernia surgery and shot 6 for 6 on 3-pointers, finishing with 18 points and matching his most makes beyond the arc since joining the Heat. Spoelstra said the plan was to ease Miller back, playing him for “five or six” minutes. Miller played 15.“Every once in a while you get going when you’re a shooter,” Miller said. “I just happened to do that.”
San Antonio connected on 12 of its first 15 shots, led 52-35 with 3 minutes to go in the first half, and had Danny Green hit a pair of buzzer-beaters — the first from the top of the key to end the first quarter, the second from near midcourt to beat the halftime horn — to take a 63-49 lead into intermission.
What happened next left both sides befuddled.
“Can’t explain it,” Bosh said.
Offered Spurs guard Tony Parker: “That’s basketball.”
Miami outscored San Antonio 39-12 in the third quarter — matching the second-largest differential for any quarter in Heat history, and matching the second-worst differential for a period in Spurs history, according to STATS LLC. James was 7 for 9 in the third quarter. The Spurs — combined — were 4 for 19. James hit 3-pointers on consecutive possessions to put Miami up 72-68, and the Heat simply never stopped rolling from there.
James finished 12 for 21 from the floor, almost erasing any memory of him missing his first four shots. He was battling a cold, but offered no excuse afterward.
The comeback from down 17 matched the NBA’s fifth-largest this season.
Before the game, Spurs coach Greg Popovich summed his team’s all-or-nothing record — 9-0 at home, now 0-5 on the road — with his usual dry wit. “We’re really good at home and on the road, we (stink). That’s the biggest difference,” Popovich said.
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