Watching Game 2 of the 2011 NBA Finals was an exhilarating experience — yet it did not start that way. On the heels of an eight-point loss in Game 1, the Dallas Mavericks faced a daunting challenge.
The shadowboxing celebration of LeBron James and Dwayne Wade followed an apparent dagger three-pointer right in front of the Mavericks bench. Jason Terry famously told Mavericks assistant coach Darrell Armstrong “D.A, nobody likes a showoff.”
Terry sparked the comeback and his teammates galvanized around his shot-making. The pressure the Mavericks applied on the defensive end fueled one key basket after another. I can still hear Mike Breen say it. “A 20-2 run, one of the most incredible comebacks in NBA Finals history.”
Maybe the greatest. Certainly, it was for Maverick fans. The run was capped off by a take-the-lead three from number 41 off a pin-down double screen from Tyson Chandler, a defensive lapse from Terry to allow the Heat to tie it and then the defining moment of Dirk’s career. Oh, that lefty layup. If the statue was going to be anything other than his signature fadeaway, it would have been that moment.
I can still see the Wade three-ball to win it in the air and his look of surprise that a phantom foul call was not granted to save the Heat. Not unlike Gordon Hayward’s 60-foot shot that would have won the NCAA title for Butler just a few months earlier, Wade looked to upend the Dallas brilliance and break all our hearts again five years later.
Instead, it clanked off the back rim and Dirk stood there, seemingly stunned that all he could do was just enough. What an out of body experience that must have been for the great German, as teammate after teammate lovingly tapped his chest and told him he just did that. Yes, sure, they did it as a team and Terry got the comeback rolling — but that was Dirk’s moment. It changed everything.