Two nights after letting the Larry O’Brien Trophy slip through their grasp in Game 5 of the NBA Finals, the Los Angeles Lakers captured their 17th title on Sunday night with a 106-93 Game 6 win over the Miami Heat, slapping a fitting ending onto the most turbulent season in league history.
It was less than 10 months ago that Lakers icon Kobe Bryant, his 12-year-old daughter Gianna, and seven others died in a helicopter crash along the California coast. And although series MVP LeBron James and most of the current Lakers were never Bryant’s teammates, their championship run still served as a meaningful tribute to his legacy, which included the club’s previous five league crowns.
‘Ever since the tragedy, all we wanted to do was do it for him,’ said Lakers star Anthony Davis. ‘We didn’t want to let him down.
‘It’s a tough moment,’ Davis continued. ‘He was a big brother to all of us.’
The effort did not go unnoticed.
‘Wish Kobe and Gianna were here to see this,’ Vanessa Bryant, Kobe’s widow, wrote on social media alongside a picture of her late husband and Lakers GM Rob Pelinka, his former agent.
LeBron James celebrates his fourth NBA title with JR Smith and his Los Angeles Lakers teammates on Sunday night
LeBron James holds his fourth NBA Finals MVP award, which is named for Boston Celtics legend Bill Russell
The Lakers 17th title comes 10 months after the deaths of franchise icon Kobe Bryant and his 12-year-old daughter Gianna
Bryant’s widow Vanessa posted a picture of her late husband with Lakers GM Rob Pelinka, his former agent
The Los Angeles Lakers pose for a team picture after beating the Miami Heat in the 2020 NBA Finals
Lakers fans celebrate in the street after Sunday’s win over the heat. Several people were seen with tributes to Kobe Bryant
Fans in Los Angeles put together a small fireworks display following Game 6 of the NBA Finals on Sunday night
Lakers fans celebrate near Staples Centers as Los Angeles plays against Miami Heat in Game 6 of the 2020 NBA Finals
‘You have written your own inspiring chapter in the great Laker history,’ Lakers owner Jeanie Buss said. ‘And to Laker Nation, we have been through a heartbreaking tragedy with the loss of our beloved Kobe Bryant. Let this trophy serve as a reminder of when we come together, believe in each other, incredible things can happen.’
That the NBA season ended nearly one year after it began, and on a neutral court inside a coronavirus-resistant ‘bubble’ only served to make the moment more surreal.
The league became America’s first to interrupt its season at the onset of the pandemic on March 11, leading to a four-month hiatus. Ultimately NBA commissioner Adam Silver and the players’ union agreed to finish the year with 22 teams at Disney’s ESPN Wide World of Sports campus outside Orlando.
The challenge was keeping the pandemic at bay in a state where over 15,000 people have died due to COVID-19. But unlike the NFL and Major League Baseball, leagues that went without bubbles and subsequently were forced to postpone several games due to infections, the NBA remained COVID-free in Florida.
The downside of the bubble may have been the in-game atmosphere, which was cold and somewhat contrived.
There were no fans to celebrate with the Lakers. The only attendees were team employees and small groups of relatives and friends, who remained masked and practiced social distancing.
Instead of courtside celebrities, the Lakers were surrounded by the digital images of fans projected onto the scoreboards encircling a court emblazoned with the words ‘Black Lives Matter.’
That slogan, like the social justice messages stitched onto the players’ jerseys, would have been unthinkable back when the season started in October. In recent years the NBA actually required players to stand for the national anthem.
But following the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd on May 25, the league embraced the protests performed by players, most of whom declined to stand for ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ inside the bubble.
The 2019-2020 season will also be remembered for the passing of longtime commissioner David Stern, who suffered a brain hemorrhage in December and passed away on January 1.
Stern will perhaps best be remembered for building the league’s presence in China, which was, until recently, a reported $4 billion market for the NBA.
That, however, was put into jeopardy in October when Rockets general manager Daryl Morey tweeted his support for anti-Beijing protestors in Hong Kong during the preseason.
China’s government furiously banned the league from state TV for a year (a ban that ended Friday), while the NBA took criticism in North American for its perceived kowtowing to the communist nation.
Although Morey apologized for the uproar, he was never punished by the league or reprimanded publicly by Silver.
On Sunday night, all of that seemed like a distant memory as James was capturing his fourth NBA Finals MVP.
Love him or hate him, James is in his own category now.
He has led three franchises to NBA titles, something nobody has ever done. His legacy was complete long before Sunday night, when the Lakers tied the Boston Celtics with their 17th league crown.
But that legacy is just a bit shinier now.
‘I guess, as Frank Sinatra would say, I did it my way,’ James said earlier in these playoffs.
That’s not up for debate.
He’s got four titles. He’s a four-time NBA Finals MVP, the second to win that many. He’s done it all with the NBA’s biggest target on his back, with every action and every word scrutinized and often criticized.
James has become the epitome of the independent superstar athlete, something many try to be but few even have a chance of pulling off. He does whatever he wants, whenever he wants, however he wants and makes it work. Bill Russell will forever have more rings and Michael Jordan will forever be the choice of many as the NBA’s greatest player. And that’s OK with James, who has forged his own path.
‘The game of basketball will pass me by,’ James said as the title loomed. ‘There will be a new group of young kids and vets and rookies throughout the course of this game. So, I can’t worry about that as far as on the floor. How I move, how I walk, what I preach, what I talk about, how I inspire the next generation is what matters to me the most.’
He’s never forgotten that he was once a broke kid from Akron, Ohio. If he’s not a billionaire yet, he’s trending that way. He’s on a Wheaties box now, saying its unveiling last week was ‘one of the best moments of my life.’ He founded a school and stays involved with matters there. He’s actively trying to get more people, particularly Black people, to vote than ever before.
Oh, if that wasn’t enough, he delivered a championship to a Lakers franchise that went 10 years without one and did so in a year when they needed it most, letting them cry tears of joy after all the tears of anguish that followed the death of Kobe Bryant in a helicopter crash in January.
‘I think it’s remarkable what LeBron is still doing at his age,’ Denver coach Michael Malone said of James. ‘The minutes he’s playing, how effective he is on both ends of the floor, and the impact he has on both ends of the floor, his will to win is just incredible.’
The 35-year-old James finished this postseason with 580 points; no one at his age had ever done that. He had 184 assists; no one at his age had ever done that. If he’s slowing down, he’s not showing it; he had 32 points in his first playoff game 14 years ago, he exceeded that six times in this postseason run.
‘He’s shown why he is the player that he is, why he’s had the career and the legacy that he’s continually building,’ Miami’s Jimmy Butler said.
LeBron James and former rival-turned-teammate Rajon Rondo embrace after Game 6 of the NBA Finals on Sunday
James pictured holding the Larry O’Brien and Bill Russell trophies in front of Lakers GM Rob Pelinka, Bryant’s former agent
Some Lakers fans wore masks while celebrating the team’s 17th title on Sunday, but social distancing proved difficult
James is 4,148 points behind Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the regular-season scoring lead, meaning he’ll have to play at least two more full seasons to reach that mark. Sunday was his 260th career playoff appearance, passing Derek Fisher for the all-time record. He was All-NBA for the 16th time this season, a record. He started his 16th consecutive All-Star Game this season, yet another record. More fans picked him as MVP this season than Giannis Antetokounmpo, who won the award.
There’s nothing left to prove on the basketball court.
Then again, there’s been nothing left to prove for a while now.
‘I think the story will be told how it’s supposed to be told and be written how it’s supposed to be written,’ James said. ‘But I don’t live my life thinking about legacy. What I do off the floor is what means more to me than what I do on the floor.’
What he’s done, on and off the floor, is how legends are defined.
‘I just think it is a true testament to his greatness to be able to sustain this type of success year in, year out,’ Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said. ‘Different uniforms. New players and new teams going after him. It’s a real testament to that commitment. He’s seen everything. At this point in his career, it’s just about winning.’
James, who poured in 40 points in a losing effort on Friday, appeared in his 260th playoff game on Sunday, lifting him into sole possession of first place on the league’s postseason appearances list.
Now in his 17th season, James has reached the playoffs 14 times in 15 years. His teams in Cleveland, Miami and now Los Angeles have gone 14-0 in first-round series with James on the roster, 11-3 in second-round series and 10-1 in the conference-final round.
He had been tied with Derek Fisher for the top spot on the playoff list with 259.
To put James’ postseason longevity into perspective, consider that 260 games is the equivalent of 3.2 full regular seasons. And out of the 4,489 players to have appeared in an NBA regular-season contest, 63 percent did not (or in the case of active players, have not) gotten into 260 games.
That means James’ postseason career alone has included more games than most NBA players’ entire careers.
Game 6 also was the 55th NBA Finals game of James’ career, tying him with Jerry West for fourth-most in league history. Bill Russell played in 70, Sam Jones in 64 and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 56.
LeBron James hugs former rival-turned-teammate Dwight Howard, who won his first NBA title on Sunday in Orlando
LeBron James, who poured in 40 points in a losing effort on Friday, began Game 6 by setting another record in his illustrious career. Sunday’s game was the 260th of James’ playoff career, lifting him into sole possession of first place on the league’s postseason appearances list
Anthony Davis (left) and the Los Angeles Lakers are once again trying to clinch their 17th NBA title with a win over the Miami Heat, but unlike Friday’s Game 5, which seemed destined to be an anticlimactic finale to an uneven series, Sunday’s Game 6 begins with much more drama thanks to Jimmy Butler (right).
The Los Angeles Lakers players and coaches celebrate after the Lakers defeated the Miami Heat 103-88 in Game 6
LeBron James won his fourth title while teammate Danny Green (right) won his third after playing for the NBA-champion Toronto Raptors last season
James had another triple-double on Sunday, finishing with 28 points, 14 rebounds and 10 assists.
Davis and Rajon Rondo, meanwhile, both had 19 points for the Lakers.
Bam Adebayo had 25 points and 10 rebounds for Miami, which got 12 points from Jimmy Butler – the player who, in his first Heat season, got the team back to title contention.
Game 6 was over by halftime, the Lakers taking a 64-36 lead into the break. The Heat never led and couldn’t shoot from anywhere: 35 percent from 2-point range in the half, 33 percent from 3-point range and even an uncharacteristic 42 percent from the line, not like any of it really mattered. The Lakers were getting everything they wanted and then some, outscoring Miami 36-16 in the second quarter and doing all that with James making just one shot in the period.
Rondo, now a two-time champion and the first to win rings as a player in both Boston and Los Angeles – the franchises now tied with 17 titles apiece – was 6 for 6 in the half, the first time he’d done that since November 2007. The Lakers’ lead was 46-32 with 5:00 left in the half, and they outscored Miami 18-4 from there until intermission.
Ball game. The 28-point halftime lead was the second-biggest in NBA Finals history, topped only by the Celtics leading the Lakers 79-49 on May 27, 1985.
True to form, the Heat – a No. 5 seed in the Eastern Conference that finished with a losing record last season, a team that embraced the challenge of the bubble like none other – didn’t stop playing, not even when the deficit got to 36 in the third quarter.
A 23-8 run by Miami got the Heat to 90-69 with 8:37 left. But the outcome was never in doubt, and before long confetti was blasted into the air as the Lakers’ celebration formally and officially began.
Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (R) and Miami Heat forward Andre Iguodala (L) fight for the ball in the first quarter
Jimmy Butler pictured before Game 6 of the NBA Finals on Sunday night at the league bubble near Orlando, Florida
LeBron James of the Lakers (left) and Miami’s Bam Adebayo both had early first-quarter dunks on Sunday night
LeBron James embraces former teammate Udonis Haslem following Game 6 of the NBA Finals outside Orlando on Sunday
For the second time this weekend, the Larry O’Brien Trophy (pictured) was courtside for another NBA Finals game
Just as most players have done throughout the NBA’s restart, the Lakers protested racism during the anthem on Sunday
Members of the Miami Heat kneel as center Meyers Leonard stands before Game 6 of the NBA Finals inside the league bubble
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