Wade, Heat take Game 3

Led by Dwyane Wade's monster 42 points and 13 rebounds, Miami put together a
13-point fourth-quarter comeback to take Game 3. Hear from both sides after
the Mavericks' series lead was trimmed 2-1.
Not here. Not now. Not this quickly.

And definitely not when he was finally feeling like himself again.


So Miami's getting-better-by-the-second guard led a furious fourth-quarter
comeback that put his team back into the NBA finals.

"I said, 'I ain't going out like this,"' Wade told his teammates.

He scored 42 points and orchestrated a Miami rally that reached its
crescendo on Gary Payton's jumper with 9.3 seconds left as the Heat escaped
with a 98-96 win over the Dallas Mavericks on Tuesday night.

The Heat rallied from a 13-point deficit in the final 6:34 to keep alive a
series that looked to be over with Dallas up 2-0 and cruising toward a Game
3 victory.

"As a team, we just came out and said this could be the season if they win
this game," Wade said. "We came out, ran our offense to the crisp, locked
down on defense and came back and won this game."

Despite blowing its big lead, Dallas still had plenty of chances late but
Dirk Nowitzki missed one of two free throws with 3.4 seconds to go and the
Mavericks couldn't convert on an inbounds play in the final second thanks to
Wade, who tipped away the last gasp pass after scoring 15 points in the
fourth quarter.

Wade has been battling flu-like symptoms for several weeks.

"I had legs at the end to go down there and finish and make things happen.
... I feel a little bit better," Wade said.

As the final horn sounded, Heat fans simultaneously exhausted and
exhilarated, tossed their "White Hot" white T-shirts into the air, a
celebration that seemed unimaginable just a few minutes earlier.

Now, after watching Wade's heroics, Shaquille O'Neal and Udonis Haslem hit
four straight crucial free throws in final two minutes and the
second-largest fourth-quarter rally in NBA finals history, they're coming
back for Game 4 on Thursday night.

"We had 2 1/2 horrible games and now we can use this momentum and pick it up
and just try to win four," said O'Neal, who had 16 points and 11 rebounds,
atoning for a miserable five-point performance in Game 2.

Miami was down and apparently done after Jason Terry's basket made it 89-76
with 6:34 remaining.

That's when Wade, playing with five fouls and conjuring memories of Michael
Jordan's playoff miracles, decided it was time for him to take over.

First, he hit a jumper. Then he completed a 3-point play and dropped in
another bucket to bring the Heat within five. Then, after a miss by
Nowitzki, Wade drove baseline, hung in the air for what seemed like an
eternity, and hit a floater to make it 91-88 with 3:36 to go.

Dallas, meanwhile, which had shown so much poise through 3 1/2 quarters, was
coming apart at the seams. Nowitzki's two free throws slowed Miami for a
moment, but O'Neal, whose abysmal foul shooting had contributed to Miami's
0-2 deficit in the series, calmly spun in two attempts to pull the Heat
within 93-90 1:48 left.

Wade's jumper got Miami within a point, and Haslem came up with the play of
the game, picking off a pass intended for Nowitzki. Haslem, playing with a
badly bruised shoulder suffered in Game 2, was fouled and the Heat's
toughest player made both attempts after firing bricks on his first four
tries.

Then, with the game tied, Payton, the defensive specialist coach Pat Riley
brought in this season, knocked down a 21-foot jumper - just his second
field goal of the series.

Nowitzki, who finished with 30 points, was fouled trying to answer Payton's
shot with a drive to the hoop. At that point, he was 25-of-27 from the line
in the series, but he could only make the first. When he misfired on the
second, he triggered a roar inside AmericanAirlines Arena that could be
heard back in Dallas.

The Mavericks appeared on their way when they outscored the Heat 34-16 in
the third quarter to open a 77-68 lead entering the final 12 minutes.

Josh Howard scored 21 points for Dallas, which came in 25-0 in games where
he scores at least 20. Erick Dampier added 14 points and Jerry Stackhouse,
who had 19 in Game 2, managed just four points on 1-of-9 shooting.

Beyond what the Mavericks' defense did to him in Games 1 and 2, O'Neal, who
was fined $10,000 by the NBA for skipping his postgame interview on Sunday
in Dallas, has taken a public beating in the media and from fans wondering
what has happened to one of the NBA's pre-eminent towers of power.

Riley, for one, thinks O'Neal has been treated unfairly.

"Shaquille O'Neal is one of the most worthy professional athletes who has
ever walked the face of the planet," Riley said before the game. "And he has
one bad game ... but that's the way it is in life.

In his final pregame blog, Dallas owner Mark Cuban first grumbled about
South Florida's oppressive humidity - "I promise never to complain about the
weather in Dallas again. Dang." - and then he imagined how the temperature
might be when the Heat took the floor in AmericanAirlines Arena.

"The crowd is going to be nuts," he said. "We have to be able to take the
early barrage of punches."

O'Neal and Wade combined to throw the first flurries.

On Miami's first possession, O'Neal backed down the lane and dropped a
turnaround jumper over DeSagana Diop and then the big fella powered inside
off a repost and banked in another bucket.

Moments later, O'Neal reached in and poked the ball away from Terry and
shoveled the ball ahead to Jason Williams for a layup.

And then, with the crowd holding its breath, O'Neal stepped to the line and
drained his first two free throws, matching his entire total on 16 attempts
in the first two games.

Notes

No respect or wishful thinking? On a ticket request form on a table in
Dallas' locker room, someone spelled Nowitzki's name, "Nowinski." ... Riley
didn't condone O'Neal's decision not to speak after Game 2, which also drew
the Heat an NBA-imposed $25,000 penalty. "I think it's something he needs to
do and live up to his obligations," Riley said. ... Funny sign: "The Only
Cuban Not Welcome in Miami Is Mark Cuban." ... Following Game 2, Wade
received an "encouraging" e-mail from Cleveland superstar LeBron James, his
good friend, who told Miami's dynamic guard "to lead my troops." ... While
O'Neal's horrid free-throw shooting dominated the pregame talk, his
teammates prefer to keep quiet about it. "I don't talk to Shaq about his
free throws at all," Wade said. "Never. Never. He's been in the league for
13 years. What can I say?" ... The Mavericks are 4-0 in playoff series
they've led 2-0.

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