Allen Iverson finally shook his shadow and shook up the NBA Finals.
Hounded by unheralded Tyronn Lue, Iverson scored seven of his 48 points in a one-minute span of overtime as the Philadelphia 76...
Allen Iverson finally shook his shadow and shook up the NBA Finals.
Hounded by unheralded Tyronn Lue, Iverson scored seven of his 48 points in a one-minute span of overtime as the Philadelphia 76ers stunned the Los Angeles Lakers with a 107-101 victory in the opener of the NBA Finals.
Iverson scored 30 points in a scintillating first half, letting everyone know that the 76ers were going to be more than another pushover for the powerful Lakers. His late flurry silenced the Staples Center and unceremoniously ended Los Angeles' run at a perfect postseason.
"Anybody that bet on it, some broke people out there," Iverson said. "I'm glad nobody didn't bet their life on it 'cause they definitely would be dead right now."
Instead, the Sixers -- double-digit underdogs -- are very much alive as they again displayed their heroic heart.
"Our guys just try hard," Sixers coach Larry Brown said. "This is kind of unexpected but it's neat."
In between Iverson outbursts, Lue stymied the NBA Most Valuable Player for nearly 20 minutes, using his quickness to prevent Iverson from even getting the ball, let alone shoot it. He had spent the last two practices impersonating Iverson and apparently got pretty good at it.
"I just try to deny him the ball as much as possible, because when he does get the ball, the best penetrator in the game is going to be hard to stop," Lue said. "We were trying to keep the ball out of his hands as much as possible."
"He was holding me the whole time," Iverson said.
But the third-year reserve let his guard down for just a second and it cost the Lakers. Iverson's two free throws pulled the Sixers within 99-98 with 1:46 remaining and the Lakers called a timeout.
Lue drove and threw up a wild shot as he fell out of bounds. The Sixers rebounded and Iverson ran out in transition. With Lue nowhere in sight, he drilled a 3-pointer that gave Philadelphia the lead for good at 101-99 with 1:19 left.
"That was really the knife that wounded us," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said.
Rick Fox spoiled a solid game by throwing away a pass and Iverson made a step-back baseline jumper for a 103-99 lead with 47 seconds to go.
Kobe Bryant, who shot poorly and could not defend Iverson, hit a baseline jumper with 33 seconds to play. But Eric Snow, whose runner late in the fourth quarter saved the Sixers, made a similar shot to seal it with 10 seconds left.
On the eve of his 26th birthday, Iverson made 18-of-41 shots and 9-of-9 free throws, adding six assists and five steals. Playing his first NBA Finals game, his explosion offset 44 points and 20 rebounds by Shaquille O'Neal as he won the duel between the league's last two MVPs.
The Lakers rallied from a 15-point third-quarter deficit only to blow a five-point overtime lead as they lost for the first time since April 1, a span of 20 games. They had come into this series as huge favorites, having romped through the postseason with 11 straight wins by an average of more than 15 points.
"I'm kind of relieved it's over in some ways but but it does put some pressure on us to get a win on our home court," Jackson said. "We've got to go out on Friday night and find a way to get this series tied up."
The Sixers came in with no one expecting them to win a game, let alone the series. But they used their trademark toughness to do in just one game what the weak knees of the Western Conference could not do in 11 -- beat the Lakers.
"They thought we were gonna get swept and that was like a slap in the face to us," Iverson said.
Game Two is Friday at Los Angeles. Philadelphia is trying to knock off the defending champions and win its first title in 18 years.
"Now it's a series," O'Neal said.
However, Philadelphia may have to try a little harder. Guard Aaron McKie, who did a superb job of defending Bryant, suffered a chip fracture of his right ankle but is probable for Friday.
Both Iverson and O'Neal abused a series of defenders. Iverson sent starter Derek Fisher to a permanent seat on the bench and also had his way with Bryant before Lue came on.
"You can't take anything away from Tyronn Lue," Iverson admitted. "A lot of guys go out against a player that's named MVP of the regular season and won't give it his all, act like he's scared. But he gave his team a great lift."
O'Neal met some resistance from Mutombo but manhandled Matt Geiger and Todd MacCulloch at the end of the third quarter. He made 17-of-28 shots but just 10-of-22 from the line.
Most of O'Neal's offense came against single coverage from Dikembe Mutombo, who sat down with foul trouble for most of the third quarter but still contributed 13 points, 16 rebounds and five blocks.
His presence allowed Philadelphia to swarm to Bryant, who had an awful game with just 15 points, on 7-of-22 shooting, and six turnovers.
"They got into Kobe's body, and bodied him on the dribble, stripped the ball when he picked it up," Jackson said. "He really didn't clear himself for shots very easily tonight."
Snow scored 13 points and injury-hampered Matt Geiger provided an unexpected 10 for the Sixers, who shot 48 percent (40-of-83) and missed just two of 25 free throws, which came at the worst possible time.
O'Neal's dunk off a feed from Bryant with 1:57 left in the fourth quarter gave the Lakers a 94-92 lead, their first since midway through the second period.
Snow answered with his first running jumper and the Sixers had a chance to take the lead when Mutombo rebounded a miss by Snow and was fouled with 34 seconds to go. But he missed both after Philadelphia had hit its first 19 from the line.
Bryant and Snow missed, sending it to overtime, where it looked like the Lakers were ready to win. O'Neal threw in a hook, Bryant spun for a layup and O'Neal split a pair from the line for a 99-94 lead.
The Sixers looked dead when Raja Bell found himself trapped in the lane with the shot clock running down. But he pivoted and threw in a scoop shot with his left hand with 2:19 remaining, sparking the comeback.
Fox scored 19 points for the Lakers, who were playing for the first time in 10 days and shot 44 percent (40-of-90).
At the start, it looked like another Lakers landslide. A 16-0 burst capped by Bryant's first basket gave Los Angeles an 18-5 lead with 5 1/2 minutes to go -- and perhaps allowed complacency to set in.
"We watched games that they played when they jumped out on guys and guys just packed it in and stopped playing," Iverson said. "But we've been like that before. We've been in games where we started off slow and ended up winning."
Iverson scored 10 points in the rest of the period, then opened the second quarter with a jumper over Bryant for a 24-23 lead.
The Lakers still held a 38-36 lead midway through the second quarter when Jackson was hit with a technical foul for arguing a non-call against Mutombo.
Iverson made the foul shot, Geiger hit two jumpers to give the Sixers the lead at 41-40 and Iverson took over from there as he scored Philadelphia's last 15 points of the half, mostly off his trademark crossover dribble.
His 3-pointer gave the Sixers a 56-48 advantage before O'Neal hammered home a miss by Bryant in the final second.
At intermission, Iverson had 30 points on 11-of-24 shooting, lighting up Bryant, who was 2-of-10 for four points with five turnovers.
"Allen really stepped it up," Brown said. "His first half was about as good as it gets."
It continued in the third quarter, as Iverson fed Jumaine Jones for an alley-oop slam, sank a jumper and dropped a layup over O'Neal for a 64-54 lead. He took a steal in for a layup and hit a fading corner shot before Eric Snow's three-point play gave the Sixers their largest lead at 73-58 with 5:23 left.
But with Mutombo on the bench, Philadelphia could not fight off O'Neal, who overpowered Geiger and MacCulloch and muscled Los Angeles back into it. He scored 14 points in the final 5:10 of the period, and with Lue shadowing Iverson, the Lakers pulled within 79-77 entering the final period.
Philadelphia led by as many as seven points early in the fourth quarter, when Mutombo picked up his fifth foul and again sat down before returning less than a minute later as Geiger fouled out.
Like to rate videos and let people know what you think?
Automatically share your ratings, favorites, and more on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Reader with YouTube Autoshare.
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
Like to share videos with friends?
Automatically share your ratings, favorites, and more on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Reader with YouTube Autoshare.
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
This video has been removed from your Favorites. (Undo)
Like to Favorite videos and let people know what you think?
Automatically share your ratings, favorites, and more on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Reader with YouTube Autoshare.
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
lol u dont know wat ur talking about. look at 05-07 kobe when he was basically playing the ai role of a one man show trying to carry his team. his fg% was garbage and he took a hell of alot of shots. did he take the lakers to finals? no he didnt even get out of the first round. plz ai has never had the talent around him that kobes had and has done much more with less.
Give me a good reason why I shouldn't take Kobe/Lebron over AI then huh? Just cause you speak of the facts about the players doesn't mean you're riding their dick
Iverson clearly is below those players..even his stats don't lie...big TO's and low FG%...epitome of a ball hog
AI was the best player in the league for what? 1 year? 2001?...even his 30ppg was mediocre with a 42% FG
Please state some real reason why he is better instead of some bias statement cuz u love him for his crossovers
The thing is that him coming off the bench wasn't making the team better. Both teams were playing bad while he was on the bench. Iverson said he would be fine coming off the bench if the team was winning but they weren't. Stop just listening to what everyone else says about who the best is. You can clearly see in this game that Kobe couldn't even hang with AI. People have short memories because Iverson was better than Kobe. Enough said. And by the way get your lips off Kobe and Lebron's asses.
If he had known how to sacrifice his game for the better of the team, he would've been an all time great
He doesn't know the term TEAM ball
If you all think i'm wrong then i'm sorry, but just look at his career
Think why did the Nuggets get better after he left?...why couldn't he play with Detroit when a lesser player (Billups) led them to 59 wins the year before
why did the Sixers ship him out when he was a 28 ppg scorer?
U think just cuz the way he looks he gets judge badly?
Look at the way he plays...he averages more points than Kobe and Lebron but look at his FG%..the guy shoots 42% from the floor...averages more assists, but turns the ball over more times than anyone
He gets labeled selfish because he's not willing to sacrifice his game for the better of the TEAM he has to be the main guy...the top scorer...the GUY...wouldn't even play on the bench to make his team better
u call this game by Iverson domination? 48 points on 41 shots? Typical Iverson numbers...not even close to best individual performance in the playoffs
Lebron's 2007 48 point game against Detroit was more dominating than this one...scored 29 of his team's last 30 points...that's what i call utter domination
u mean in 2002 when he averaged 30 while shooting 38%? he had 2 great years (2001 and 2006) and the other years were just sub-par..breaking people's ankles, chucking up 9-30 games...u miss this?
he didn't deliver a championship cause he was too selfish...even in denver he couldn't play second fiddle to Carmelo...proof that he can't play with another superstar
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
Iverson had talent in Denver and he didn't do crap
Give Kobe Carmelo and they're in the Finals
Evidence? Billups alone helped that Nuggets team to the Conference Finals...Kobe with Melo would've been Finals bound
Billups with the Pistons garnered 59 wins the year before
Iverson was in a team offense in Detroit...reason for his lack of produce
look at 05-07 kobe when he was basically playing the ai role of a one man show trying to carry his team. his fg% was garbage and he took a hell of alot of shots. did he take the lakers to finals? no he didnt even get out of the first round. plz ai has never had the talent around him that kobes had and has done much more with less.
Iverson clearly is below those players..even his stats don't lie...big TO's and low FG%...epitome of a ball hog
AI was the best player in the league for what? 1 year? 2001?...even his 30ppg was mediocre with a 42% FG
Please state some real reason why he is better instead of some bias statement cuz u love him for his crossovers
1 on 1, sure, AI is the greatest ever...heck Jordan would have a hard time playing AI 1 on 1 but then again, the NBA isn't streetball
And Iverson the team player, just doesn't make it...Billups took the same Nuggets team Iverson had and advanced them to the Conference Finals
AI scored 48 on 41 shots this game. You don't think Kobe did a good job on him?
I'm just speaking the truth
If he had known how to sacrifice his game for the better of the team, he would've been an all time great
He doesn't know the term TEAM ball
If you all think i'm wrong then i'm sorry, but just look at his career
Think why did the Nuggets get better after he left?...why couldn't he play with Detroit when a lesser player (Billups) led them to 59 wins the year before
why did the Sixers ship him out when he was a 28 ppg scorer?
Answer these q's and u'll know why
Look at the way he plays...he averages more points than Kobe and Lebron but look at his FG%..the guy shoots 42% from the floor...averages more assists, but turns the ball over more times than anyone
He gets labeled selfish because he's not willing to sacrifice his game for the better of the TEAM
he has to be the main guy...the top scorer...the GUY...wouldn't even play on the bench to make his team better
What kind of basketball fan are u?
Lebron's 2007 48 point game against Detroit was more dominating than this one...scored 29 of his team's last 30 points...that's what i call utter domination
u mean in 2002 when he averaged 30 while shooting 38%? he had 2 great years (2001 and 2006) and the other years were just sub-par..breaking people's ankles, chucking up 9-30 games...u miss this?
he didn't deliver a championship cause he was too selfish...even in denver he couldn't play second fiddle to Carmelo...proof that he can't play with another superstar
u must also think Iverson was unstoppable during 2002 when he averaged 30ppg while shooting 38% too huh?
I could average 30 shooting under 40%