A street near the Mavericks’ arena is named after Dirk Nowitzki, the German star who gave the team its only NBA championship ring. With games like this Friday, one day another street in Dallas will be named after Luka Dončić. The Slovenian guard gave a basketball exhibition in the fourth game of the NBA final, best of seven. The Celtics had started the series with three consecutive victories, so for the Mavericks it was a game of life or death. Still alive.
The hundreds, maybe thousands, of fans in green jerseys who flocked to the American Airlines Center hoping to see the Celtics win their first title since 2008 will have to wait. Maybe they can celebrate in Boston on Monday. This Friday, the overwhelming superiority that the Celtics had shown in the first games disappeared in both rings. The Mavericks dismantled the rival defense for the first time and neutralized their attack, winning 122-84. We will have to see if it is a one-day flower. No team has come back from 3-0 down.
The game was decided in the first half. The 34-21 score in the first quarter, with 13 points from Dončić, indicated a path that the Dallas team had not followed in all the finals. A difference of 13 points in a single quarter was something they had not achieved in any of the 12 quarters of the previous three games. And they continued on that path until halftime, which was reached with a 61-35 advantage in favor of the locals. The Slovenian had 25 points, 4 assists and 3 rebounds and together with Kyrie Irving’s 11 points, they were enough to surpass the rival score. Not even the six missed free throws—the Mavericks have a serious problem from the line—in the first half took their toll on them. A difference of 26 points at halftime was enough advantage to hold out until the end.
For anyone who had seen the first three games of the final, it was difficult to believe what was happening on the hardwood. After the break, Dončić gave way (he finished the game with 29 points in 33 minutes), but the Dallas team continued to extend the lead to 90-52, which was almost humiliating for the visitors. Before the end of the third quarter, a series of three-pointers by Boston reduced the lead to 92-60 at the end of the third quarter, but the game was still decided.
With the crowd chanting MVP, Dončić was the undoubted star of the night. He was feeling the credit of the Slovenian star a little damaged. He was criticized for a lack of defensive commitment, little concentration on free throws, a game that was too individualistic and being too attentive to the referees. In the third game he was eliminated due to six fouls and the Mavericks failed what was pointing to a historic comeback.
Dončić himself seemed crestfallen, tormented, self-critical. This Friday he freed himself. He gave his all on the field, he pressed the defense as hard as anyone, but he felt like he owned the game from the beginning, and that despite the fact that he didn’t make a single three-pointer. He chose to make shots to the basket, mid-distance shots and distribute the game and with that, plus the fouls that he forced, he added and added. The Mavericks may (almost certainly) not win the title, but the Slovenian guard has another notch on his revolver: he has already won at least one game in the finals.
Under Dončić’s leadership, the entire team was more in tune. Kyrie Irving did not stand out, but he delivered, with 26 points, 6 assists and 4 rebounds. Center Derek Lively II mastered the rebounds (12) and had a couple of spectacular streaks that got the audience out of their seats. Daniel Gafford showed his character, both in defense and attack. PJ Washington, Derrick Jones and the substitutes sharpened their aim from the three-point line.
Those from Dallas, who had not managed to reach 100 points in any of the previous three games, this time they achieved it with nine and a half minutes left in the game. The difference was so wide that Mavericks coach Jason Kidd allowed himself the luxury of giving both Dončić and Irving ample rest in the fourth quarter. And it turned out that the substitutes were also in tune. In the end, the difference in the score of this game in favor of the Dallas team was greater than that accumulated in the first three for the Celtics.
Those from Boston, meanwhile, were unrecognizable. Only Tatum kept it together in the first quarter, while Jaylen Brown, Jrue Holiday and Derrick White had regrettable success rates in their shots, which only made up for something in the final stretch of the game, with the result decided. Nadsa worked this time in Joe Mazzulla’s script: neither the transitions, nor the assists, nor the circulation of the ball nor the insistence with the triples. The referees were also less permissive with the Celtics’ aggressive defense, which was loaded with fouls.
Despite the problems they had, or perhaps thinking about reserving themselves for the next game, the Celtics decided not to use Latvian center Kristaps Porziņģis, who is a little affected by a new injury. He was theoretically available, but did not take the court. He’ll probably do it on Monday if he has to.
There are still fans who wear the Mavericks jersey with Nowitzki’s number 41 to games at the American Airlines Center, who was in the front row following the game this Friday. The fans are extremely fond of him, but the number you see everywhere now is Dončić’s 77. Even Sergio Ramos, also present this Friday in Dallas, wore it.
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