NBA Finals: Lakers land 17th title after 106-93 win in Game Six

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The coronation came in the second quarter.

The Los Angeles Lakers outscored the Miami Heat by 20 points in the second stanza to take a 28-point halftime lead en route to a 106-93 win that secured the franchise’s record-tying 17th NBA championship.

In his record-setting 260th playoff game, LeBron James became the first player to lead three different teams to a title, logging 28 points, 14 rebounds and 10 assists in 41 minutes on his way to a fourth ring.

He was also named Finals MVP for the fourth time unanimously. Only Michael Jordan has more with six.

“We just want our respect,” James said after accepting the trophy on the postgame broadcast. “Rob [Pelinka, the Lakers’ general manager] wants his respect.

Coach [Frank] Vogel wants his respect. Our organisation wants their respect. Lakers nation wants their respect. And I want my damn respect, too.”

(Photo: NBA Facebook)

Anthony Davis added 19 points and 15 rebounds. He is a champion for the first time. Davis owned the interior on both ends, the reason the Lakers outscored the Heat by a 34-16 first-half margin in the paint.

But it was Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Rajon Rondo who ignited the second-quarter stampede. They combined for 20 of the Lakers’ 36 points in the frame, pushing the lead to as large as 30 just before the break. Caldwell-Pope and Rondo made eight of their 10 shots in the quarter, and the game was over.

The series was over. The NBA’s bubble experiment was over. The 2019-20 season, after 355 days, was over.

The 34-year-old Rondo scored 19 points on 8-of-11 shooting off the bench to join Hall of Famer Clyde Lovellette as the only other player to win titles with the Lakers and rival Boston Celtics. Rondo was 22 years old when his Celtics beat the Lakers by a close-out record 39 points in Game 6 of the 2008 Finals.

Sunday’s game seemed headed that way until Miami took a chunk out of the deficit in the fourth quarter.

Bam Adebayo led the Heat with 25 points, 10 rebounds and five assists, his best production since returning from a neck strain that cost him Games 2 and 3 of the series. Miami’s Goran Dragic played for the first time on the plantar fascia tear he suffered in Game 1, contributing five points off the bench.

Neither resembled the players that led the Heat to the Finals, and it took two monumental performances from Jimmy Butler to take two games from the Lakers in this series. Butler played as though his 47 minutes of Game Five had taken their toll, totaling 12 points, eight assists and seven rebounds in the loss. (Yahoo Sport)

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