2007 NBA Finals
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The 2007 NBA Finals was the championship series of the
National Basketball Association The National Basketball Association (NBA) is a professional basketball league in North America. The league is composed of 30 teams (29 in the United States and 1 in Canada) and is one of the major professional sports leagues in the United St ...
's (NBA) 2006–07 season and conclusion of the season's playoffs. In this
best-of-seven playoff There are a number of formats used in various levels of competition in sports and games to determine an overall champion. Some of the most common are the ''single elimination'', the ''best-of-'' series, the ''total points series'' more commonly ...
series, the Western Conference champion
San Antonio Spurs The San Antonio Spurs are an American professional basketball team based in San Antonio. The Spurs compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the league's Western Conference Southwest Division. The team plays its home ...
defeated the Eastern Conference champion Cleveland Cavaliers in a 4–0 sweep. This was Cleveland's first trip to the NBA Finals in their franchise history and San Antonio's fourth.
Tony Parker William Anthony Parker Jr. (born 17 May 1982) is a French-American former professional basketball player and majority owner of ASVEL Basket in LNB Pro A. Himself the son of a basketball pro, Parker started his career at Paris Basket Racing in ...
was named the series'
MVP In team sports, a most valuable player award, abbreviated 'MVP award', is an honor typically bestowed upon an individual (or individuals, in the instance of a tie) whose individual performance is the greatest in an entire league, for a particu ...
. The series was televised on
ABC ABC are the first three letters of the Latin script known as the alphabet. ABC or abc may also refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Broadcasting * American Broadcasting Company, a commercial U.S. TV broadcaster ** Disney–ABC Television ...
under the
ESPN on ABC ESPN on ABC (formerly known as ABC Sports from 1961 to 2006) is the branding used for sports event and documentary programming televised by the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) in the United States. Officially, the broadcast network retains ...
branding, and produced the lowest television ratings in NBA Finals history until 2020 NBA Finals, 2020. This series was the last sweep in the NBA Finals until 2018 NBA Finals, 2018, which coincidentally also involved the Cavaliers on the losing end. This also was the last finals until 2019 NBA Finals, 2019 in which a team made its first trip to the NBA Finals in its franchise history.


Format

The Finals were played using the 2-3-2 format, where the first two and last two games are held at the team with home court advantage. The NBA, after experimenting in the early years, restored this original format for the Finals in 1985 NBA Finals, 1985. The other playoff series were played in the 2-2-1-1-1 format. The Playoff format#Best-of-seven playoff, best-of-seven series began on June 7, 2007, with the Western Conference champion San Antonio Spurs playing the Eastern Conference champion Cleveland Cavaliers. Because the San Antonio Spurs had a better regular season win–loss record, they had home court advantage.


Series summary


Background


2007 NBA Playoffs


Regular season series

The Cleveland Cavaliers won both games in the regular season series:


San Antonio Spurs

The previous season saw the San Antonio Spurs drop a heartbreaking seventh game at home to the rival 2006–07 Dallas Mavericks season, Dallas Mavericks in the second round. As the new season began, the Spurs saw the Mavericks rolling through their regular season, on their way to a franchise best 67 win campaign. Meanwhile, the Spurs struggled through their season through January. With the main focus lying on Dallas and the 2006–07 Phoenix Suns season, Phoenix Suns, the Spurs found themselves flying under the radar. A late-season surge resulted in a 58–24 regular season record, good enough for third seed in the Western Conference. In the playoffs, the Spurs met the 2006–07 Denver Nuggets season, Denver Nuggets and their duo of Allen Iverson and Carmelo Anthony. The Nuggets took game 1, but the Spurs reeled off 4 straight wins to take the series in five games. As San Antonio prepared to face off against the second seed Suns, the top-ranked Mavericks suffered a stunning first-round exit at the hands of the 2006–07 Golden State Warriors season, Golden State Warriors. With the Mavericks gone, the stakes of the Suns-Spurs series shot up dramatically, and it was a closely competitive and controversial series. The Suns had homecourt advantage, but that did not last past game 1. In a hotly contested battle of Western Conference heavyweights, each team tried to deliver a knockout blow. The Spurs finally landed it, but by accident. With the game in the balance
Tony Parker William Anthony Parker Jr. (born 17 May 1982) is a French-American former professional basketball player and majority owner of ASVEL Basket in LNB Pro A. Himself the son of a basketball pro, Parker started his career at Paris Basket Racing in ...
and Steve Nash collided head-to-head. A large gash opened along Nash's nose and the medical staff could not stop the bleeding. He was forced to sit out the final 45 seconds and watch the Spurs win, 111–106. Game 2 saw the Suns rebound and blow out the Spurs, 101–81. After this game, Suns center Amar'e Stoudemire called the Spurs a dirty team. Game 3 switched back to San Antonio and saw a return of physical play, with Manu Ginóbili receiving a bruised and bloodied eye and Bruce Bowen kneeing Nash in the groin. Tim Duncan led the Spurs to a 108–101 victory. Games 4 and 5 were the most controversial of the series. The Spurs, after being comfortably in control of game 4, saw their 11-point fourth-quarter lead dwindle away to a 2-point Suns lead. With 18 seconds left, Robert Horry bodychecked Nash into the scorers' table. Nash's teammates jumped to his defense; during the ensuing altercation, Stoudemire and Boris Diaw left the bench. Their action violated NBA rules, and league commissioner David Stern suspended both players for game 5. Horry was also suspended two games for his flagrant foul on Nash. In game 5, in Phoenix, the short-handed Suns jumped out early to a 16-point lead, but in a reversal of game 4, the Spurs came back in the final seconds and won the game 88–85, giving San Antonio a 3–2 series lead. The Spurs won game 6 of the series 114–106 in San Antonio, sending them to their fifth Western Conference finals since 1999. San Antonio went on to beat the 2006–07 Utah Jazz season, Utah Jazz in five games to advance to the franchise's fourth NBA Finals.


Cleveland Cavaliers

In the replay of the previous year's playoffs with the Cavaliers holding home court advantage against 2006–07 Washington Wizards season, Washington Wizards, the Cavaliers swept the Wizards after the season-ending injuries of both Gilbert Arenas and Caron Butler. In the second round of the playoffs, the Cavaliers faced the 2006–07 New Jersey Nets season, New Jersey Nets. Again, the Cavaliers had home court advantage, and battled the Nets through 6 games before winning the series. The Cavaliers advanced to the conference finals for only the third time in franchise history, and faced a familiar foe: the 2006–07 Detroit Pistons season, Detroit Pistons, the number one seed in the Eastern Conference, with their home court advantage. This was the same Detroit team that knocked the Cavaliers out of the second round the previous year. Expectations were high after a 7-game series the previous year and the two teams did not disappoint. The first two games were close and saw Cleveland fall by identical 79–76 scores. Down 0–2 in the series, the spotlight shifted back to Cleveland and LeBron James. Another hard-fought set ensued, with the Cavaliers taking the two games at home 88-82 and 91-87 respectively. Game 5 switched back to Detroit and produced one of the greatest moments in NBA history. With 6:14 to go in regulation and his team clinging to a one-point 79–78 lead, James took over the game. He scored 11 of the final 12 points to end regulation tied 91-91. In the first overtime, James scored all nine of the Cavaliers' points, ending the period tied 100-100. In the second overtime, James again scored all nine of the team's points to win, 109-107. Thus, in the last 16:14 of play, James scored 29 of the Cavaliers' last 30 points, as well as all of their last 25 points. The Cavaliers beat the Pistons at home in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals to earn the franchise's first trip to the NBA Finals. Cleveland became the third team in NBA history to win a best-of-seven NBA Conference Finals, conference finals series after trailing by 2 games.


Rosters


San Antonio Spurs


Cleveland Cavaliers


Player statistics

;San Antonio Spurs , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 0 , , 10.6 , , .364 , , .400 , , .000 , , 1.5 , , 0.5 , , 0.3 , , 0.0 , , 3.0 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 4 , , 41.7 , , .296 , , .389 , , .250 , , 5.5 , , 1.3 , , 0.5 , , 0.3 , , 6.0 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 4 , , 37.3 , , .446 , , .000 , , .625 , , 11.5 , , 3.8 , , 1.3 , , 2.3 , , 18.3 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 0 , , 11.4 , , 1.000 , , .000 , , .800 , , 2.5 , , 0.0 , , 0.3 , , 0.0 , , 4.0 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 4 , , 18.5 , , .261 , , .083 , , .667 , , 2.0 , , 0.8 , , 1.3 , , 0.0 , , 3.8 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 0 , , 29.3 , , .367 , , .435 , , .833 , , 5.8 , , 2.5 , , 1.3 , , 0.0 , , 17.8 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 0 , , 22.0 , , .333 , , .375 , , .750 , , 4.5 , , 3.3 , , 0.3 , , 1.3 , , 3.0 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 4 , , 20.8 , , .471 , , .000 , , .333 , , 4.3 , , 0.5 , , 0.3 , , 0.0 , , 4.3 , -! style="background:#FDE910;" , align="left" , , , 4 , , 4 , , 37.8 , , .568 , , .571 , , .526 , , 5.0 , , 3.3 , , 0.8 , , 0.0 , , 24.5 , - , align="left" , , , 2 , , 0 , , 0.6 , , .000 , , .000 , , .000 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 0 , , 10.1 , , .571 , , .000 , , .000 , , 1.3 , , 1.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 2.0 ;Cleveland Cavaliers , - , align="left" , , , 1 , , 0 , , 0.0 , , .000 , , .000 , , .000 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 2 , , 34.8 , , .439 , , .316 , , 1.000 , , 1.8 , , 2.5 , , 1.5 , , 0.0 , , 10.8 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 4 , , 27.5 , , .500 , , .000 , , .875 , , 8.3 , , 0.3 , , 0.3 , , 0.5 , , 12.8 , - , align="left" , , , 2 , , 2 , , 21.9 , , .100 , , .000 , , .000 , , 2.5 , , 1.0 , , 0.5 , , 0.0 , , 1.0 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 4 , , 25.8 , , .351 , , .000 , , .833 , , 10.3 , , 0.5 , , 0.5 , , 1.0 , , 7.8 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 4 , , 42.6 , , .356 , , .200 , , .690 , , 7.0 , , 6.8 , , 1.0 , , 0.5 , , 22.0 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 0 , , 16.2 , , .455 , , .556 , , 1.000 , , 1.3 , , 1.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 4.5 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 0 , , 15.3 , , .313 , , .182 , , .750 , , 2.3 , , 1.3 , , 0.8 , , 0.0 , , 3.8 , - , align="left" , , , 1 , , 0 , , 10. , , .000 , , .000 , , .000 , , 1.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 4 , , 31.7 , , .364 , , .417 , , .333 , , 2.5 , , 0.8 , , 0.5 , , 0.0 , , 9.8 , - , align="left" , , , 1 , , 0 , , 0.9 , , .000 , , .000 , , .000 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , , 0.0 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 0 , , 10.2 , , .400 , , .000 , , .500 , , 1.0 , , 2.3 , , 0.3 , , 0.3 , , 1.3 , - , align="left" , , , 4 , , 0 , , 24.5 , , .667 , , .000 , , .625 , , 5.3 , , 0.8 , , 1.3 , , 0.5 , , 7.5


Game summaries

:''All times are in Eastern Time Zone, Eastern Daylight Time (UTC−4). If the venue is located in a different time zone, the local time is also given.''


Game 1

The Cleveland Cavaliers entered the 2007 Finals as newcomers. Game 1 was their first NBA Finals game in franchise history, and the first for each of its players (other than reserve point guard Eric Snow). However, the San Antonio Spurs had been to the Finals in three of the past eight seasons, winning a championship each time. With solid performances by Tim Duncan,
Tony Parker William Anthony Parker Jr. (born 17 May 1982) is a French-American former professional basketball player and majority owner of ASVEL Basket in LNB Pro A. Himself the son of a basketball pro, Parker started his career at Paris Basket Racing in ...
, and Manu Ginóbili, the Spurs won the series opener in convincing fashion, limiting LeBron James to 14 points on 4–16 shooting.


Game 2

The Spurs took a stranglehold on momentum in Game 2. The Spurs' big three overwhelmed the Cavs and the Spurs led by as many as 29 points in the third quarter. They dominated the game during the first 3 quarters and played show-time basketball. A furious 25–6 rally by Cleveland in the final quarter wasn't enough as the Spurs took a 2–0 lead in the series.


Game 3

Rookie Daniel Gibson started Game 3 in place of the injured Larry Hughes but scored a series-low 2 points on 1-10 shooting. As a team the Cavs shot only .367, but out-rebounded the Spurs 48–41. Zydrunas Ilgauskas had a 2006–07 season high 18 rebounds. On the game's final play, LeBron James missed a potential game-tying 29 foot 3-pointer. Game 3 was the lowest scoring Finals game since 1955 NBA Finals, 1955, with Tim Duncan of the Spurs having his lowest scoring game in his NBA Finals career, with 14 points.


Game 4

San Antonio started out strong through the first three quarters, leading by as many as 11. Cleveland would stage a rally near the end of the third quarter and the first five minutes of the fourth, scoring 14 consecutive points to take its first second-half lead of the series. However, the Spurs would stage a 12–3 rally of their own to retake the lead and win the series in a 4–0 sweep. Twelve-year veteran Michael Finley was awarded the NBA championship game ball.


Broadcasting

Coverage was produced by ESPN and televised on
ABC ABC are the first three letters of the Latin script known as the alphabet. ABC or abc may also refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Broadcasting * American Broadcasting Company, a commercial U.S. TV broadcaster ** Disney–ABC Television ...
in the United States, The Sports Network, TSN in Canada, Sky Sports in the United Kingdom, Canal+ in France, Premiere (pay television network), Premiere in Germany, and more than 100 other broadcasters in over 200 countries. Play-by-play announcer Mike Breen, analysts Mark Jackson & former Houston Rockets, Rockets head-coach Jeff Van Gundy, and courtside reporters Michele Tafoya & Stuart Scott provided commentary and analysis for the North American market. The radio coverage on ESPN Radio features play-by-play man Mike Tirico and color analysts Dr. Jack Ramsay and Hubie Brown. This was the first of a record 14 NBA Finals assignments for the team of Breen, Jackson and Van Gundy. With the exception of the and Finals (Jackson was head coach of the Golden State Warriors during this period), the trio would call every NBA Finals thereafter. (In the 2022 NBA Finals, Mark Jones (sportscaster), Mark Jones alongside Mark Jackson called Game 1 of the series with Breen and Van Gundy out due to COVID-19 protocols; Van Gundy returned in Game 2 followed by Breen in Game 3.) The featured song, aired throughout the playoffs, was The Pussycat Dolls "Right Now (1962 song), Right Now." Another song featured in the 2007 NBA Finals series, "It Ends Tonight" by The All-American Rejects, was aired at the end of the pre-game promo for Game 4.


Ratings

According to ESPN, the NBA Finals series was a television bust in the United States. San Antonio's four-game sweep of Cleveland finished with a record-low 6.2 television rating and 11 share on ABC, Nielsen Media Research said on June 15, 2007. That was down 27 percent from the 8.5/15 for Miami Heat, Miami's six-game victory over Dallas Mavericks, Dallas from 2006 NBA Finals, the previous year and 5 percent under the previous low, a 6.5/12 for San Antonio's six-game win over New Jersey Nets, New Jersey in . San Antonio's series-winning 83-82 victory on Thursday night got a 6.5/12, down 17 percent from the 7.8/14 for Game 4 in 2006. Despite having the lowest ratings of any NBA championship series, game two of the 2003 series between San Antonio and New Jersey remains the lowest-rated game of all time in the history of the NBA Finals.


Aftermath

The Spurs won 56 games in the succeeding 2007–08 NBA season, 2007–08 season, but relinquished the Southwest Division (NBA), Southwest Division title to the New Orleans Hornets due to a tie-breaker. The Spurs had the last laugh, though, defeating the Hornets in seven games. But their chance of defending their title was denied by the Los Angeles Lakers in five games of the conference finals. After that, age and injury took its toll on the Spurs, as they proceeded to win only a single playoff series in three years (2010 NBA Playoffs, 2010, vs. Dallas Mavericks, Dallas 4–2 of the first round), before getting upset by the Memphis Grizzlies in the first round of the 2011 NBA Playoffs despite finishing with 61 wins. The Spurs then retooled their roster, after which they appeared in three consecutive conference finals, beginning in 2012 NBA Playoffs, 2012, before making the NBA Finals in and against James and the Miami Heat. The Spurs split the two Finals meetings against the Heat. The Cavaliers won 45 games in the 2007–08 season, despite early-season contract issues involving center Anderson Varejão and guard Sasha Pavlović, and a mid-season trade for Ben Wallace (basketball), Ben Wallace. They 2008 NBA Playoffs, fell in the second round to the eventual NBA champions Boston Celtics in seven games, after a hard-fought duel involving LeBron James and Paul Pierce. The Cavaliers would earn the league's best record for the next two years (66 and 61 wins, respectively) and boast the NBA Most Valuable Player Award, NBA's MVP in James. However, they were unable to win it all, losing to the Orlando Magic in six games of the 2009 NBA Playoffs, 2009 Eastern Conference Finals and the Celtics in six games of the 2010 NBA Playoffs, 2010 Eastern Conference Semifinals (allowing the Lakers to win the Finals twice against the Magic and Celtics). The latter playoff defeat would cost head coach Mike Brown his job, though he was later re-hired (and fired again) in the 2013–14 NBA season. After that season, as a free agent, James left for the Miami Heat and helped them to four successive NBA Finals appearances, winning in and 2013, while the Cavaliers sunk to an Eastern Conference-low 19 wins in the 2010–11 NBA season, which included a List of National Basketball Association longest losing streaks, 26-game losing streak. The Cavaliers then appeared in the NBA draft lottery four consecutive times, earning the top pick in three of them. Those three top picks became Kyrie Irving (2011 NBA draft, 2011), Anthony Bennett (basketball), Anthony Bennett (2013 NBA draft, 2013) and Andrew Wiggins (2014 NBA draft, 2014) (Bennett and Wiggins were later traded to Minnesota for Kevin Love). In July 2014, James announced his return to the Cavaliers after the hiring of coach David Blatt, and they reached the 2015 NBA Playoffs#Conference Finals: (1) Atlanta Hawks vs. (2) Cleveland Cavaliers, conference finals against the Atlanta Hawks with a 4-0 sweep before falling to the Golden State Warriors in the 2015 NBA Finals, Finals 4-2. The following season, the Cavaliers returned to the Finals in a rematch against the Golden State Warriors and won the 2016 NBA Finals, Finals over the Warriors 4-3 with LeBron James winning the Bill Russell NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award, Finals MVP.


References


External links

* {{NBA on ESPN Radio National Basketball Association Finals 2006–07 NBA season, Finals 2000s in Cleveland 21st century in San Antonio 2007 in sports in Ohio 2007 in sports in Texas National Basketball Association controversies Sports competitions in San Antonio Sports competitions in Cleveland San Antonio Spurs games, NBA Cleveland Cavaliers games, NBA June 2007 sports events in the United States