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BOSTON — A familiar atmosphere emanated from the visitors' locker room of TD Garden on Wednesday night. The Miami Heat, just as they did after Game 7 of last season's Eastern Conference finals, raucously celebrated another road victory over the Boston Celtics. Players cheered. Pacificos flowed. Music blared.
This may have been only Game 2 of a first-round NBA playoff series, but these Heat had extra fuel.
"We code red," one player could be heard shouting from the locker room following Miami's 111-101, series-tying upset. "We code redding s***."
He was referencing a comment made by former Celtics forward turned broadcaster Brian Scalabrine in the aftermath of Boston's blowout Game 1 win. Scalabrine had called Caleb Martin's undercut of Celtics star Jayson Tatum "shady," suggesting Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra used a late timeout to order a so-called "code red."
Both teams spent their days off downplaying the faux controversy, only the Heat took it to heart.
And why not? They were double-digit underdogs for the second straight game. This was supposed to be the league's most lopsided series, what with Jimmy Butler and Terry Rozier both sidelined for the eighth seeds. The talent gap against the 64-win Celtics seemed insurmountable. Oh, how the tables have turned.
Sometimes all it takes is a simple math lesson. Boston made 22 3-pointers to Miami's 12 in Game 1. Anyone who listened to the Heat repeatedly note that 30-point margin in Sunday's postgame interviews could see the adjustment coming on Wednesday: Fire at will. That they did, making a franchise playoff record 23 triples on 43 attempts (53.5%) to beat the Celtics at their own game by 33 points at the arc.
"Honestly, I thought we generated the same looks in the first game," said Tyler Herro, whose 24 points (on 6-for-11 shooting from 3) led Miami. "Guys, including myself, just didn't take them. The talk amongst the team was to be aggressive, take the open shots. If they give it to us, don't hesitate. Let it go."
"That's part of their game plan, too, they're going to leave certain guys open," added Martin, who scored 21 points and made five of his six 3-point attempts. "You play to the game plan, and you don't hesitate to shoot. I think all of our guys are very, very capable shooters, and we shoot the ball too good to hesitate."
As obvious as the game plan was, the Heat downplayed the idea that this was a simple math equation, some anomaly, that they cannot recreate the magic — that they will not beat these Celtics otherwise. This was guts, they said. Another win for Heat Culture, "the hardest working, best conditioned, most professional, unselfish, toughest, meanest, nastiest team in the NBA," as their home court reminds us.
"I think the focus was just to score more points and they score less," said Heat rookie Jaime Jaquez Jr. "That's kind of what it was. We just wanted it more. ... It just came down to toughness and will to win."
And why wouldn't they trust a culture that defied the odds last season, when they beat another heavily favored Celtics team to become the second No. 8 seed ever to reach the NBA Finals — three years after they did it as a fifth seed. This wasn't just the 3s, they will tell you; it's basketball. It's finding a way to win.
"We've been doubted a lot throughout our playoff runs," said Bam Adebayo, who did his damage inside the arc, making nine of Miami's 14 2-point field goals. "There's people saying we couldn't do a lot of stuff that we did. So, for me and my team, it's like: Why lose belief now? Backs against the wall, everybody already against us, use it as fuel. A lot of people seem to think we're going to buy into what they say, that we can't get it done, and let it seep into our locker room. It's different. Our guys believe we can win. We get in between those lines, we make it about basketball. We don't make it about schemes; we don't make it about this guy and that guy. We make it about mano a mano, get in that cage fight, and let's hoop."
Of course, there is extra juice to this rivalry, and not just from the code red controversy. Following Game 1, Celtics center Kristaps Porziņģis said of Adebayo, "I don't care about him. I care about our team and what we're trying to achieve." Adebayo was asked about those comments, absent substantive context.
"I'm not on social media, so I don't hear that noise," said Adebayo, who — in conjunction with a swarm of swiping hands around him — helped limit Porziņģis to just six points on 1-for-9 shooting. "It is what it is. He can say what he wants. We're just going to go out there in between those lines and handle business."
The two teams understand the math now. What the Celtics cannot equate is how much confidence the Heat draw from this. You could hear it from the hallways of TD Garden. They believe, even if you don't.
Daniel Weinman was crowned winner of the 2023 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event on Monday, taking home a record breaking $12.1 million in winnings. Weinman had to outlast the other 10,043 entrants to take home the prize and get his hands on his share of live poker’s largest ever prize pool – a staggering $93,399,900. As well as taking home the prize money, 35-year-old Weinman also got his hands on the WSOP Main Event bracelet. The huge bracelet contains 500 grams of 10-karat yellow gold, as well as 2,352 various precious gemstones.
Daniel Weinman won the World Series of Poker's main event world championship on Monday in Las Vegas, earning $12.1 million along the way. Playing in the tournament for a 16th year, Weinman was tops in a deep pool of 10,043 players vying for $93.39 million. His victory came after just 164 hands at the final table. "I was honestly on the fence about even coming back and playing this tournament," the 35-year-old Atlanta native told reporters afterward. Weinman's final table featured Jan-Peter Jachtmann, who landed in fourth place and took home $3 million, as well as Toby Lewis, who finished seventh and secured $1.42 million. According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, the main event's entry pool far outpaced the previous record of 8,773 set in 2006. "I've always kind of felt that poker was kind of going in a dying direction, but to see the numbers at the World Series this year has been incredible," Weinman said. "And to win this main event, it doesn't feel real. I mean, [there's] so much luck in a poker tournament. I thought I played very well." Steven Jones finished second, securing $6.5 million. And Adam Walton settled for third and a $4 million prize.
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