MIAMI—This is the matchup Chris Bosh wanted in the Eastern Conference finals.
No, he might not necessarily enjoy going head-to-head with 7-foot-2 Roy Hibbert when the Miami Heat face the Indiana Pacers, especially since the Pacers’ biggest man is arguably enjoying the best postseason run of his career to date. And it’s not because he thinks Miami will waltz past the Pacers, either.
It’s simply because this is the series that got taken away from him last season.
Bosh, the former Toronto Raptor, got hurt after playing just 16 minutes of Game 1 of the Miami–Indiana second-round series in 2012, badly straining an abdominal muscle when he reached past Hibbert for a fierce dunk. He missed the remainder of the series, which the Heat eventually won in six games on their way toward the NBA title.
“To be able to have a chance to compete against these guys, I didn’t get the chance last time,” Bosh said. “I felt last year that I could have really made an imprint on the series. And it’s funny how things come back around. I’m going to get another shot. So I’m just thankful to be healthy and be able to play and we'll see what happens.”
The irony of the play where Bosh got hurt—and where Miami’s title hopes almost evaporated—was that it was a sensational move.
He caught a pass from LeBron James near the top of the key, took one hard dribble, drove past Hibbert, outstretched his left arm and slammed the ball home while getting fouled by the Pacers’ centre. The contact was minor. The result was a fluke.
Bosh felt intense pain around his abdomen, and remained on his hands and knees on the court for several seconds after the dunk. James came over and tapped him on the backside. Mike Miller grabbed at Bosh’s arm, ready to pull him off the floor. After a few moments, Bosh slowly pulled himself to his feet, and even made the subsequent free throw for the Hibbert foul.
The pain didn’t subside, and moments later, he was gone—for the series.
Bosh returned during the East finals against the Boston Celtics, and the Heat said after that series that without him, they probably wouldn’t have even gotten a shot to face and ultimately beat the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals.
It’s big-time,” James said of having Bosh around for this series. “He’s an All-Star. Multiple All-Star. We didn’t have him last time we faced them.”
The Bosh vs. Hibbert battle might be the one that decides who represents the East in the NBA Finals.
When Hibbert scores at least 14 points, the Pacers are 11–2 in playoff games. When he doesn’t, they’re 4–11. And while Bosh might not be the bruiser inside who can overpower Hibbert—who’s three inches taller and 45 pounds bigger than the de facto Heat centre—there is a simple way that Miami might be able to slow down the Pacers’ centre.
That would be to do what the Heat like to do most with Bosh on offence, let him extend defences and exploit his jumper.
“He’s very disruptive back there,” Spoelstra said of Hibbert, who had 21 points, 12 rebounds and five blocked shots in Indiana’s second-round-clinching win over New York last Saturday. “He’s big, he’s intelligent, he changes shots, he sees so many pick-and-rolls every night, he knows how to do it without fouling. He’s, no question, the anchor of their defence.”
Hibbert is most effective defensively around the rim, so having Bosh set up on the perimeter, as he’s apt to do anyway, would serve two purposes. One, it would set him up for his preferred shot and would likely make Hibbert venture outside his comfort zone. Two, pulling Hibbert away from the rim could potentially free up some lanes for James and Wade to attack the basket.
“That’s worth a lot,” James said. “When Chris pulls anyone out of the lane, his ability to shoot the ball is a huge bonus for our team. There’s not many [centres] that can stretch to the 3-point line. I don’t know one besides Chris that can stretch to the 3-point line every night.”
Bosh said he’s eager for the challenge.
“I’m just thankful to be out there,” Bosh said.
With files from The Canadian Press