2005–06 Miami Heat season

Professional basketball team season (won NBA championship) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2005–06 Miami Heat season was the 18th National Basketball Association season for the Miami Heat basketball franchise. During the offseason, the Heat acquired Jason Williams and James Posey from the Memphis Grizzlies, and All-Star forward Antoine Walker from the Boston Celtics, while signing free agent All-Star point guard Gary Payton. Early into the season, after a 11–10 start to the year, head coach Stan Van Gundy resigned, citing the desire to spend more time with his family, and Pat Riley resumed coaching the Heat. The Heat went 41–20 the rest of the way, finishing with a 52–30 record, good enough for first place in the Southeast Division and second place in the Eastern Conference overall. Dwyane Wade and Shaquille O'Neal were both selected for the 2006 NBA All-Star Game.

Head coach
PresidentPat Riley
Quick facts Miami Heat season, Head coach ...
2005–06 Miami Heat season
NBA champions
Conference champions
Division champions
Head coach
PresidentPat Riley
General managerRandy Pfund
OwnerMicky Arison
ArenaAmerican Airlines Arena
Results
Record5230 (.634)
PlaceDivision: 1st (Southeast)
Conference: 2nd (Eastern)
Playoff finishNBA champions
(Defeated Mavericks 4–2)

Stats at Basketball Reference
Local media
TelevisionWBFS-TV
WFOR-TV
Sun Sports
RadioWIOD
< 2004–05 2006–07 >
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In the first round of the playoffs, the Heat defeated the Chicago Bulls in six games, and the New Jersey Nets in five games in the semi-finals to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals against the Detroit Pistons in a rematch of last year's playoffs. After splitting the first two games of the series, the Heat defeated the Pistons in six games to advance to the NBA Finals for the first time in franchise history, where they faced the Dallas Mavericks. After losing the first two games of the series, the Heat recovered to win the next four games and the first ever championship in franchise history. The team was nicknamed "15 Strong".

Offseason

  • In August 2005, Shaquille O'Neal signed a 5-year-extension with the Heat for $100 million. Supporters applauded O'Neal's willingness to take what amounted to a pay cut, and the Heat's decision to secure O'Neal's services for the long term. They contend that O'Neal was worth more than $20 million per year, particularly given that considerably less valuable players earn almost the same amount. Critics, however, questioned the wisdom of the move, characterizing it as overpaying an aging and often injured player.
  • On August 2, 2005, the Heat were involved in one of the largest trades in NBA history. It was a five-team trade which included the Heat, the New Orleans Hornets, the Memphis Grizzlies, the Boston Celtics, and the Utah Jazz. The Heat traded Rasual Butler to the Hornets, Eddie Jones to the Grizzlies, and Albert Miralles, Qyntel Woods, a 2006 2nd round draft pick, and a 2008 2nd round draft pick to the Celtics. In return, the Heat received Antoine Walker from the Celtics, Andre Emmett, James Posey, and Jason Williams from the Grizzlies, and Roberto Dueñas from the Hornets. Walker would be a reliable bench player during the season. Posey and Williams would be starters at small forward and point guard, respectively. Emmett would be waived on October 31, while Dueñas would not sign with the team.[1]
Jason Williams would be the starting point guard on the Heat.

On the same day, the Heat would sign Kasib Powell. He would sign with the Chicago Bulls on September 29, and the Bulls waived him on November 2.[2] Powell may not have played on the Heat during the season, but would join the team two seasons later.

NBA draft

More information Round, Pick ...
Round Pick Player Position Nationality School/Club team
1 29 Wayne Simien Forward  United States Kansas
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Roster

More information Players, Coaches ...
2005–06 Miami Heat roster
Players Coaches
Pos. No. Player Height Weight DOB From
G 5 Derek Anderson 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1974-07-18 Kentucky
G/F 49 Shandon Anderson 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 208 lb (94 kg) 1973-12-31 Georgia
C 30 Earl Barron 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 250 lb (113 kg) 1981-08-14 Memphis
C 51 Michael Doleac 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 262 lb (119 kg) 1977-06-15 Utah
F 40 Udonis Haslem 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 235 lb (107 kg) 1980-06-09 Florida
F 24 Jason Kapono 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1981-02-04 UCLA
C 33 Alonzo Mourning 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 240 lb (109 kg) 1970-02-08 Georgetown
C 32 Shaquille O'Neal 7 ft 1 in (2.16 m) 325 lb (147 kg) 1972-03-06 LSU
G 20 Gary Payton 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 1968-07-23 Oregon State
F 42 James Posey 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 217 lb (98 kg) 1977-01-13 Xavier
F 25 Wayne Simien 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 260 lb (118 kg) 1983-03-09 Kansas
G 3 Dwyane Wade 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1982-01-17 Marquette
F 8 Antoine Walker 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 265 lb (120 kg) 1976-08-12 Kentucky
G 55 Jason Williams 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 1975-11-18 Florida
F 1 Dorell Wright 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 1985-12-02 South Kent (HS)
Head coach
Assistant(s)

Legend
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • Injured Injured

Roster
Updated: February 23, 2006

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Regular season

  • In the second game of the 2005–06 season, O'Neal injured his right ankle and subsequently missed the following 18 games. Many critics stated that Heat coach Pat Riley correctly managed O'Neal during the rest of the season, limiting his minutes to a career low. Riley felt doing so would allow O'Neal to be healthier and fresher come playoff time. Although O'Neal averaged career (or near-career) lows in points, rebounds, and blocks, he said in an interview "Stats don't matter. I care about winning, not stats. If I score 0 points and we win I'm happy. If I score 50, 60 points, break the records, and we lose, I'm pissed off. 'Cause I knew I did something wrong. I'll have a hell of a season if I win the championship and average 20 points a game." During the 2005–06 season, the Heat recorded only a .500 record without O'Neal in the line-up.
  • During the 2005 off-season, it was widely speculated Pat Riley was attempting to run Van Gundy out of his coaching job and take over the job himself, as the team was in a position to contend for the championship.[3] Van Gundy would resign from his position as head coach on December 12, 2005, just 21 games into the season, citing a need to spend more time with his family. Riley replaced him as head coach, and led Miami to their first championship that same season.

In Shaquille O'Neal's book, "Shaq Uncut: My Story", O'Neal responded to allegations of being a "coach killer" and that he forced Van Gundy out of Miami by stating: "Stan got fired because Pat (Riley) wanted to take over, not because I wanted him out. I had no control over it — not a smidgen of control. We all kind of knew it was coming because Pat and Stan were always arguing. Pat would come down and tell Stan how to do something and Stan would want to do it his own way, and that was a fine game plan if you wanted to get yourself fired."[4]

  • On April 11, 2006, Shaquille O'Neal recorded his second career triple-double against the Toronto Raptors with 15 points, 11 rebounds and a career high 10 assists.

Standings

More information W, L ...
W L PCT GB Home Road Div
y-Miami Heat 5230.634-31–1021–2013–3
x-Washington Wizards 4240.5121027–1415–268–8
Orlando Magic 3646.4391626–1510–319–7
Charlotte Bobcats 2656.3172617–249–325–11
Atlanta Hawks 2656.3172618–238–335–11
Close

Game log

More information 2005–06 game log Total: 52–30 (Home: 31–10; Road: 21–20), Game ...
2005–06 game log
Total: 52–30 (Home: 31–10; Road: 21–20)
November: 9–6 (home: 7–2; road: 2–4)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
1 November 2 @ Memphis W 97–78 Antoine Walker (25) Antoine Walker (16) Dwyane Wade (6) FedEx Forum
18,119
1–0
2 November 3 Indiana L 102–105 Dwyane Wade (31) Udonis Haslem (8) Dwyane Wade (10) American Airlines Arena
20,128
1-1
3 November 5 @ Milwaukee L 100–105 Dwyane Wade (21) Alonzo Mourning (12) Dwyane Wade (9) Bradley Center
18,717
1–2
4 November 7 New Jersey W 90–89 Dwyane Wade (23) Alonzo Mourning (11) Dwyane Wade (6) American Airlines Arena
19,600
2-2
5 November 9 @ Indiana L 90–95 Dwyane Wade (29) Wade, Haslem (11) Dwyane Wade (6) Conseco Fieldhouse
17,586
2–3
6 November 10 Houston W 88–84 Dwyane Wade (25) Alonzo Mourning (9) Dwyane Wade (7) American Airlines Arena
19,600
3-3
7 November 12 Charlotte W 108–99 Jason Williams (22) Udonis Haslem (11) Williams, Wade (7) American Airlines Arena
19,600
4–3
8 November 15 New Orleans/Oklahoma City W 109–102 (OT) Dwyane Wade (25) Alonzo Mourning (11) Dwyane Wade (10) American Airlines Arena
19,600
5–3
9 November 18 Philadelphia W 106–96 Dwyane Wade (32) Udonis Haslem (12) Dwyane Wade (10) American Airlines Arena
20,068
6–3
10 November 20 @ Toronto L 94–107 Dwyane Wade (33) Dwyane Wade (8) Dwyane Wade (9) Air Canada Centre
17,594
6–4
11 November 23 Portland W 100–79 Dwyane Wade (19) Dwyane Wade (11) three players tied (4) American Airlines Arena
19,600
7–4
12 November 25 Dallas L 90–103 Jason Williams (24) Udonis Haslem (8) Jason Williams (5) American Airlines Arena
20,246
7–5
13 November 26 @ Orlando L 77–80 Dwyane Wade (21) Alonzo Mourning (21) Dwyane Wade (4) TD Waterhouse Centre
16,619
7–6
14 November 28 New York W 107–94 Dwyane Wade (33) Udonis Haslem (12) Jason Williams (6) American Airlines Arena
19,894
8–6
15 November 30 @ Atlanta W 96–74 Jason Williams (21) Alonzo Mourning (12) Jason Williams (9) Philips Arena
16,029
9–6
December: 9–7 (home: 4–2; road: 5–5)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
16 December 2 @ Sacramento W 98–87 Dwyane Wade (27) Udonis Haslem (8) Jason Williams (8) ARCO Arena
17,317
10–6
17 December 3 @ Denver L 99–101 Dwyane Wade (32) James Posey (10) Dwyane Wade (6) Pepsi Center
18,196
10–7
18 December 5 @ L.A. Clippers L 89–99 Dwyane Wade (29) Alonzo Mourning (12) Jason Williams (9) Staples Center
19,060
10–8
19 December 7 @ San Antonio L 84–98 Dwyane Wade (31) Alonzo Mourning (7) Dwyane Wade (10) SBC Center
18,797
10–9
20 December 9 Denver L 92–100 Dwyane Wade (37) Dwyane Wade (10) Antoine Walker (5) American Airlines Arena
19,896
10-10
21 December 11 Washington W 104–101 (OT) Dwyane Wade (41) Shaquille O'Neal (11) Dwyane Wade (8) American Airlines Arena
19,600
11–10
22 December 13 @ Chicago W 100–97 Shaquille O'Neal (30) Alonzo Mourning (12) Dwyane Wade (11) United Center
19,129
12–10
23 December 14 @ Milwaukee W 100–83 Dwyane Wade (27) Udonis Haslem (10) Dwyane Wade (7) Bradley Center
16,287
13–10
24 December 16 @ Philadelphia W 112–105 Dwyane Wade (32) Shaquille O'Neal (13) Gary Payton (5) Wachovia Center
20,652
14–10
25 December 17 @ Cleveland L 107–115 Dwyane Wade (33) Shaquille O'Neal (6) Wade, Walker (7) Quicken Loans Arena
20,562
14–11
26 December 20 Atlanta W 111–92 Shaquille O'Neal (28) Shaquille O'Neal (10) Gary Payton (8) American Airlines Arena
20,294
15–11
27 December 23 New Jersey L 88–95 Shaquille O'Neal (24) Shaquille O'Neal (14) Dwyane Wade (7) American Airlines Arena
20,065
15–12
28 December 25 L.A. Lakers W 97–92 Gary Payton (21) Shaquille O'Neal (17) Dwyane Wade (5) American Airlines Arena
20,277
16–12
29 December 27 Milwaukee W 109–98 Dwyane Wade (35) Shaquille O'Neal (8) Wade, Williams (7) American Airlines Arena
20,270
17–12
30 December 29 @ Detroit L 101–106 Dwyane Wade (33) Udonis Haslem (10) Dwyane Wade (9) The Palace of Auburn Hills
22,076
17–13
31 December 30 @ Washington W 128–113 Dwyane Wade (34) Antoine Walker (13) Gary Payton (7) MCI Center
20,173
18–13
January: 10–5 (home: 4–2; road: 6–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
32 January 1 Minnesota W 97–70 Dwyane Wade (19) Alonzo Mourning (10) Dwyane Wade (9) American Airlines Arena
20,274
19–13
33 January 4 @ New Orleans/Oklahoma City L 92–107 O'Neal, Wade (19) Dwyane Wade (10) Dwyane Wade (10) Ford Center
19,326
19–14
34 January 6 @ Phoenix L 93–111 Antoine Walker (22) Shaquille O'Neal (13) Gerald Fitch (6) US Airways Center
18,422
19–15
35 January 8 @ Portland W 118–89 Dwyane Wade (31) James Posey (9) Jason Williams (8) Rose Garden
18,032
20–15
36 January 11 @ Golden State W 110–96 Dwyane Wade (32) Haslem, O'Neal (10) Dwyane Wade (11) The Arena in Oakland
20,075
21–15
37 January 13 @ Seattle W 117–104 Posey, Williams (19) Dwyane Wade (10) Dwyane Wade (14) KeyArena
17,072
22–15
38 January 14 @ Utah W 100–94 Dwyane Wade (31) Shaquille O'Neal (14) Dwyane Wade (8) Delta Center
19,911
23–15
39 January 16 @ L.A. Lakers L 92–100 Dwyane Wade (34) Udonis Haslem (12) Dwyane Wade (7) Staples Center
18,997
23–16
40 January 20 San Antonio L 94–101 Dwyane Wade (36) Posey, Walker (7) Haslem, Williams (3) American Airlines Arena
20,287
23–17
41 January 22 Sacramento W 119–99 Shaquille O'Neal (27) three players tied (6) Jason Williams (11) American Airlines Arena
20,071
24–17
42 January 24 Memphis W 94–82 Dwyane Wade (25) Shaquille O'Neal (15) Jason Williams (6) American Airlines Arena
19,600
25–17
43 January 26 Phoenix L 98–107 Dwyane Wade (25) Shaquille O'Neal (12) Gary Payton (8) American Airlines Arena
20,025
25–18
44 January 27 @ Charlotte W 91–85 Shaquille O'Neal (23) Gerald Fitch (8) Gary Payton (8) Charlotte Bobcats Arena
19,026
26–18
45 January 29 @ Houston W 101–95 Dwyane Wade (32) Shaquille O'Neal (14) Dwyane Wade (9) Toyota Center
18,199
27–18
46 January 30 L.A. Clippers W 118–114 Dwyane Wade (28) Shaquille O'Neal (8) Dwyane Wade (11) American Airlines Arena
19,600
28–18
February: 8–2 (home: 6–0; road: 2–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
47 February 2 Cleveland W 101–73 Dwyane Wade (24) James Posey (10) Jason Williams (8) American Airlines Arena
20,168
29–18
48 February 4 @ New Jersey L 92–105 Dwyane Wade (31) Posey, O'Neal (7) Jason Williams (7) Continental Airlines Arena
19,268
29–19
49 February 6 Boston W 114–98 Dwyane Wade (34) Dwyane Wade (8) Dwyane Wade (8) American Airlines Arena
19,986
30–19
50 February 9 @ Dallas L 76–112 Shaquille O'Neal (23) Shaquille O'Neal (8) Dwyane Wade (8) American Airlines Center
20,273
30–20
51 February 12 Detroit W 100–98 Dwyane Wade (37) Wade, O'Neal (8) Jason Williams (5) American Airlines Arena
20,289
31–20
52 February 14 Orlando W 107–93 Dwyane Wade (38) Udonis Haslem (14) Jason Williams (4) American Airlines Arena
19,600
32–20
53 February 15 @ Orlando W 110–100 Dwyane Wade (36) Udonis Haslem (12) Dwyane Wade (9) TD Waterhouse Centre
17,283
33–20
All-Star Break
54 February 22 @ New York W 103–83 Williams, Wade (24) Udonis Haslem (8) Williams, Wade (5) Madison Square Garden
19,763
34–20
55 February 25 Seattle W 115–106 Shaquille O'Neal (31) three players tied (9) Dwyane Wade (11) American Airlines Arena
20,255
35–20
56 February 27 Toronto W 101–94 Dwyane Wade (32) Shaquille O'Neal (11) Dwyane Wade (6) American Airlines Arena
19,600
36–20
March: 12–3 (home: 7–1; road: 5–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
57 March 1 @ Boston W 103–96 Dwyane Wade (24) Shaquille O'Neal (9) Jason Williams (9) TD Banknorth Garden
18,624
37–20
58 March 4 Atlanta W 95–93 Shaquille O'Neal (21) Shaquille O'Neal (8) Jason Williams (7) American Airlines Arena
20,023
38–20
59 March 6 @ Charlotte W 106–105 (OT) Shaquille O'Neal (35) Udonis Haslem (13) Jason Williams (5) Charlotte Bobcats Arena
17,165
39–20
60 March 8 Washington W 118–112 Dwyane Wade (40) Shaquille O'Neal (11) Wade, Williams (5) American Airlines Arena
19,600
40–20
61 March 10 Golden State L 106–111 Dwyane Wade (42) Shaquille O'Neal (15) Dwyane Wade (6) American Airlines Arena
19,600
40–21
62 March 12 Cleveland W 98–92 Dwyane Wade (35) Dwyane Wade (9) Dwyane Wade (7) American Airlines Arena
20,268
41–21
63 March 14 Utah W 121–83 Dwyane Wade (25) three players tied (7) Jason Williams (7) American Airlines Arena
19,600
42–21
64 March 16 Boston W 107–104 Dwyane Wade (30) Haslem, O'Neal (11) Dwyane Wade (6) American Airlines Arena
20,188
43–21
65 March 18 @ Chicago W 85–84 Dwyane Wade (15) Udonis Haslem (11) Jason Williams (5) United Center
22,439
44–21
66 March 19 @ New York W 111–100 Dwyane Wade (30) Udonis Haslem (7) Wade, Williams (9) Madison Square Garden
19,763
45–21
67 March 21 @ Minnesota L 96–100 Dwyane Wade (35) Alonzo Mourning (12) Dwyane Wade (8) American Airlines Arena
17,927
45–22
68 March 22 @ Detroit L 73–82 Shaquille O'Neal (27) Udonis Haslem (12) Dwyane Wade (9) The Palace of Auburn Hills
22,076
45–23
69 March 24 Charlotte W 114–93 Dwyane Wade (24) Shaquille O'Neal (9) Dwyane Wade (8) American Airlines Arena
20,146
46–23
70 March 27 Indiana W 96–91 Shaquille O'Neal (23) Shaquille O'Neal (11) Dwyane Wade (5) American Airlines Arena
20,204
47–23
71 March 29 @ Toronto W 98–94 Dwyane Wade (37) Udonis Haslem (13) Shandon Anderson (4) Air Canada Centre
19,973
48–23
April: 4–7 (home: 3–3; road: 1–4)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
72 April 1 @ Cleveland L 99–106 Dwyane Wade (44) Udonis Haslem (11) Dwyane Wade (9) Quicken Loans Arena
20,562
48–24
73 April 2 @ New Jersey L 78–90 Dwyane Wade (32) Udonis Haslem (11) Gary Payton (7) Continental Airlines Arena
18,928
48–25
74 April 4 Milwaukee W 115–89 Shaquille O'Neal (24) Shaquille O'Neal (10) Dwyane Wade (8) American Airlines Arena
19,600
49–25
75 April 6 Detroit L 82–95 Dwyane Wade (29) Dwyane Wade (9) Dwyane Wade (6) American Airlines Arena
20,290
49–26
76 April 8 @ Washington W 99–86 Shaquille O'Neal (27) Udonis Haslem (14) Payton, Wade (8) MCI Center
20,173
50–26
77 April 9 Orlando L 84–93 Dwyane Wade (27) Shaquille O'Neal (9) Dwyane Wade (7) American Airlines Arena
20,021
50–27
78 April 11 Toronto W 106–97 Antoine Walker (32) Shaquille O'Neal (11) Shaquille O'Neal (10) American Airlines Arena
19,600
51–27
79 April 14 Philadelphia W 104–85 Dwyane Wade (25) Udonis Haslem (14) Dwyane Wade (8) American Airlines Arena
20,268
52–27
80 April 16 Chicago L 93–117 Antoine Walker (22) Shaquille O'Neal (6) D. Anderson, Williams (3) American Airlines Arena
20,248
52–28
81 April 18 @ Atlanta L 100–103 Dorell Wright (19) Michael Doleac (8) Jason Kapono (6) Philips Arena
19,718
52–29
82 April 19 @ Boston L 78–85 Dorell Wright (20) Udonis Haslem (8) Derek Anderson (4) TD Banknorth Garden
18,624
52–30
2005–06 schedule
Close

Playoffs

More information 2006 playoff game log, Game ...
2006 playoff game log
First Round: 4–2 (home: 3–0; road: 1–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 April 22 Chicago W 111–106 Dwyane Wade (30) Shaquille O'Neal (16) Dwyane Wade (11) American Airlines Arena
20,288
1–0
2 April 24 Chicago W 115–108 Williams, O'Neal (22) Antoine Walker (10) Dwyane Wade (7) American Airlines Arena
20,214
2–0
3 April 27 @ Chicago L 90–109 Dwyane Wade (26) Udonis Haslem (10) Wade, Williams (4) United Center
22,133
2–1
4 April 30 @ Chicago L 87–93 Antoine Walker (21) Udonis Haslem (9) Dwyane Wade (10) United Center
22,361
2–2
5 May 2 Chicago W 92–78 Dwyane Wade (28) Shaquille O'Neal (10) Dwyane Wade (5) American Airlines Arena
20,287
3–2
6 May 4 @ Chicago W 113–96 Shaquille O'Neal (30) Shaquille O'Neal (20) Dwyane Wade (6) United Center
22,584
4–2
Conference Semifinals: 4–1 (home: 2–1; road: 2–0)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 May 8 New Jersey L 88–100 Dwyane Wade (25) Shaquille O'Neal (10) Wade, Williams (3) American Airlines Arena
20,208
0–1
2 May 10 New Jersey W 111–89 Dwyane Wade (31) Udonis Haslem (10) Dwyane Wade (6) American Airlines Arena
20,227
1–1
3 May 12 @ New Jersey W 103–92 Dwyane Wade (30) James Posey (10) Dwyane Wade (10) Continental Airlines Arena
20,102
2–1
4 May 14 @ New Jersey W 102–92 Dwyane Wade (31) Udonis Haslem (11) Dwyane Wade (8) Continental Airlines Arena
19,474
3–1
5 May 16 New Jersey W 106–105 Antoine Walker (23) Udonis Haslem (10) Dwyane Wade (6) American Airlines Arena
20,255
4–1
Conference Finals: 4–2 (home: 3–0; road: 1–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 May 23 @ Detroit W 91–86 Dwyane Wade (25) Udonis Haslem (9) Dwyane Wade (5) The Palace of Auburn Hills
22,076
1–0
2 May 25 @ Detroit L 88–92 Dwyane Wade (32) Shaquille O'Neal (17) Dwyane Wade (5) The Palace of Auburn Hills
22,076
1–1
3 May 27 Detroit W 98–83 Dwyane Wade (35) Shaquille O'Neal (12) Walker, Wade (4) American Airlines Arena
20,245
2–1
4 May 29 Detroit W 89–78 Dwyane Wade (31) Shaquille O'Neal (9) Dwyane Wade (5) American Airlines Arena
20,248
3–1
5 May 31 @ Detroit L 78–91 Dwyane Wade (23) Udonis Haslem (10) Jason Williams (6) The Palace of Auburn Hills
22,076
3–2
6 June 2 Detroit W 95–78 Shaquille O'Neal (28) Shaquille O'Neal (16) Dwyane Wade (10) American Airlines Arena
20,258
4–2
NBA Finals: 4–2 (home: 3–0; road: 1–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 June 8 @ Dallas L 80–90 Dwyane Wade (28) Udonis Haslem (9) Dwyane Wade (6) American Airlines Center
20,475
0–1
2 June 11 @ Dallas L 85–99 Dwyane Wade (23) Dwyane Wade (8) Payton, Williams (4) American Airlines Center
20,459
0–2
3 June 13 Dallas W 98–96 Dwyane Wade (42) Dwyane Wade (13) Shaquille O'Neal (5) American Airlines Arena
20,145
1–2
4 June 15 Dallas W 98–74 Dwyane Wade (36) Shaquille O'Neal (13) Jason Williams (6) American Airlines Arena
20,145
2–2
5 June 18 Dallas W 101–100 (OT) Dwyane Wade (43) Shaquille O'Neal (12) Wade, Williams (4) American Airlines Arena
20,145
3–2
6 June 20 @ Dallas W 95–92 Dwyane Wade (36) Shaquille O'Neal (12) Jason Williams (7) American Airlines Center
20,522
4–2
2006 schedule
Close

2006 NBA Finals

Game One

Dallas' Jason Terry scored a playoff-high 32 points as the Mavericks overcame a 31–23 deficit at the end of the first quarter.

June 8
21:00 ET
Miami Heat 80, Dallas Mavericks 90
Scoring by quarter: 31–23, 13–23, 24–24, 12–20
Pts: Dwyane Wade 28
Rebs: Udonis Haslem 8
Asts: Dwyane Wade 6
Pts: Jason Terry 32
Rebs: Josh Howard 12
Asts: Nowitzki, Howard 4 each
Dallas leads series, 1–0.

Game Two

Dirk Nowitzki had a stellar 26-point-16 rebound performance, and the Mavericks cruised past the Heat to take a 2–0 series lead.

June 11
21:00 ET
Miami Heat 85, Dallas Mavericks 99
Scoring by quarter: 17–18, 17–32, 24–32, 27–17
Pts: Dwyane Wade 23
Rebs: Dwyane Wade 8
Asts: Payton, Williams 4 each
Pts: Dirk Nowitzki 26
Rebs: Dirk Nowitzki 16
Asts: Jason Terry 9
Dallas leads series, 2–0.

Game Three

Led by Dwyane Wade's 42 points and 13 rebounds, the Heat rallied from a 13-point deficit with six minutes to go in the fourth quarter. The momentum-changing comeback was capped by a Gary Payton field goal from just inside the three-point line with 9.3 seconds left.

June 13
21:00 ET
Dallas Mavericks 96, Miami Heat 98
Scoring by quarter: 21–29, 22–23, 34–16, 19–30
Pts: Dirk Nowitzki 30
Rebs: Erick Dampier 9
Asts: Jason Terry 5
Pts: Dwyane Wade 42
Rebs: Dwyane Wade 13
Asts: Shaquille O'Neal 5
Dallas leads series, 2–1.

Game Four

Dwyane Wade shined again for the Heat with 36 points, and Miami held Dallas to just seven points in the fourth quarter en route to a series-tying, blowout victory. The Mavericks' low-scoring fourth quarter was the lowest ever by any team during the NBA Finals. Jerry Stackhouse caught Shaquille O'Neal with a flagrant foul that resulted in his suspension for Game 5.

June 15
21:00 ET
Dallas Mavericks 74, Miami Heat 98
Scoring by quarter: 25–30, 19–24, 23–24, 7–20
Pts: Jason Terry 17
Rebs: Dirk Nowitzki 9
Asts: Jerry Stackhouse 4
Pts: Dwyane Wade 36
Rebs: Shaquille O'Neal 13
Asts: Jason Williams 6
Miami ties series, 2–2.
AmericanAirlines Arena, Miami
Attendance: 20,145
Referees: Dick Bavetta, Mike Callahan, Bernie Fryer

Game Five

Making a strong case for NBA Finals MVP, Wade was the star yet again with 43 points shooting as many free throws as all the Mavericks combined, leading the Heat to their third straight win over Dallas after being down 0–2 in the series. After a controversial play in which Mavericks owner Mark Cuban thought Wade committed a backcourt violation, Wade hit the game-winning free throws with 1.9 seconds left, and also made the shot that sent the game into overtime. He set an NBA Finals record for most made free-throws in a game with 21. The NBA, upon further review of the play, deemed that the officials made the correct call, and that there was no backcourt violation committed.[5]

After the game, Dirk Nowitzki kicked a ball into the stands and Mavericks owner Mark Cuban caused many "acts of misconduct" resulting in both of them being fined $5,000 and $250,000 respectively.[6]

June 18
21:00 ET
Dallas Mavericks 100, Miami Heat 101 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 21–24, 30–19, 20–27, 22–23, Overtime: 7–8
Pts: Jason Terry 35
Rebs: Josh Howard 10
Asts: Marquis Daniels 4
Pts: Dwyane Wade 43
Rebs: Shaquille O'Neal 12
Asts: Wade, Williams 4 each
Miami leads series, 3–2.

Game Six

Behind Dwyane Wade's 36 points, Miami edged Dallas to win their first championship in franchise history. Averaging 34.7 points per game in the championship series, Wade was named NBA Finals MVP (Most Valuable Player).

June 20
21:00 ET
Miami Heat 95, Dallas Mavericks 92
Scoring by quarter: 23–30, 26–18, 22–20, 24–24
Pts: Dwyane Wade 36
Rebs: Shaquille O'Neal 12
Asts: Jason Williams 7
Pts: Dirk Nowitzki 29
Rebs: Dirk Nowitzki 12
Asts: Jason Terry 5
Miami wins series, 4–2.

Player statistics

Regular season

More information Player, POS ...
Player POS GP GS MP REB AST STL BLK PTS MPG RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
Antoine WalkerPF 82192,19942116647301,00026.85.12.0.6.412.2
Udonis HaslemPF 81802,49163495501775730.87.81.2.6.29.3
Gary PaytonPG 81252,305233257711062628.52.93.2.9.17.7
Dwyane WadeSG 75752,892430503146582,04038.65.76.71.9.827.2
James PoseySF 67631,91431989542048328.64.81.3.8.37.2
Alonzo MourningC 65201,302359111317350920.05.5.2.22.77.8
Shaquille O'NealC 59581,806541113231041,18130.69.21.9.41.820.0
Jason WilliamsPG 59561,87413928753572831.82.44.9.9.112.3
Jason KaponoSF 51266571377320713.01.4.7.1.14.1
Shandon AndersonSF 481638813017612613.31.7.6.4.12.6
Wayne SimienPF 4324148871311469.62.0.2.3.03.4
Michael DoleacC 3133718581079812.02.7.3.3.23.2
Derek AndersonSG 23346560488213320.22.62.1.3.15.8
Dorell WrightSF 20213232831586.61.6.4.2.12.9
Gerald FitchPG 1812393033758413.31.71.8.4.34.7
Earl BarronC 804510000135.61.3.0.0.01.6
Matt WalshSG 203000021.5.0.0.0.01.0
Close
  • Denotes player spent time with another team in the season. Stats reflect time with the Heat only.

Playoffs

More information Player, POS ...
Player POS GP GS MP REB AST STL BLK PTS MPG RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
Dwyane WadeSG 2323959135132512665441.75.95.72.21.128.4
Antoine WalkerPF 23238621295623830737.55.62.41.0.313.3
Shaquille O'NealC 232375922539113442433.09.81.7.51.518.4
Jason WilliamsPG 2323686469015021429.82.03.9.7.09.3
Gary PaytonPG 230560403623313324.31.71.61.0.15.8
Udonis HaslemPF 22226501621713718929.57.4.8.6.38.6
James PoseySF 2216071252017216027.65.7.9.8.17.3
Alonzo MourningC 2102266135248010.82.9.1.21.13.8
Shandon AndersonSF 1309012401136.9.9.3.0.11.0
Michael DoleacC 807222010169.02.8.0.1.02.0
Derek AndersonSG 80669520248.31.1.6.3.03.0
Wayne SimienPF 207100003.5.5.0.0.0.0
Jason KaponoSF 102000002.0.0.0.0.0.0
Close

Award winners

O'Neal handing over the championship ball when the NBA Champion Heat visited the White House
  • Shaquille O'Neal, NBA leader in field goal percentage
    • He joined Wilt Chamberlain as the only two players in league history to lead the league in field goal percentage nine times.
  • Shaquille O'Neal, All-NBA First Team
  • Dwyane Wade, NBA All-Star Skills Challenge Champion
  • Dwyane Wade, All-NBA Second Team
  • Dwyane Wade, NBA Finals MVP
  • Dwyane Wade, Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year

NBA All-Star Game

  • Dwyane Wade, NBA All-Star Game Appearance
  • Shaquille O'Neal, NBA All-Star Appearance

References

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