The New Jersey Nets plan to run, and the San Antonio Spurs plan to stop them from running.
The NBA Finals were to begin last night, and if the best-of-seven series can be broken down into one central theme, that's it.
If the Nets are successful with their fast break, as they were in the first three rounds, they'll have a much better chance of erasing everyone's collective memory of their dreadful performance in the finals a year ago, when they were swept by the Los Angeles Lakers.
If the Spurs can stop them, San Antonio will dramatically increase its chances of taking home the franchise's second championship.
"I think it's going to pretty much be the series, in the sense of who can force their will on the tempo," Nets guard Jason Kidd said. "The key is to put the ball in the basket, that always helps. But if you can force your tempo and maintain that, whoever does it the longest will probably win the series."
San Antonio also had to stop an opponent's transition game in its last series, but that was against a Dallas Mavericks team that liked to run and shoot jump shots -- especially 3-pointers.
The Nets are different.
"These guys will be going to the rim. Dallas had guys run to spots," Spurs forward Bruce Bowen said. "We're accustomed to running back in general, but the Nets and Dallas are totally different teams."
The Nets outscored the Pistons 94-15 in fast-break points during the Eastern Conference finals after outscoring the Boston Celtics 78-22 in the same category during the conference semifinals. New Jersey swept both series.
"If we can limit their transition baskets, we'll have a great opportunity. If not, it'll be a long night for us," Bowen said.
The Spurs held the Mavericks to no more than eight fast-break baskets in five of their six games during the Western Conference finals, and they were only outscored in that category 91-64 over the course of that series.
In order to keep the Nets from running, the Spurs will need to sprint back on defense while staying aware of where the ball is.
Kidd is a master at creating fast-break baskets with his pinpoint passing, and he's surrounded by a team of finishers, including Kenyon Martin, Richard Jefferson and Kerry Kittles, all of whom are adept at closing a fast break in style with an alley-oop dunk.
Martin had 105 dunks during the season, which the Nets said was tied for fourth-most in the NBA. Jefferson had 67 dunks, and Kittles 37. As a team, New Jersey had 295 dunks -- fourth in the league.
The Nets will look to run whenever they can. But the key will be turnovers.
"Our weakness is obviously at the free-throw line and committing turnovers," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. "Hanging onto the basketball is really a priority for us."
"If you rebound the ball and get stops, hopefully we can beat Tim [Duncan] and David [Robinson] down the court with the run," Martin said. "Everyone we've played so far, people were saying we couldn't run, and we have."
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