MIAMI (AP) -- LeBron James held his index finger
aloft, then turned and took a walk nine years in the making.
A few moments later, a championship ring -
finally - was his.
James and the Miami Heat celebrated their NBA
title once again Tuesday night, with the ring-and-banner ceremony replete with
an indoor fireworks show that immediately preceded their season opener against
the Boston Celtics.
NBA Commissioner David Stern handed Heat owner
Micky Arison the first ring of the night, and Arison handed the others out to
executives, coaches and players.
James went last, as the crowd roared for the
reigning NBA MVP.
"It's not given," James said earlier
Tuesday. "These moments are not given."
Stern gave brief remarks to the crowd, starting
his address by mentioning "those who were affected" by Hurricane
Sandy, which struck the East Coast earlier this week. (Stern misspoke and
referred to the storm Hurricane Katrina, though his point was clear.) He
congratulated Heat executives and coaches, then lauded Miami's players.
"And congratulations to the Miami Heat
fans," Stern said.
The only player to address the crowd was veteran
Mike Miller, who spoke after warmups.
"We want to thank you guys so much for all
your support," Miller said. "Without you guys, a night like tonight's
not possible. The journey that starts tonight is going to be even more
challenging, so we're going to need your passion, your support and your energy
even more. Enjoy the game tonight and let it fly."
The rings had the words "All In" on one
side, and "Family" underneath two images of the Larry O'Brien Trophy
on the other. James hugged Stern briefly as the commissioner said a few words,
then got a few words from Arison before checking out the box that held his
newest bauble.
Players posed for a quick photo as the banner
started being raised, then James and others took their rings out to examine the
detail. He touched the banner as it rose behind him, then went back to checking
out the ring.
Soon, they were put away, the lights came on, and
the season started.
"I think we all know what another year's all
about," James said. "We know what our long-term goal is. But we're
not going to take any short cuts. It's a process. It's always been that way for
us."
The pursuit of a title is what drove James every
year since joining the NBA in 2003, and he had been close twice, ultimately
falling in his first two trips to the NBA Finals.
His breakthrough came last June, and James capped
his stellar postseason with a triple-double in Game 5 of the finals against
Oklahoma City, as the Heat capped off the second title in franchise history.
"I'm not going to take this moment for
granted," James said. "It doesn't happen to everyone. I know the
history of the game. I am going to live in the moment. Not going to sit here
and say I'm not. It's a special moment for not only our team, for our
organization, for the city, whoever's a Miami Heat fan, our families,
everything. We'll live in the moment, but we also have some other business to
take care of as well."
In the long term, that means another title.
In the short term, that meant getting ready for
Boston.
Miami's first ring night was an unmitigated
disaster - a 108-66 loss to the Chicago Bulls after the 2006 championship
jewelry was issued. The Heat were on the other end of a banner blowout last
Christmas in Dallas, where in a finals rematch they ran out to a 35-point lead
shortly after halftime.
The Heat were clearly inspired by having a chance
to put a damper on Dallas' day. And they expected the Celtics to feel the same
way, after Miami ousted Boston in last season's Eastern Conference finals and
then lured Ray Allen away in a free-agency coup over the summer.
"We were hoping that Oklahoma was playing
Miami on opening night to watch ring night," Celtics coach Doc Rivers
said. "I don't know why they chose us. But it is what it is. They deserve
it. They won it last year. They get to have their day. We had our day and
LeBron had to sit and watch that.
"It's his payback night," Rivers added.
"And he deserves it. He really does. He's probably gone through more
scrutiny than any player, maybe any athlete, that I can ever remember. In that
light, I'm happy for him."
The Celtics were not on the court for the
ceremony, which preceded the usual pregame warmup period.
"To be able to raise that banner in front of
our fans, it took a tremendous amount of work collectively," Heat coach
Erik Spoelstra said. "We don't want to diminish that."
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