NBA Re-Asserts Itself as Biggest Joke in Sports, Just Let Miami Heat Win Already
For the record, I have zero stake in the NBA Playoffs.
With that, the NBA is a joke. Miami and Boston isn't a series, it's a public display of a what a fixed game looks like.
Yes, Boston hasn't shot great, but they haven't been overwhelmed by the Miami Heat and their duo of hired assassins in Chris Bosh and Lebron James.
Tuesday Night with the game tied at 80 apiece with 7:10 left to play, Miami went on a 14-2 run over the next four minutes of the game.
In that time span, Boston got hit with five fouls while the Miami Heat didn't get one single call. After letting the teams play a bit in the 3rd quarter in which Boston took the lead, David Stern and the NBA got involved once again and helped in changing the outcome of the game.
From the 5:42 mark of the third quarter with Boston up 58-56 through the rest of the game, 17:42 in total, Boston was hit with 12 total fouls, Miami, nine.
Pretty even you would think.
At the end of the game, Boston as a team shot 22 free throws, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh shot 24.
One bad call and all of a sudden a player looses his concentration, frustration sets in and one missed shot becomes two.
An obvious flop by Miami forward James Jones on a Garnett post up leads to a technical foul from everyone's favorite NBA referee Joey Crawford on Celtic head coach Doc Rivers.
If you haven't figured out the NBA and their game fixing, here it is for you. The first rule, the golden rule is to at some point, either the 3rd or early 4th quarter to let the teams play, usually the visiting team will get more calls than the other.
Tuesday Night, from the 5:42 mark to the 7:10 mark in the 4th, about 10 total minutes, the foul calls were 6-2 in favor of Miami with the game tied at 80.
The second part of the plan is that at some point, the foul calls start to swing towards the "choosen" team. In this case, Boston got hit with five fouls over the next four minutes during which Miami made their game clinching 14-2 run.
Miami didn't get hit with a foul call from the time the game was tied at 80 until the 2:40 mark, almost five minutes, when Miami was already up 94-82.
From there, the foul calls were 5-3 Boston with the game already over.
To refresh, in the last 7 minutes and 10 seconds of Game 2, with the game tied at 80, Boston was hit with 10 fouls, Miami, just three.
In the end, what David Stern wants, David Stern gets. The only way to beat the system is to do what Dallas did last night against the Los Angeles Lakers, make big shots to where the system cannot take away a win.
At the end of it all, the NBA leads the best of seven series 2-0 against the Boston Celtics.









