Mavs' win streak faces tall order
Dallas must go through Shaq, Heat to extend winning streak to 13
11:01 PM CST on Wednesday, February 8, 2006
By EDDIE SEFKO / The Dallas Morning News
As the streak grows, so do the stakes. And the degree of difficulty.
The Mavericks have a dozen wins in a row, which is impressive stuff. But reaching the franchise record of 14 consecutive victories will be even more demanding.
Going into Wednesday's action, only four of the 12 opponents in the Mavericks' streak had winning records. Starting tonight, they play two division leaders on back-to-back nights, leading off with Shaquille O'Neal, Dwyane Wade and the Miami Heat. The Mavericks visit Denver on Friday night.
"It doesn't get any easier," Mavericks guard Jason Terry said. "And we wouldn't have it any other way."
As the run has ballooned, subplots have emerged, too. One of them involves brainwashing, although Mavericks coach Avery Johnson prefers to call it reprogramming the mind.
Johnson, you see, refuses to deal in two-game increments, and his team has gotten the message that their winning streak has been built by taking one quarter and one game at a time. He's had to recalibrate some gray matter to get this accomplished.
And they have done a terrific job during the streak of not losing focus. That shouldn't change tonight. Facing Shaq for the first time this season (he missed their meeting in November) is enough to get anybody's attention.
"Shaq's a handful," Johnson said. "Everybody has to pay close attention to Shaq, kind of like we did with Kobe [Bryant on Tuesday]."
Which brings us to another subplot: Erick Dampier, one of O'Neal's favorite targets when the Big Aristotle gets philosophical.
Who can forget O'Neal saying that Dampier could be one of the best centers in the league. "Yeah, the WNBA." Or when he said that Dampier is soft and told reporters to write it, print it, put it on TV and send it to Dampier.
Seems like overkill for one of the best centers in NBA history to be so worried about a center who is no longer starting but certainly will see his share of O'Neal tonight.
"That's what comedians do, comedians talk a lot," Dampier said. "I laugh at it, too. He's never hung out with me. I don't even know him. So I can say anything about him, and he can say anything about me."
But for a comedian, O'Neal is a pretty good NBA center. And most likely, the Mavericks shouldn't expect any excess gushing from him or anybody else with the Heat tonight. Miami has gone through a coaching change and numerous injuries, but it has come around with seven wins in nine games since losing to San Antonio on Jan. 23.
And O'Neal has something that Dirk Nowitzki doesn't – a teammate who is better than him.
"They have two really terrific players in Shaq and Wade," Johnson said.
But while the Heat feels its depth is one of its best assets with former Mav Antoine Walker, Alonzo Mourning and Gary Payton coming off the bench, nobody can match the Mavericks' bench.
Their reserves have scored as much or more as opposing backups 33 times in 48 games. The Mavs are 27-6 in those games.
"It is a rarity, and I think in terms of talent, I don't think any of us will play on a more talented team throughout our career," Mavs forward Keith Van Horn said. "And like I've always said, that's why we really want to take advantage of this situation this year, and hopefully, win a championship."
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