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NPR Staff Painfully Recount Game 1 Of The NBA Finals

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

People can't stop talking about the epic failure that went down in Game 1 of the NBA finals.

MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

Yeah. It had been an exciting game on ABC last night between the Golden State Warriors and the Cleveland Cavaliers. And then - well, I'm going to let our colleagues pick it up from here. Our producer Becky Sullivan set out in the NPR newsroom with her microphone.

BECKY SULLIVAN, BYLINE: All right. Did you watch the game last night?

RENITA JABLONSKI, BYLINE: Yes.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

JABLONSKI: Are you going to make me recall this?

SULLIVAN: Can you take me through just, like, the last, you know, 10 or so seconds of regulation? Like, what happened?

MONIKA EVSTATIEVA, BYLINE: OK.

BRANDON CARTER, BYLINE: OK, yeah, yeah.

AHMAD OMAR, BYLINE: OK, so...

LAURA ROMAN, BYLINE: The Cavs were down by one point.

EVSTATIEVA: It is 107-106.

JABLONSKI: The Cavs had the ball. There was - what? - 4 seconds.

ROMAN: Four-point-seven seconds left on the clock.

JABLONSKI: It was the longest 4 (laughter) seconds of my life.

OMAR: Up until that point, Lebron James had scored...

EVSTATIEVA: Forty-nine points.

OMAR: Carried the team on his back singlehandedly, Lebron and his band of merry misfits.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER #1: James passes aside and a foul call on Thompson.

OMAR: Teammate gets fouled, gets sent to the line.

ROMAN: George Hill was shooting free throws.

OMAR: Two free throws to win the game.

CARTER: So the Cavs hit one free throw, miss the second.

OMAR: Misses the second.

ROMAN: So then it was 107-107.

CARTER: It's tied.

EVSTATIEVA: Then...

ROMAN: The Cavs got the rebound.

OMAR: J.R. Smith gets the rebound.

JABLONSKI: And they're at the Cavaliers' basket, so all he needs to do is to...

OMAR: Shoot the ball, take time-out, do anything but just stand there and let the clock run out.

EVSTATIEVA: But then...

CARTER: Inexplicably...

EVSTATIEVA: ...He dribbles away.

CARTER: ...Runs away from the basket.

JABLONSKI: Why aren't they shooting? And he's just dribbling the ball.

ROMAN: Which is what you would do if you were trying to run out the clock.

JABLONSKI: And then it hit me.

OMAR: He thought that they were winning, and he was just dribbling the time out. And they were not winning.

ROMAN: It was 107-107.

CARTER: It's tied.

JABLONSKI: He didn't realize that he had to take the shot.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER #2: You get the feeling J.R. Smith thought they had the lead. He didn't know the score.

CARTER: When the buzzer sounded, they just looked so defeated.

EVSTATIEVA: And then LeBron James is just staring at him.

CARTER: Just, like, an incredulous look on his face. He's like, what is happening?

ROMAN: It's the face of the greatest basketball player of all time, in my opinion, who scored 51 points only to watch, like, a starting member of the Cavaliers lose the game for them.

OMAR: I've scored 51 points here, historical game, and you guys can't do anything right.

EVSTATIEVA: It was just, like, breaking my heart.

CARTER: I cannot believe that that happened, honestly.

ROMAN: How can you keep playing after that? That's what - you have to play a whole overtime period.

OMAR: And anyone who was watching that game knew that when it went to overtime, it was not going to work out for these guys.

ROMAN: (Laughter) They totally lost.

CARTER: Oh, yeah. It wasn't even close in overtime.

EVSTATIEVA: LeBron is carrying his team on his shoulders, pushing these people to be a little better than mediocre. And they ruined it.

JABLONSKI: I'm from Cleveland. I thought we had it. And then we didn't. It was cruel, Becky.

KELLY: (Laughter) NPR's Renita Jablonski, Brandon Carter, Ahmad Omar, Monika Evstatieva and Laura Roman speaking to our producer, the very cruel Becky Sullivan.

CORNISH: J.R. Smith says he knew it was tied and didn't shoot because he thought the Cavs were going to call a time-out. Game 2 is Sunday night. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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