Examine individual changes
Appearance
This page allows you to examine the variables generated by the Edit Filter for an individual change.
Variables generated for this change
Variable | Value |
---|---|
Name of the user account (user_name ) | '76.17.132.38' |
Page ID (page_id ) | 3176981 |
Page namespace (page_namespace ) | 0 |
Page title without namespace (page_title ) | '2003 NBA Finals' |
Full page title (page_prefixedtitle ) | '2003 NBA Finals' |
Action (action ) | 'edit' |
Edit summary/reason (summary ) | '/* New Jersey Nets roster */ ' |
Whether or not the edit is marked as minor (no longer in use) (minor_edit ) | false |
Old page wikitext, before the edit (old_wikitext ) | '{{NBA Finals summary
| image =
| caption =
| year = 2003
| runnerup = [[New Jersey Nets]]
| runnerup_coach = [[Byron Scott (basketball)|Byron Scott]]
| runnerup_games = 2
| champion = [[San Antonio Spurs]]
| champion_coach = [[Gregg Popovich]]
| champion_games = 4
| date= June 4 - 15
| MVP = [[Tim Duncan]]<br>(San Antonio Spurs)
| television = [[NBA on ABC|ABC]] (U.S.)
| announcers = [[Brad Nessler]], [[Bill Walton]] and [[Tom Tolbert]]
| HOFers = [[David Robinson (basketball)|David Robinson]] (2009)
| radio_network = [[NBA on ESPN Radio|ESPN]]
| radio_announcers = [[Brent Musburger]] and [[Jack Ramsay]]
| referees_1 = [[Dick Bavetta]], [[Joe Crawford]], [[Joe DeRosa]]
| referees_2 = [[Dan Crawford (basketball referee)|Dan Crawford]], [[Bob Delaney (basketball referee)|Bob Delaney]], [[Bennett Salvatore]]
| referees_3 = [[Ron Garretson]], [[Steve Javie]], [[Jack Nies]]
| referees_4 = Mike Callahan, [[Bernie Fryer]], [[Eddie F. Rush]]
| referees_5 = [[Dick Bavetta]], [[Joe Crawford]], [[Bennett Salvatore]]
| referees_6 = [[Dan Crawford (basketball referee)|Dan Crawford]], [[Bob Delaney (basketball referee)|Bob Delaney]], [[Ron Garretson]]
| ECF result = [[New Jersey Nets|Nets]] defeated [[Detroit Pistons|Pistons]], 4-0
| WCF result = [[San Antonio Spurs|Spurs]] defeated [[Dallas Mavericks|Mavericks]], 4-2
}}
The '''2003 NBA Finals''' was the championship round of the [[2002–03 NBA season]]. The [[San Antonio Spurs]] of the [[Western Conference (NBA)|Western Conference]] took on the [[New Jersey Nets]] of the [[Eastern Conference (NBA)|Eastern Conference]] for the title, with the Spurs holding [[home team|home court advantage]]. The series was played under a [[best-of-seven playoff|best-of-seven format]]. The Spurs won the series 4 games to 2. Spurs Forward [[Tim Duncan]] was named the [[NBA Finals MVP Award|Most Valuable Player]] of the championship series.
It was the last NBA Final to be played in the state of [[New Jersey]]; the Nets move to [[Brooklyn]], [[New York]] for the [[2012–13 NBA season|2012–13 season]].
'''Television:''' [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] ([[Brad Nessler]], [[Bill Walton]], and [[Tom Tolbert]] announcing)
The 2003 Finals documentary was narrated by Rodd Houston, who later narrated three other NBA Finals series.
==Background==
The 2002-03 season had already started as a memorable one for the San Antonio Spurs as it was the team's first season in their new arena, [[AT&T Center|SBC Center]]. However, as this season was one of beginnings, it was also one of endings. During the season, Spurs star [[David Robinson (basketball)|David Robinson]] announced that this season would be his last. The NBA Finals also marked the end of [[Steve Kerr]]'s career as well - he was on the Spurs, having already won four titles with the [[Chicago Bulls]].
Over the last few seasons, injuries had slowed down Robinson's productivity to the point where he missed 18 games in his final season while averaging only 8.5 points per game. Nevertheless, Robinson would retire holding Spurs franchise career records in points, rebounds, steals and blocks. The Spurs had a very successful season, finishing 60-22, tying for the best record in the NBA that year.
The playoffs started off shaky for the Spurs as they lost game 1 of the first-round series against the [[Phoenix Suns]] in overtime. However the Spurs would bounce back to take the series in 6 games. The second round put the Spurs face-to-face with the three-time defending champion [[Los Angeles Lakers]]. After splitting the first four games, the Spurs eked out a win in game 5, benefitting from a rare last-second in-and-out miss from the Lakers' clutch-shooter [[Robert Horry]] (who would help the Spurs win a title two years later). The Spurs would eventually dispose of the Lakers in Game 6, ending the Lakers' championship run. In the Conference Finals, the Spurs would face their in-state nemesis the [[Dallas Mavericks]]. The Spurs would start off slow again, losing Game 1 by 3 points, but would take control of the series from there, taking the next three straight. After losing Game 5 at home 103-91, the Spurs would come from 15 points down in the fourth quarter in Game 6 as Steve Kerr buried four 3-pointers in a row to take the series in six games with a 90-78 win in Dallas, advancing to their second NBA Finals in franchise history.
In the meantime the [[New Jersey Nets]], who lost to the Lakers in the Finals the previous year, were out to prove that they were serious title contenders, despite the lack of competition in the Eastern Conference. The Nets would finish the regular season 49-33, good enough to win the [[Atlantic Division (NBA)|Atlantic Division]] and clinch the number 2 seed in the East. After splitting the first four games with the [[Milwaukee Bucks]] in the first round, the Nets would take complete control, winning the series in 6 games. From then on, the Nets had no trouble making a return to the NBA Finals, sweeping the [[Boston Celtics]] and the [[Detroit Pistons]] to win their second straight Eastern Conference championship.
===2003 NBA Playoffs===
{{Main|2003 NBA Playoffs}}
{|width=100% border=0 class=wikitable
|- valign=top
!colspan=2 width=45%|[[San Antonio Spurs]] ([[Western Conference (NBA)|Western Conference]] Champion)!!colspan=2 width=45%|[[New Jersey Nets]] ([[Eastern Conference (NBA)|Eastern Conference]] Champion)
|-
|align=right|[[2002-03 San Antonio Spurs season|60-22]] (.732)<br />1st Midwest, 1st West,Tied-1st Overall
!colspan=2|[[2002-03 NBA season|Regular season]]
|align=left|[[2002-03 New Jersey Nets season|49-33]] (.598)<br />1st Atlantic, 2nd East, Tied-9th Overall
|-
|align=right|Defeated the (8) [[Phoenix Suns]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#(1) San Antonio Spurs vs. (8) Phoenix Suns|4–2]]
!colspan=2|First Round
|align=left|Defeated the (7) [[Milwaukee Bucks]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#(2) New Jersey Nets vs. (7) Milwaukee Bucks|4–2]]
|-
|align=right|Defeated the (5) [[Los Angeles Lakers]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#(1) San Antonio Spurs vs. (5) Los Angeles Lakers|4–2]]
!colspan=2|Conference Semifinals
|align=left|Defeated the (6) [[Boston Celtics]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#(6) Boston Celtics vs. (2) New Jersey Nets|4–0]]
|-
|align=right|Defeated the (2) [[Dallas Mavericks]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#Conference Finals: (1) San Antonio Spurs vs. (2) Dallas Mavericks|4–2]]
!colspan=2|Conference Finals
|align=left|Defeated the (1) [[Detroit Pistons]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#Conference Finals: (1) Detroit Pistons vs. (2) New Jersey Nets|4–0]]
|}
===Regular season series===
Both teams split the two meetings, each won by the home team:
{{basketballbox
| bg=#fff
| date = November 13, 2002
| team1 = [[San Antonio Spurs]] |score1=82
| team2 = '''[[New Jersey Nets]] |score2=91'''
| place = [[Izod Center|Continental Airlines Arena]], [[East Rutherford, New Jersey|East Rutherford]], [[New Jersey]]
}}
{{basketballbox
| date = March 6, 2003
| team1 = [[New Jersey Nets]] |score1=78
| team2 = '''[[San Antonio Spurs]] |score2=92'''
| place = [[AT&T Center|SBC Center]], [[San Antonio]], [[Texas]]
}}
==Series summary==
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Game !! Date !! Home Team !! Result !! Road Team
|-
| Game 1 || Wednesday, June 4 || '''San Antonio Spurs''' || 101-89 (1-0) || New Jersey Nets
|-
| Game 2 || Friday, June 6 || San Antonio Spurs || 85-87 (1-1) || '''New Jersey Nets'''
|-
| Game 3 || Sunday, June 8 || New Jersey Nets || 79-84 (1-2) || '''San Antonio Spurs'''
|-
| Game 4 || Wednesday, June 11 || '''New Jersey Nets''' || 77-76 (2-2) || San Antonio Spurs
|-
| Game 5 || Friday, June 13 || New Jersey Nets || 83-93 (2-3) || '''San Antonio Spurs'''
|-
| Game 6 || Sunday, June 15 || '''San Antonio Spurs''' || 88-77 (4-2) || New Jersey Nets
|}
The Finals were played using a 2-3-2 site format, where the first two and last two games are held at the team with [[home court advantage]]. The NBA, after experimenting in the early years, restored this original format for the [[1985 NBA Finals|Finals in 1985]]. As of yet, the other playoff series are still running on a 2-2-1-1-1 site format.
Game 4 at [[Izod Center|Continental Airlines Arena]] was not a sellout.
This is the last Finals series to be played on a Wednesday-Friday-Sunday rotation which was used starting in 1991 when [[NBA on NBC|NBC]] began carrying the NBA. Starting with the [[2004 NBA Finals|2004 series]], all Finals are now Thursday-Sunday-Tuesday.
==2003 NBA Finals roster==
===San Antonio Spurs roster===
{{San Antonio Spurs 2002-03 NBA champions}}
===New Jersey Nets roster===
{{Navbox
|navbar=plain
|titlestyle = background:#002147; color:silver; border:2px solid #B71234;
|title = '''[[New Jersey Nets|<font color="silver">New Jersey Nets]] <font color="silver">2002-03 Eastern Conference Champions'''
|list1 = <div>
2 [[Anthony Johnson (basketball)|Johnson]] {{!}}
5 [[Jason Kidd|Kidd]] {{!}}
6 [[Kenyon Martin|Martin]] {{!}}
8 [[Tamar Slay|Slay]] {{!}}
12 [[Lucious Harris|Harris]] {{!}}
21 [[Brian Scalabrine|Scalabrine]] {{!}}
24 [[Richard Jefferson|Jefferson]] {{!}}
30 [[Kerry Kittles|Kittles]] {{!}}
34 [[Aaron Williams|Williams]] {{!}}
35 [[Jason Collins|Collins]] {{!}}
54 [[Rodney Rogers|Rogers]] {{!}}
55 [[Dikembe Mutombo|Mutombo]] {{!}}
Coach [[Byron Scott (basketball)|Scott]]
</div>
}}
==Features==
While the series received the usual hype of any Finals, it was not heavily anticipated due to the absence of the Lakers, who had won the previous three finals. The Spurs did have a star in Tim Duncan, but at the time he was criticized as being boring compared to flashier players such as Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal.
The series was largely centered around the half-court offense and defense of each team, with only 1 team breaking 100 points in the series. The Nets constantly double-teamed Tim Duncan, and at one point quadruple-teamed him, allowing him to find open teammate or score over the top of the multiple defenders.
Nets point guard Jason Kidd, second to Tim Duncan in MVP voting during the 2003 season, was in the last year of his contract with the team, leading to speculation that the Spurs (a team that could afford signing him) would pursue him in the free agency following the 2003 Finals despite already having future All-Star Tony Parker on the roster. The underlying story of whether or not Kidd would be in a Spurs uniform the following season continued into the off-season. Kidd would visit San Antonio and speak with team officials, but ultimately resigned with the Nets.
Perhaps the lasting memory of the series is David Robinson retiring as a champion. In the clinching Game 6, Robinson had 13 points and 17 rebounds to complement Tim Duncan on the inside. In that game, the Spurs trailed at one point 72-63 before going on a 19-0 run to put the game away and take the series. Stephen Jackson's three pointer during the run held the lead permanently. The Spurs' win denied New Jersey from having both NBA and NHL titles in the same year.
Tim Duncan became the 8th player in NBA history to win the Finals MVP award a second time. He joined the list of [[Willis Reed]], [[Kareem Abdul-Jabbar]], [[Magic Johnson]], [[Larry Bird]], [[Michael Jordan]], [[Hakeem Olajuwon]] and [[Shaquille O'Neal]]. In the series clinching game, Duncan came two blocks shy of a [[quadruple-double]] in an NBA Finals match, an extremely rare feat, finishing with 22 points, 20 rebounds, 10 assists, and 8 blocks. Interestingly enough, [[David Robinson (basketball)|David Robinson]] recorded the last [[quadruple-double]] in NBA history with the Spurs.
Steve Kerr joined [[Robert Horry]], [[Dennis Rodman]] and [[Ron Harper]] as the only players to win at least two championships with two franchises. Kerr won three with the Chicago Bulls (1996–98) and another with the Spurs in 1999.
===Impact of the Series===
*Despite a great performance, particularly a barrage of three-pointers in the clinching Game 6 by Spurs swingman [[Stephen Jackson]], the Spurs let Jackson leave as a free agent. Spurs veterans [[Steve Kerr]], [[Danny Ferry]], and most notably David Robinson retired after the 2003 Finals.
*Duncan and Robinson would be named Sportsmen of the Year by ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'' for 2003.
*This series would mark the first time that two [[American Basketball Association|ABA]] teams pitted off against each other in the NBA Finals. Four years prior, though, the Spurs made it to the NBA Finals in the shortened 1998-99 NBA Season and won the championship.
==Aftermath==
The Nets had an inconsistent start to the [[2003-04 NBA season]], and with a 22-20 record early in the season they fired head coach Byron Scott. [[Lawrence Frank]] would take over and lead the Nets to another [[Atlantic Division (NBA)|Atlantic Division]] title by winning 47 games, highlighted by a 13-0 start, the best start for a rookie head coach in sports history. Despite that, however, the Nets would lose to the [[2004 NBA Finals|eventual NBA champion]] [[Detroit Pistons]] in seven games of the conference semifinals. To this day, this is the Nets' last finals appearance.
[[Jason Kidd]] remained with the Nets until he was traded in [[2007-08 NBA season|February 2008]] to the team he was originally drafted to, the [[Dallas Mavericks]]. Kidd, along with teammate [[Dirk Nowitzki]], led the Mavericks to the NBA title in [[2011 NBA Finals|2011]]. [[Kenyon Martin]] was sent to the [[Denver Nuggets]] after the 2003-04 season, while [[Richard Jefferson]] eventually joined the Spurs in the [[2009-10 NBA season|2009-10 season]], after a brief one-year stint with the [[Milwaukee Bucks]].
Despite the departures of Robinson, Jackson and Kerr, the Spurs still managed to win 57 games, aided by Tim Duncan's strong play. However, they were ousted in six games by the [[Los Angeles Lakers]], highlighted by [[Derek Fisher]]'s game winner with 0.4 seconds left in Game 5 of the conference semifinals. In the four years following Robinson's retirement, Duncan would lead the Spurs to two more NBA titles, in [[2005 NBA Finals|2005]] and [[2007 NBA Finals|2007]].
==Television coverage==
This NBA Finals was aired on [[NBA on ABC|ABC]], after a 30 years of absence for [[ESPN on ABC|ABC Sports]] carrying the NBA.
Until [[2007 NBA Finals|2007]], this was the lowest rated finals in NBA history.
This was also the only year that ABC broadcast both the NBA and the Stanley Cup Finals that involved teams from one city in the same year. During ABC's broadcast of Game 3, Brad Nessler, Tom Tolbert, and Bill Walton said that ABC was in a unique situation getting ready for both that game and Game 7 of the [[2003 Stanley Cup Finals|Stanley Cup Finals]] between the Devils and the [[Anaheim Ducks|Mighty Ducks of Anaheim]] the following night.<ref>{{cite video|title=NBA on ABC: Game 3 of the 2003 NBA Finals|medium=television|date=June 8, 2003}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=ABC scores big with seventh game after much promotion|date=June 11, 2003|first=William|last=Houston|newspaper=The Globe and Mail|page=S2}}</ref> [[Gary Thorne]], [[Bill Clement]], and [[John Davidson (ice hockey)|John Davidson]] mentioned this the following night and thanked Nessler, Tolbert, and Walton for promoting [[NHL on ABC|ABC]]'s broadcast of Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals.<ref>{{cite video|title=NHL on ABC: Game 7 of the 2003 Stanley Cup Finals|medium=television|date=June 9, 2003|publisher=ABC Sports}}</ref>
==See also==
*[[2003 NBA Playoffs]]
*[[2003 Stanley Cup Finals]]
==References==
{{reflist}}
==External links==
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20101203184032/http://www.nba.com/finals2003/ Official website]
{{Navboxes|list1=
{{NBA Finals}}
{{San Antonio Spurs}}
{{New Jersey Nets}}
{{NBA on ABC}}
}}
[[Category:National Basketball Association Finals]]
[[Category:2003 in basketball|NBA Finals]]
[[Category:San Antonio Spurs]]
[[Category:New Jersey Nets]]
[[es:Finales de la NBA de 2003]]
[[tr:2003 NBA Finalleri]]
[[zh:2003年NBA總決賽]]' |
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext ) | '{{NBA Finals summary
| image =
| caption =
| year = 2003
| runnerup = [[New Jersey Nets]]
| runnerup_coach = [[Byron Scott (basketball)|Byron Scott]]
| runnerup_games = 2
| champion = [[San Antonio Spurs]]
| champion_coach = [[Gregg Popovich]]
| champion_games = 4
| date= June 4 - 15
| MVP = [[Tim Duncan]]<br>(San Antonio Spurs)
| television = [[NBA on ABC|ABC]] (U.S.)
| announcers = [[Brad Nessler]], [[Bill Walton]] and [[Tom Tolbert]]
| HOFers = [[David Robinson (basketball)|David Robinson]] (2009)
| radio_network = [[NBA on ESPN Radio|ESPN]]
| radio_announcers = [[Brent Musburger]] and [[Jack Ramsay]]
| referees_1 = [[Dick Bavetta]], [[Joe Crawford]], [[Joe DeRosa]]
| referees_2 = [[Dan Crawford (basketball referee)|Dan Crawford]], [[Bob Delaney (basketball referee)|Bob Delaney]], [[Bennett Salvatore]]
| referees_3 = [[Ron Garretson]], [[Steve Javie]], [[Jack Nies]]
| referees_4 = Mike Callahan, [[Bernie Fryer]], [[Eddie F. Rush]]
| referees_5 = [[Dick Bavetta]], [[Joe Crawford]], [[Bennett Salvatore]]
| referees_6 = [[Dan Crawford (basketball referee)|Dan Crawford]], [[Bob Delaney (basketball referee)|Bob Delaney]], [[Ron Garretson]]
| ECF result = [[New Jersey Nets|Nets]] defeated [[Detroit Pistons|Pistons]], 4-0
| WCF result = [[San Antonio Spurs|Spurs]] defeated [[Dallas Mavericks|Mavericks]], 4-2
}}
The '''2003 NBA Finals''' was the championship round of the [[2002–03 NBA season]]. The [[San Antonio Spurs]] of the [[Western Conference (NBA)|Western Conference]] took on the [[New Jersey Nets]] of the [[Eastern Conference (NBA)|Eastern Conference]] for the title, with the Spurs holding [[home team|home court advantage]]. The series was played under a [[best-of-seven playoff|best-of-seven format]]. The Spurs won the series 4 games to 2. Spurs Forward [[Tim Duncan]] was named the [[NBA Finals MVP Award|Most Valuable Player]] of the championship series.
It was the last NBA Final to be played in the state of [[New Jersey]]; the Nets move to [[Brooklyn]], [[New York]] for the [[2012–13 NBA season|2012–13 season]].
'''Television:''' [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] ([[Brad Nessler]], [[Bill Walton]], and [[Tom Tolbert]] announcing)
The 2003 Finals documentary was narrated by Rodd Houston, who later narrated three other NBA Finals series.
==Background==
The 2002-03 season had already started as a memorable one for the San Antonio Spurs as it was the team's first season in their new arena, [[AT&T Center|SBC Center]]. However, as this season was one of beginnings, it was also one of endings. During the season, Spurs star [[David Robinson (basketball)|David Robinson]] announced that this season would be his last. The NBA Finals also marked the end of [[Steve Kerr]]'s career as well - he was on the Spurs, having already won four titles with the [[Chicago Bulls]].
Over the last few seasons, injuries had slowed down Robinson's productivity to the point where he missed 18 games in his final season while averaging only 8.5 points per game. Nevertheless, Robinson would retire holding Spurs franchise career records in points, rebounds, steals and blocks. The Spurs had a very successful season, finishing 60-22, tying for the best record in the NBA that year.
The playoffs started off shaky for the Spurs as they lost game 1 of the first-round series against the [[Phoenix Suns]] in overtime. However the Spurs would bounce back to take the series in 6 games. The second round put the Spurs face-to-face with the three-time defending champion [[Los Angeles Lakers]]. After splitting the first four games, the Spurs eked out a win in game 5, benefitting from a rare last-second in-and-out miss from the Lakers' clutch-shooter [[Robert Horry]] (who would help the Spurs win a title two years later). The Spurs would eventually dispose of the Lakers in Game 6, ending the Lakers' championship run. In the Conference Finals, the Spurs would face their in-state nemesis the [[Dallas Mavericks]]. The Spurs would start off slow again, losing Game 1 by 3 points, but would take control of the series from there, taking the next three straight. After losing Game 5 at home 103-91, the Spurs would come from 15 points down in the fourth quarter in Game 6 as Steve Kerr buried four 3-pointers in a row to take the series in six games with a 90-78 win in Dallas, advancing to their second NBA Finals in franchise history.
In the meantime the [[New Jersey Nets]], who lost to the Lakers in the Finals the previous year, were out to prove that they were serious title contenders, despite the lack of competition in the Eastern Conference. The Nets would finish the regular season 49-33, good enough to win the [[Atlantic Division (NBA)|Atlantic Division]] and clinch the number 2 seed in the East. After splitting the first four games with the [[Milwaukee Bucks]] in the first round, the Nets would take complete control, winning the series in 6 games. From then on, the Nets had no trouble making a return to the NBA Finals, sweeping the [[Boston Celtics]] and the [[Detroit Pistons]] to win their second straight Eastern Conference championship.
===2003 NBA Playoffs===
{{Main|2003 NBA Playoffs}}
{|width=100% border=0 class=wikitable
|- valign=top
!colspan=2 width=45%|[[San Antonio Spurs]] ([[Western Conference (NBA)|Western Conference]] Champion)!!colspan=2 width=45%|[[New Jersey Nets]] ([[Eastern Conference (NBA)|Eastern Conference]] Champion)
|-
|align=right|[[2002-03 San Antonio Spurs season|60-22]] (.732)<br />1st Midwest, 1st West,Tied-1st Overall
!colspan=2|[[2002-03 NBA season|Regular season]]
|align=left|[[2002-03 New Jersey Nets season|49-33]] (.598)<br />1st Atlantic, 2nd East, Tied-9th Overall
|-
|align=right|Defeated the (8) [[Phoenix Suns]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#(1) San Antonio Spurs vs. (8) Phoenix Suns|4–2]]
!colspan=2|First Round
|align=left|Defeated the (7) [[Milwaukee Bucks]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#(2) New Jersey Nets vs. (7) Milwaukee Bucks|4–2]]
|-
|align=right|Defeated the (5) [[Los Angeles Lakers]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#(1) San Antonio Spurs vs. (5) Los Angeles Lakers|4–2]]
!colspan=2|Conference Semifinals
|align=left|Defeated the (6) [[Boston Celtics]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#(6) Boston Celtics vs. (2) New Jersey Nets|4–0]]
|-
|align=right|Defeated the (2) [[Dallas Mavericks]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#Conference Finals: (1) San Antonio Spurs vs. (2) Dallas Mavericks|4–2]]
!colspan=2|Conference Finals
|align=left|Defeated the (1) [[Detroit Pistons]], [[2003 NBA Playoffs#Conference Finals: (1) Detroit Pistons vs. (2) New Jersey Nets|4–0]]
|}
===Regular season series===
Both teams split the two meetings, each won by the home team:
{{basketballbox
| bg=#fff
| date = November 13, 2002
| team1 = [[San Antonio Spurs]] |score1=82
| team2 = '''[[New Jersey Nets]] |score2=91'''
| place = [[Izod Center|Continental Airlines Arena]], [[East Rutherford, New Jersey|East Rutherford]], [[New Jersey]]
}}
{{basketballbox
| date = March 6, 2003
| team1 = [[New Jersey Nets]] |score1=78
| team2 = '''[[San Antonio Spurs]] |score2=92'''
| place = [[AT&T Center|SBC Center]], [[San Antonio]], [[Texas]]
}}
==Series summary==
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Game !! Date !! Home Team !! Result !! Road Team
|-
| Game 1 || Wednesday, June 4 || '''San Antonio Spurs''' || 101-89 (1-0) || New Jersey Nets
|-
| Game 2 || Friday, June 6 || San Antonio Spurs || 85-87 (1-1) || '''New Jersey Nets'''
|-
| Game 3 || Sunday, June 8 || New Jersey Nets || 79-84 (1-2) || '''San Antonio Spurs'''
|-
| Game 4 || Wednesday, June 11 || '''New Jersey Nets''' || 77-76 (2-2) || San Antonio Spurs
|-
| Game 5 || Friday, June 13 || New Jersey Nets || 83-93 (2-3) || '''San Antonio Spurs'''
|-
| Game 6 || Sunday, June 15 || '''San Antonio Spurs''' || 88-77 (4-2) || New Jersey Nets
|}
The Finals were played using a 2-3-2 site format, where the first two and last two games are held at the team with [[home court advantage]]. The NBA, after experimenting in the early years, restored this original format for the [[1985 NBA Finals|Finals in 1985]]. As of yet, the other playoff series are still running on a 2-2-1-1-1 site format.
Game 4 at [[Izod Center|Continental Airlines Arena]] was not a sellout.
This is the last Finals series to be played on a Wednesday-Friday-Sunday rotation which was used starting in 1991 when [[NBA on NBC|NBC]] began carrying the NBA. Starting with the [[2004 NBA Finals|2004 series]], all Finals are now Thursday-Sunday-Tuesday.
==2003 NBA Finals roster==
===San Antonio Spurs roster===
{{San Antonio Spurs 2002-03 NBA champions}}
===New Jersey Nets roster===
{{Navbox
|navbar=plain
|titlestyle = background:#002147; color:silver; border:2px solid #B71234;
|title = '''[[New Jersey Nets|<font color="silver">New Jersey Nets]] <font color="silver">2002-03 Eastern Conference Champions'''
|list1 = <div>
2 [[Anthony Johnson (basketball)|Johnson]] {{!}}
5 [[Jason Kidd|Kidd]] {{!}}
6 [[Kenyon Martin|Martin]] {{!}}
8 [[Tamar Slay|Slay]] {{!}}
12 [[Lucious Harris|Harris]] {{!}}
21 [[Brian Scalabrine|Scalabrine]] {{!}}
24 [[Richard Jefferson|Jefferson]] {{!}}
30 [[Kerry Kittles|Kittles]] {{!}}
34 [[Aaron Williams|Williams]] {{!}}
35 [[Jason Collins|bitch]] {{!}}
54 [[Rodney Rogers|Rogers]] {{!}}
55 [[Dikembe Mutombo|Mutombo]] {{!}}
Coach [[Byron Scott (basketball)|Scott]]
</div>
}}
==Features==
While the series received the usual hype of any Finals, it was not heavily anticipated due to the absence of the Lakers, who had won the previous three finals. The Spurs did have a star in Tim Duncan, but at the time he was criticized as being boring compared to flashier players such as Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal.
The series was largely centered around the half-court offense and defense of each team, with only 1 team breaking 100 points in the series. The Nets constantly double-teamed Tim Duncan, and at one point quadruple-teamed him, allowing him to find open teammate or score over the top of the multiple defenders.
Nets point guard Jason Kidd, second to Tim Duncan in MVP voting during the 2003 season, was in the last year of his contract with the team, leading to speculation that the Spurs (a team that could afford signing him) would pursue him in the free agency following the 2003 Finals despite already having future All-Star Tony Parker on the roster. The underlying story of whether or not Kidd would be in a Spurs uniform the following season continued into the off-season. Kidd would visit San Antonio and speak with team officials, but ultimately resigned with the Nets.
Perhaps the lasting memory of the series is David Robinson retiring as a champion. In the clinching Game 6, Robinson had 13 points and 17 rebounds to complement Tim Duncan on the inside. In that game, the Spurs trailed at one point 72-63 before going on a 19-0 run to put the game away and take the series. Stephen Jackson's three pointer during the run held the lead permanently. The Spurs' win denied New Jersey from having both NBA and NHL titles in the same year.
Tim Duncan became the 8th player in NBA history to win the Finals MVP award a second time. He joined the list of [[Willis Reed]], [[Kareem Abdul-Jabbar]], [[Magic Johnson]], [[Larry Bird]], [[Michael Jordan]], [[Hakeem Olajuwon]] and [[Shaquille O'Neal]]. In the series clinching game, Duncan came two blocks shy of a [[quadruple-double]] in an NBA Finals match, an extremely rare feat, finishing with 22 points, 20 rebounds, 10 assists, and 8 blocks. Interestingly enough, [[David Robinson (basketball)|David Robinson]] recorded the last [[quadruple-double]] in NBA history with the Spurs.
Steve Kerr joined [[Robert Horry]], [[Dennis Rodman]] and [[Ron Harper]] as the only players to win at least two championships with two franchises. Kerr won three with the Chicago Bulls (1996–98) and another with the Spurs in 1999.
===Impact of the Series===
*Despite a great performance, particularly a barrage of three-pointers in the clinching Game 6 by Spurs swingman [[Stephen Jackson]], the Spurs let Jackson leave as a free agent. Spurs veterans [[Steve Kerr]], [[Danny Ferry]], and most notably David Robinson retired after the 2003 Finals.
*Duncan and Robinson would be named Sportsmen of the Year by ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'' for 2003.
*This series would mark the first time that two [[American Basketball Association|ABA]] teams pitted off against each other in the NBA Finals. Four years prior, though, the Spurs made it to the NBA Finals in the shortened 1998-99 NBA Season and won the championship.
==Aftermath==
The Nets had an inconsistent start to the [[2003-04 NBA season]], and with a 22-20 record early in the season they fired head coach Byron Scott. [[Lawrence Frank]] would take over and lead the Nets to another [[Atlantic Division (NBA)|Atlantic Division]] title by winning 47 games, highlighted by a 13-0 start, the best start for a rookie head coach in sports history. Despite that, however, the Nets would lose to the [[2004 NBA Finals|eventual NBA champion]] [[Detroit Pistons]] in seven games of the conference semifinals. To this day, this is the Nets' last finals appearance.
[[Jason Kidd]] remained with the Nets until he was traded in [[2007-08 NBA season|February 2008]] to the team he was originally drafted to, the [[Dallas Mavericks]]. Kidd, along with teammate [[Dirk Nowitzki]], led the Mavericks to the NBA title in [[2011 NBA Finals|2011]]. [[Kenyon Martin]] was sent to the [[Denver Nuggets]] after the 2003-04 season, while [[Richard Jefferson]] eventually joined the Spurs in the [[2009-10 NBA season|2009-10 season]], after a brief one-year stint with the [[Milwaukee Bucks]].
Despite the departures of Robinson, Jackson and Kerr, the Spurs still managed to win 57 games, aided by Tim Duncan's strong play. However, they were ousted in six games by the [[Los Angeles Lakers]], highlighted by [[Derek Fisher]]'s game winner with 0.4 seconds left in Game 5 of the conference semifinals. In the four years following Robinson's retirement, Duncan would lead the Spurs to two more NBA titles, in [[2005 NBA Finals|2005]] and [[2007 NBA Finals|2007]].
==Television coverage==
This NBA Finals was aired on [[NBA on ABC|ABC]], after a 30 years of absence for [[ESPN on ABC|ABC Sports]] carrying the NBA.
Until [[2007 NBA Finals|2007]], this was the lowest rated finals in NBA history.
This was also the only year that ABC broadcast both the NBA and the Stanley Cup Finals that involved teams from one city in the same year. During ABC's broadcast of Game 3, Brad Nessler, Tom Tolbert, and Bill Walton said that ABC was in a unique situation getting ready for both that game and Game 7 of the [[2003 Stanley Cup Finals|Stanley Cup Finals]] between the Devils and the [[Anaheim Ducks|Mighty Ducks of Anaheim]] the following night.<ref>{{cite video|title=NBA on ABC: Game 3 of the 2003 NBA Finals|medium=television|date=June 8, 2003}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=ABC scores big with seventh game after much promotion|date=June 11, 2003|first=William|last=Houston|newspaper=The Globe and Mail|page=S2}}</ref> [[Gary Thorne]], [[Bill Clement]], and [[John Davidson (ice hockey)|John Davidson]] mentioned this the following night and thanked Nessler, Tolbert, and Walton for promoting [[NHL on ABC|ABC]]'s broadcast of Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals.<ref>{{cite video|title=NHL on ABC: Game 7 of the 2003 Stanley Cup Finals|medium=television|date=June 9, 2003|publisher=ABC Sports}}</ref>
==See also==
*[[2003 NBA Playoffs]]
*[[2003 Stanley Cup Finals]]
==References==
{{reflist}}
==External links==
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20101203184032/http://www.nba.com/finals2003/ Official website]
{{Navboxes|list1=
{{NBA Finals}}
{{San Antonio Spurs}}
{{New Jersey Nets}}
{{NBA on ABC}}
}}
[[Category:National Basketball Association Finals]]
[[Category:2003 in basketball|NBA Finals]]
[[Category:San Antonio Spurs]]
[[Category:New Jersey Nets]]
[[es:Finales de la NBA de 2003]]
[[tr:2003 NBA Finalleri]]
[[zh:2003年NBA總決賽]]' |
Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node ) | 0 |
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp ) | 1338162472 |