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Small wonder he is still fixated on the one that got away. After opening the finals five years ago with two wins at home, Dallas dropped four straight to Dwyane Wade and Miami.
"We came so close in '06," Nowitzki said before Game 1 of this series, on the eve of the conference finals, "and if we never get to the finals again, I'll be thinking about that the rest of my life."
Yet that emotion was forgotten by the time Tuesday night tipped off. By game's end, his demeanor was businesslike and his voice flat as he recounted one of the best playoff performances in league history.
"I was really looking to shoot early and was able to get my rhythm after the first couple of shots," Nowitzki said. "I kept attacking and my teammates kept feeding me and feeding me and I was able to take advantage over some smaller players."
It was hardly that easy, and Game 2 promises to be tougher still.
"We can't get discouraged," said Durant, who finished with 40 points. "He's going to make shots. He's going to make off-balance shots with a hand in his face."
Nowitzki has been doing that for what seems like forever, more appreciated by his peers than the fans, save those in Dallas. You'd think it's impossible for someone so good for so long to be underrated. Nowitzki doesn't, at least not with that glaring hole in his resume.
"Numbers," he said with flawless logic, "don't mean anything if you lose."
[Associated Press;
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