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The fourth quarter was pure theater, both teams clearly knowing -- clearly relishing -- the stakes.
Miami scored the first seven points for a 70-69 lead. Chicago took the lead back on a pair of free throws by Rose with 6:34 left, and Miami answered with a four-point possession -- two free throws by Bosh after a flagrant foul against Boozer, followed by Miller making a jumper over Rose for a 78-77 edge.
Back and forth from there, with the lead, the momentum, control of the series, all seeming to turn every time the ball crossed midcourt.
"We thought we had chances to win and unfortunately we came up short," Boozer said. "All we can do now is focus on the next one at home and do what we can to win that game and then move forward from there."
Rose had a chance with 28 seconds left in regulation, his jumper from the left side hitting the rim and eventually being corralled by Miller. The Heat called time with 23 seconds left, 18 seconds on the shot clock, everyone in the building probably thinking the play would be set up for James.
It was. And it never got a chance for liftoff.
Referee Bennett Salvatore called James for an offensive foul with 8 seconds left, saying Ronnie Brewer beat him to the spot as the two-time MVP tried to back down the right side of the lane. So instead of winning the game late in regulation, James had to send it to overtime with defense. He guarded Rose on the final possession, forcing the Chicago guard into a jumper that fell way short -- and off to an extra 5 minutes they went.
"All I can do now is put it behind me and go forward," Rose said.
A day after being fined $50,000 for directing an anti-gay slur at a fan during Game 3, Bulls center Joakim Noah had six points and 14 rebounds in 45 minutes. And there seemed to be very little, if any, unusual rancor from Miami fans toward Noah.
Chicago's lead was 46-44 at halftime, after some wild emotional swings -- a 19-4 run by the Bulls, followed by a 29-9 spurt for the Heat, then capped by an 18-7 rebuttal by the Bulls to close the second quarter.
The Heat never led in the third quarter, but Chicago never pulled away.
The Bulls were up by eight and had possession with 3 minutes left, before Miami scored eight of the game's next 10 points to make a precarious deficit a bit more manageable and set up the unbelievable final quarter.
"Look, this series is an absolute bloodbath," Spoelstra said. "It's about as competitive and physical as it can be."
NOTES: Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski sat with Heat owner Micky Arison near midcourt. ... The teams combined for 21 turnovers in Game 3. They had 22 by the midpoint of the third quarter on Tuesday night. ... Bulls reserve C Omer Asik, who tweaked an ankle in Game 3, logged 2 minutes on Tuesday, limping noticeably.
[Associated Press;
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