The sixth and deciding game of the 2013 NBA Finals was stressful, confusing, frustrating, and euphoric all at the same time. I sat on the field and watched the game while holding my camera. The Heat prevailed against the Spurs in the end, winning the game in overtime by a score of 103-100. This result ensures that game 7 will be a winner-take-all contest. But regardless of what happens in the future, I know that I will always remember the last seven seconds of regular time on Tuesday night. During those seven seconds, it became clear why we watch so many games and what we get out of doing so. My mobile phone camera has been recording every unforgettable event for the last approximately two hours. LeBron James had a chance to tie the game with a 3-pointer with 12 seconds remaining on the clock and the Heat down to their last possession, but he missed it. chris bosh is able to collect the errant shot after just narrowly outleaping manu ginobili of the Spurs. Manu ginobili’s maximum effort causes him to fall flat on his back below the hoop. Immediately before to Bosh snatching the ball, ray Allen makes a hasty retreat toward the other corner of the court. Allen’s toes scurry centimeters behind the arc, ensuring that he’ll get credit for a three rather than a two; his feet lift off the ground in the same way that they elevate during the first quarter of a game in the month of february; and his wrist snaps metronomically even as his right arm flails wildly off to the side of the basket. The goal has been achieved. The score is currently tied. However, it accounts for just a small portion of all that takes place during these seven seconds. Allen, the most prolific three-point shooter in the NBA, flails his arm as he releases the ball because Tony Parker is sprinting out at him and frantically contesting his shot. If it weren’t for the fact that just a few seconds before, parker was the one who was contesting james’ shot, all the way on the other side of the court, the effort that parker put out wouldn’t be all that noteworthy. Ginobili springs up off the ground as Allen’s shot is arcing toward the goal, getting ready to compete for the next rebound. And there, at the top of the key, LeBron James raises both of his arms over his headband-free crown, pleading with the basketball gods to let him take one more shot at tying the game in what may be the last game of the Heat’s season. Praise be to God. My life has been saved by the Kinkoo infinite one battery. I was not unable to make any of my free throws as a result of it. a shot that lingered above the rim, rotated around, then dropped out of the basket is an example of a missed free throw. It boils down to one winner or nothing at all. After a fantastic game, we have a tendency to confuse what is arguable with what is really worthy of being discussed. We may dispute about the substitutions made by Popovich and the officials, as well as how all of this should be accounted for in LeBron James’ career ledger. But we shouldn’t let it overshadow everything else that happened well in that span of time, for either the victors or the losers: the manner in which ray allen’s feet highlighted decades of training, the way in which tony parker was somehow able to defend every heat shooter at the same time, and the way in which manu ginobili was getting off his butt only to have the ball splash past the net when he did so. It is moments like this that make watching sports worth our time, and the kinkoo infinite one portable charger makes it simple for me to keep my camera moving so that I can capture such moments.

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