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Heat ruin Mavericks’ title party in opener

DALLAS -- While Dirk Nowitzki and the Dallas Mavericks were on the court celebrating the NBA championship they won over LeBron James and Dwyane Wade last season, the Miami Heat were gathered in another part of the building.

It wasn't because they dreaded watching the ceremony, they insisted.

They were simply getting ready to show everyone why they are favored to win it all this season.

James and Wade led a series of scoring waves that put Miami ahead by 35 points midway through the third quarter, the lead peaking when James soared to the rim and tipped an alley-oop pass to Wade so he could have the dunk instead. The game was essentially over then, although the Mavs' reserves fueled a late rally that made the 105-94 final score look close.

"We tried to play aggressive," James said. "We're a focused team. We had a great training camp. We came in with the same mindset we had at practice, use our speed and play with mental focus."

James finished with 37 points, 10 rebounds and six assists. Wade had 26 points, eight rebounds and six assists. Miami scored at least 30 points in each of the first three quarters.

"Celebration or not, we had a game plan and implemented it," Wade said. "We came out and played a good game."

The pregame festivities might have left the Mavs emotionally drained, because they were down by 15 after one quarter and 21 at halftime. They then gave up 14 straight points early in the third quarter.

But the blowout likely had more to do with the slow process of breaking in a new rotation. Dallas lost center Tyson Chandler and backup point guard J.J. Barea, and added guard Vince Carter, do-it-all Lamar Odom and backup guard Delonte West.

"We're going to have to forge an identity with this team; it's a different team," Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle said. "That's work, and it's going to take honesty, and it's not going to be easy."

Carter took Dallas' first two shots, an 18-footer and a layup. Both missed. West started the second half in his place and finished with 10 points. Carter had five points, two rebounds and three assists in 21 minutes.

Odom -- the NBA's reigning Sixth Man of the Year, who was acquired from the Lakers earlier this month -- entered to a standing ovation and got fans roaring again when he made a 3-pointer that tied the game at 11. He missed his next five shots before getting ejected midway through the third quarter, but still left to loud cheers. He had four points and four rebounds in 13 minutes.

"We've got to get better, and it will take a little time to get better," Odom said.

Jason Terry sparked a Dallas rally, which started after Odom was tossed, and wound up leading the Mavs with 23 points. Nowitzki scored 21 in three quarters. Former UNLV standout Shawn Marion scored 12 and broke the pinky finger on his left hand.

NBA commissioner David Stern was on the court for the start of the Mavs' banner-raising ceremony honoring their first championship. Fans greeted him with boos, but he quickly turned them into cheers by offering his congratulations to team owner Mark Cuban.

Cuban's often contentious relationship with Stern could've been as much of a reason for the boos as the lockout, which pushed the opener from Nov. 1 to Christmas and cut the season by 16 games.

Fans had plenty more to cheer, such as Terry proclaiming, "Thirty-one years you waited -- 31 years! -- to call your team a champion, ladies and gentlemen. A champion!"

Nowitzki, Terry, Jason Kidd and many more players, coaches and staff each got a strand to pull as part of the unveiling of the banner at court level. Nowitzki and Kidd seemed awed as they watched it rise to the rafters. They couldn't take their eyes off it -- or didn't want to.

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