Such was the case on Wednesday night, when the Miami Heat — rejuvenated thanks to a three-game winning streak over the Lakers, Grizzlies and Spurs — hosted the Oklahoma City Thunder.
The Heat trailed by 11 midway through the second quarter when Dwyane Wade spun past Serge Ibaka then showed incredible lift with a dunk over Kendrick Perkins. Wade is 6-foot-4; Perkins is 6-foot-10. As you can imagine, Wade was feeling pretty good about his dunk, but that probably didn’t warrant the most ridiculous celebration by a guy whose team is trailing by nine in the history of guys whose teams have been trailing by nine.
Wade’s dunk got the crowd to really fan up, and he got the prestigious honor of being NBA.com’s “Dunk of the Night,” but it was the Thunder who executed in crunch time and came away with an 11-point victory. The Heat are now 18-20 against teams with a .500 record or better, which wasn’t what Miami envisioned when it saw Wade, LeBron James and Chris Bosh emerge from behind the clouds of white smoke to brag to America about how good they are.
And America continues to laugh.