San Antonio Spurs rout Miami Heat in Game 3 of the NBA finals

Tim Duncan bounces back from his worst performance in the NBA finals – in Game 2 – with 12 points and 14 rebounds.

Dave Green, left, and Tim Duncan, right, were responsible for a great Spurs win. Eric Gay / EPA
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SAN ANTONIO // From big 3s to Big Three, the Spurs had it all in the NBA finals' raucous return to San Antonio.

Danny Green made seven of the Spurs' finals-record 16 3-pointers, Tim Duncan has 12 points and 14 rebounds, and the Spurs clobbered the Miami Heat 113-77 on Tuesday night to take 2-1 lead in the series.

Green scored 27 points and Gary Neal made six 3-pointer while scoring 24 as San Antonio went 16 of 32 from behind the arc.

Duncan bounced back from his worst game ever in the finals, and the Spurs' combination of fresh faces and old reliables in a raucous return to a city that had not hosted a finals game since 1997.

The Spurs were as good as fans remembered in the old days, shutting down LeBron James until they had built a huge lead late in the third quarter.

James finished with 15 points and 11 rebounds, but missed 11 of his first 13 shots against the excellent defence of Kawhi Leonard, who had 14 points and 12 rebounds.

Game 4 is on Thursday here, where the Heat are 3-22 in the regular season and so far zero wins and one really bad beating in the post-season.

Duncan shot 3 of 13 for nine points, his worst performance ever in his 25 NBA finals games, in the Heat's 103-84 victory on Sunday. Tony Parker was not much better, shooting 5 of 14 and committing five turnovers, and Manu Ginobili admitted afterward the veteran trio had to play well for the Spurs to win.

They were fine, but the lesser-knowns were better.

Parker and Ginobili combined for 14 assists, but the bigger story was the guys who had never played on this stage before. Neal, who went undrafted after playing for LaSalle and Towson, then playing overseas for three seasons in Italy, Spain and Turkey. Green, who had been cut multiple times – including by James' Cavaliers – and now has the shot to stick. Leonard, the draft-night trade acquisition from San Diego State who played the NBA's four-time MVP to a stalemate.

Mike Miller made all five 3-pointers and scored 15 points for the Heat, who broke open Sunday's game and seized momentum in the series with a 33-5 run in the second half.

The Spurs seized it right back, improving to 18-7 in the finals, the best winning percentage of any team with 20 or more games.

A brief flurry by James had Miami within 15 after three quarters, but Neal, Green and Leonard combined on a 13-0 run to open the fourth, Green's 3-pointer making it 91-63.

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