SAN ANTONIO — Dwyane Wade has never gone the distance in three previous NBA Finals trips.
His first two appearances, a win and a loss, both went six games. The Miami Heat needed only five to finish off Oklahoma City last year, when LeBron James won his first title.
Wade talks now as if he expects this series with the San Antonio Spurs to reach a Game 7.
"It's going to be hard, the hardest thing we're going to do as a group is to try to repeat," Wade said. "And this team over here is not going to quit, no matter what. So we have to prepare for their best effort."
With the series tied at 2-2, the Heat are in the same position as two years ago. They lost that Game 5 to the Dallas Mavericks, who eliminated them in Game 6 in Miami.
It's often the most pivotal game of the finals, with the Game 5 winner taking 20 of the previous 27 series that were tied at 2-2. The Heat blew out the Spurs on Thursday, but their best hasn't been carrying over from game to game, not just in this series but for a while now. So it's anybody's guess what happens Sunday in a finals that's dead even, though the games haven't been.
"I think Game 5 should be the best game of the series," Wade said. "Both teams should come out knowing each other, knowing what each other want to do, and it should be a very good game."
Not the way this series has been going.