In what has been an exhilarating, tension-packed series (somehow despite all the blowouts), the Cavaliers and Warriors are all square at three games apiece. Which means basketball fans are getting that rarest of gifts: an NBA Finals Game 7.
Video of a 2001 interview with a then-16-year-old LeBron James, in which he discusses his desire to take home a third straight high school championship.
A few years ago, prime time TV and every website, newspaper and magazine announced the second coming of King James, when LeBron James announced "he was taking his talents to South Beach."
James led the Miami Heat to three straight NBA Finals appearances, and won two titles while in Florida.
Grand Rapids native and boxing champion Floyd Mayweather, Jr., hit the top 10 and the music group Bon Jovi continues to have star power in the latest Forbes Celebrity 100 list.
The rundown reflects celebrities' power and influence based on media exposure, marketability, and career earnings over the past 12 months.
Series MVP Kawhi Leonard had 22 points and 10 rebounds, and the Spurs routed the Miami Heat, 104-87, in San Antonio on Sunday night to win the 2014 NBA Finals, four games-to-one.
Blame the lack of air conditioning, blame the intensity of the game, blame fatigue -- whatever you think the reason is, the image of LeBron James being carried off the court during Game 1 of the NBA Finals is sure hard to forget.
The Miami Heat and the San Antonio Spurs face each other for the NBA title for the second year in a row. The 2014 NBA Finals start Thursday in San Antonio. Here's a preview of what to expect:
There's little question that Jimmy Fallon loves rapping, fake music videos, invented sporting events, and asking his 'Tonight Show' guests to help him combine all of the above into its own unique blast of '80s-tinged goodness and oddly catchy lyrics (if you count a single line as "lyrics"). That doesn't seem to be abating in his second week as host on the venerable late show, as basket-b