Rose misses his chance

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Derrick Rose reacts after a play during the second half Sunday against the Miami Heat. Rose scored 34 points, but missed a pair of foul shots that would have given the Bulls the lead with 22.7 seconds left. The Heat defeated, the Bulls 97-93. (AP photo)
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MIAMI – The odds had to overwhelmingly be in the Bulls’ favor. Down by a point with 22.7 seconds left, with Derrick Rose heading to the line to shoot a pair of free throws.

The reigning NBA MVP. He was a perfect 29 for 29 from the foul line in the fourth quarter this season. As if this moment needed extra significance, it was coming against the Miami Heat, the team that downed Rose and the Bulls in last season’s Eastern Conference finals by taking the series’ last four games.

Rose missed the first.

Missed the second, too.

And missed a potentially game-tying jumper with 3.7 seconds left to boot, as somehow the Heat held on for a wild 97-93 win Sunday. Le­Bron James – the player supplanted by Rose as the league MVP – scored 35 points for Miami, which never trailed yet never could relax until Chris Bosh sealed it by making two free throws with 0.1 seconds left.

“This is so surreal right now knowing that I had a chance to win the game,” said Rose, emotional at his locker afterward. “And this time it didn’t work out.”

Bosh scored 24 points and added 12 rebounds for the Heat (15-5), who got 15 points from Dwyane Wade and pulled within one game of the Bulls (17-5) in the East.

“Like the playoffs in January,” Wade said.

Richard Hamilton and Joakim Noah each scored 11 for the Bulls, who got 10 apiece from Ronnie Brewer and Carlos Boozer.

“A highly contested basketball game,” said Heat coach Erik Spoelstra.

Oh, that doesn’t even begin to tell the story of this one.

“I let my team down,” Rose said.

Wade missed nine of his first 10 shots, airballing the last of those. James missed a pair of free throws 5.1 seconds after Rose misfired on his tries in the final moments. There were skirmishes, hard fouls, pushing and screaming and shoving. Even an inadvertent whistle in the final moments that ultimately didn’t hurt Miami, although the Heat strongly believed the whistle took away their advantage.

“The way I see it, every time we play the Bulls it’s going to be like that,” Bosh said. “It’s always going to be an atmosphere where nobody wants to lose and that’s how the playoffs are.”

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