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Miami-Pacers confrontation should be a far cry from 2012 encounter

Depth of talent available on Spoelstra's bench gives Miami-Indiana match-up a very different flavour than last year's series

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LeBron James, Miami Heat

Erik Spoelstra, mad chemist that he is, started Dexter Pittman in game three of the 2012 Eastern Conference semi-finals against the Pacers.

Predictably, that lab experiment blew up in Spoelstra's face like the unstable concoction it was, and, if memory serves, set off a chain reaction of panic that left many wondering whether the Heat's grand gamble was doomed.

History has a way of glossing over the particulars but, at the time, there was a very real sense that game three was the Heat's Waterloo.

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There was infighting, of course. Dwyane Wade famously had to be restrained from his coach during one timeout. Wade, nursing a bad left knee that would later require surgery, finished the game with five points.

There was instability. Shane Battier, forced into the starting line-up after Chris Bosh's abdominal injury in game one, went 0-of-7 from the field and 0-of-6 from three-point range.

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There were anomalies. Mario Chalmers led the Heat with 25 points that night in Indianapolis.

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