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NBA'S BEST RIVALRY: KNICKS-HEAT GAME SEVEN EARNS NBC 8.7/19

          NBC's coverage of Game Seven of the Knicks-Heat series
     yesterday earned a 8.7/19 overnight Nielsen rating, up 16%
     from last year's comparable Knicks-Pacers Eastern Conference
     Finals Game One, which earned a 7.5/18.  For the weekend,
     NBC averaged a 7.5/17 overnight for two playoff games, up
     12% from last year's 6.7/17 for two conference finals Game
     Ones on the comparable weekend (#29).  In N.Y., Bob Raissman
     writes that NBC's broadcast team of Tom Hammond, Bill Walton
     and Steve Jones yesterday "displayed the kind of balance you
     needed" in a Game Seven.  Raissman: "They did not sacrifice
     the humorous aspect that has become a big part of their
     style, but they knew exactly when to can the shtick and
     focus on the game" (N.Y. DAILY NEWS, 5/22).  NEWSDAY's Steve
     Zipay writes that Walton "saved his best game of the
     playoffs for yesterday" (NEWSDAY, 5/22).  Also in N.Y., Phil
     Mushnick writes that NBC's NBA telecasts "are so much
     cleaner, so much easier on the senses, when needless and
     mindless graphics don't appear over live play."  Yesterday's
     Game Seven "was a particularly good watch, primarily because
     NBC eliminated its obstructed views" (N.Y. POST, 5/22).
          LAKERS THE SAVIORS? In Detroit, Bob Wojnowski wrote
     that NBA "ratings are down, interest is down, quality is
     down. ... How bad has it gotten?  So bad, this is the latest
     question: Can the Lakers save the NBA? ... As uninteresting
     as the Spurs were [last year], NBC's playoff ratings this
     year are down an astonishing 21 percent.  That could change
     if the Lakers and Knicks meet in the finals, but it's
     further evidence the NBA is wallowing, in dire need of
     something different" (DETROIT NEWS, 5/21).


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