This is the match-up everyone hoped for.
It took a full regular season and play-offs to get to the expected, and hotly anticipated, rematch - the San Antonio Spurs versus the Miami Heat in the NBA finals.
The manner in which the 2014 post-season played out simply added to the realisation that these two titans would clash in the finals for the second straight year.
The best team in the league - San Antonio - will take on the best player in the league in the Heat's LeBron James. And for the top seeded Spurs, their bruised egos simply won't let them forget a seven-game loss to the Heat last season.
"They wanted this, they wanted us and we will be ready for the challenge," James said Monday.
San Antonio and two-time defending champion Miami are set for the first rematch series since the 1997 and 1998 finals between the Chicago Bulls and the Utah Jazz.
The Spurs will host the first game on Thursday (Friday AEST) of the annual showcase that pits the top teams from the Eastern and Western Conferences.
"It is unbelievable to have regained our focus after that devastating loss last year," said Spurs forward Tim Duncan.
"We've got that bad taste in our mouth from last time. We got four more to win. We will do it this time."
Injuries could be a factor in the finals as Spurs star Tony Parker did not play in the second half of San Antonio's series-clincher over Oklahoma City because of a sore left ankle. Parker said Tuesday he plans to try to play in game one.
Miami opened the playoffs with a four-game sweep of the Charlotte Bobcats and then polished off the pesky Brooklyn Nets in the second round in five games.
In the final step before the finals, the inconsistent Indiana Pacers pushed the Heat to six games, but eventually succumbed.
The Spurs travelled a more difficult road.
They needed seven games to get past the eighth-seeded Dallas Mavericks in the first round, and then ousted the Portland Trail Blazers in five games.
The Oklahoma City Thunder gave the Spurs trouble in the semi-finals, but San Antonio eventually advanced in six games.
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