The buzzer-beater prompted widespread euphoria, and in a few minutes, it
quickly vanished.When a buzzer-beater wins a MUT 18 Coins game, it wins the game. When a
buzzer-beater merely forces overtime, it really only gives you a 50-50 shot at
winning the game. And maybe it's often less than a 50-50 shot. The team that was
winning with a few seconds to go is often the team that played better during the
majority of the game, forced into an extra session by a shot that might've been
a bit lucky.
And the team that just hit a buzzer-beater has often wasted a lot of its
energy -- both physical and emotional -- mounting a comeback. Sure, you have
"momentum," but that may or may not be a thing.There's a long history of Tragic
Buzzer-Beaters: Spectacular shots and plays to force overtime by teams that then
lost in overtime. The other night we asked
Twitter for some suggestions, and these are a few of the greatest ever.
Please to the comments with more suggestions and videos! Jerry West, 1970 NBA
FinalsIn Game 3 of the NBA Finals, Dave DeBusschere of the Knicks hit a fallaway
15-footer to give New York a lead with three seconds to go. Wilt Chamberlain
quickly inbounded to
West, who had to hurl a heave from 60 feet ... and he drained
it:Unfortunately for The Logo, the three-point line hadn't been invented yet, so
this shot was only worth two points. In today's NBA, this shot would've Buy Madden NFL 18 Coins given
the Lakers a win in regulation. In the NBA of 1970, it merely forced overtime,
where the Knicks won by three. It turned out to be a pretty big deal -- New York
won the series in a classic Game 7, and that's why the Lakers only have 14 more https://www.mmogo.com/