Over the years, Pat Riley has coined a term, Forever Men. He uses it to describe the players who have been through the battles with him. Superstars like Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Patrick Ewing, Alonzo Mourning and Dwyane Wade.Once you live through all that together, how can you ever grow apart?My dad and I, long-term die-hard Miami sports fans, know the feeling.We didnt coach Dwyane Wade, but we absolutely have gone through a lifetime of battles with him.Even if now, weirdly, Wade doesnt play for the Heat anymore.Like many of you, I became a sports fan because of my dad. Unlike many of you, my dad is borderline irrational when it comes to sports. There was always a game on TV when I was growing up. There was also a lot of yelling at the television, both joyful and filled with angst. Occasionally, there was cursing. Oh hell, who am I trying to fool? There was a lot of cursing.Having been born in Cuba, my dad, Jorge, wasnt a huge basketball fan at first. Its just not what my people did. Cuba is a baseball and boxing country.Although, if youre a sports fan, its hard to turn away from greatness. As a kid in the 80s, there was no Miami Heat. So I started watching hoops and fell in love with the Lakers versus the Celtics. My dad took an interest because you could clearly see how exceptional the level of play was. Slowly, he started watching more and more games with me. The NBA crept in.Then the Heat were born in 1988. We had our own team to root for, short shorts and all. But they didnt make it easy for a couple of Sedanos who mostly rooted for transcendent sports moments. The team lost the first 17 games of its expansion season. So much cursing.There were the young teams of Rony Seikaly, Steve Smith and Glen Rice, when they did make the playoffs but couldnt get out of the first round (1991-1994). Then the Alonzo Mourning, Tim Hardaway and Jamal Mashburn?teams were better but not mind-blowing, losing to the Knicks three times and to the Bulls once.It took us years to get over that stupid f---ing?Allan Houston shot. My father literally called it, the stupid f---ing Allan Houston shot for several years.The 2003 draft came with a special kind of hope. Somehow, Wade fell to us, and here was a player who created the moments that delighted my father. We had a chance to have the kind of basketball we loved in the city we adored.As I returned home from covering the 2003 World Series between the Marlins and Yankees in New York, my father suffered a massive stroke. He was lucky to survive, though he was left with some battle scars that ran deep.From that day forward, Dad lost his ability to speak more than a few words, and was partially paralyzed on his right side. In essence, he has been trapped in his own body for the past 13 years.Challenge accepted. There have been many phases of his struggle. Eventually, after several years of therapy, he regained some mobility of his right limbs. Luckily, his ability to comprehend, read and emote were all intact, which allowed him to train his brain by reading the newspaper daily in both English and Spanish. Eventually, a few words would leak out. He can call my mom Nana, which is close enough to Nancy.Now, his days are mostly moving from bed, to a wheelchair, to the living room where he reads and watches TV.Sports always starred in our relationship. But since the stroke, they mattered more than ever, quickly becoming a rare and powerful escape from a cold reality. In a weird way, this situation and sports made us way closer than we ever had been.Most of our communication, since the stroke is me asking him questions and him nodding yes or no. Occasionally, hell point to words in a newspaper or write something with his left hand. There are lots of charades. For example, when he wants to go to bed, he looks at my mom, and points toward the room.But he can still watch sports.Right on cue, Dwyane Wade and the Miami Heat became the center of that universe.Three years after my dads stroke, the Heat were down 2-0 in the 2006 NBA Finals against the Dallas Mavericks. By then I had a job on Heat radio broadcasts, doing pregame and postgame interviews, for which I sat behind the bench. During the games, Id look serious, and take notes to use during the broadcast -- I had this fancy leather folder I had bought to keep my notes in -- but half my mind would imagine my parents at home, and whatever my dad would be doing in reaction to the game.Technically, he doesnt curse anymore -- because he cant enunciate the words. Although, I know my father. His face is still extremely expressive. From his facial expressions and I always know the tone and volume of the curses in his head.After each of the first two games, I called my folks the following morning to chat with Mom and to see how the old man was reacting to the games. Needless to say, Dad was not happy. Mom told me, he was so upset he shut the game off and told her he wanted to go to bed. Basically, my dad was pulling the elderly version of Im taking my ball and going home.In Game 3, their first home game of the series, the Heat found themselves down and practically out thanks to a Jason Terry bucket that gave the Mavericks an 89-76 lead with 6:34 to go. My phone was alive with one text after another from friends upset that the series was over and the team had no heart. It was an avalanche of annoyance and I took out my nervous energy with my sweaty hands, somehow mangling that fancy, and unfortunately rather expensive, leather folder so severely I had to throw it away.But thanks to Dwyane Wade, that folder didnt die in vain. You know how the rest of the story went. Wade played the fourth quarter with five fouls, scored 15 of his 42 points and famously said postgame, I was just looking up at the score and thinking, No, I aint going out like this. Im not going out 3-0. Immediately after the clock hit zeros, I called my parents. My mom picked up and I asked if she saw the end of the game. She said she hadnt, that my dad told her to turn it off when they called timeout with six and a half minutes to go.I started laughing and said to her, Are you kidding? They won!Shock and disbelief were her only responses. I repeated myself. They did, in fact, win.She turned to my dad and told him that the Heat had won.He yelled, NO?! and began laughing maniacally and screaming. Mom initially began to laugh as she explained he was pumping his fists while lying in bed. Then she tried to get him to pipe down because it was after midnight and youll wake the neighbors.I couldnt help but getting misty eyed as I heard his voice and the pure joy in it. Still do just thinking about it.And then I got to returning some of those texts. I remember using that line from Jerry Maguire, No heart? [Theyre] ALL heart, m-----f-----!Cursing is hereditary.I said goodbye and went on with my work. I would call or visit my parents after every game, just to make sure the old man was watching. Wed talk about the games. Sometimes wed even play them back and watch again together. My mom later told me that for the rest of the series, my dad would jokingly threaten to turn off the television and go to bed whenever the Heat found themselves down double digits. To this day, he still does that just to mess with her.Miami won the next three games, then the series, capped off with Wades winning Finals MVP.Those are moments youll never forget. They live forever. Moments that only sports and special players can provide.Beyond that first title run, Wade provided numerous more opportunities for those types of personal moments between my father and me. Like the time I went to see my parents the day after the 2008-09 NBA MVP Award was announced. Wade had a magnificent season but finished third in the voting behind LeBron and Kobe. I asked my dad if he had seen who won. He responded by grabbing the page of the newspaper that showed LeBron beating out Wade and presented it to me. I told him I had seen it.In the most my father moment ever, he looked at me, rolled his eyes, and sneered as he crumpled up the newspaper and shot it into a waste basket.I couldnt do anything but laugh.When Wade extinguished the Hornets last season, Heat fans were galvanized against that self-absorbed, Purple Shirt Man. Mom told me when Purple Shirt Man was jawing at Wade, my father became enraged.It was as if that guy in the purple shirt was yelling at you. He was screaming at the television and gave the guy the finger for yelling at Wade, she later told me.Yup. Thats my dad. Welcome to my world.I could go on and on with the memories. Moments that run the gamut of emotions for my family and an entire community, all attributed to Dwyane Wade. The Big 3 forming, and winning those two titles, is bar-none the greatest four years in Miami sports history. Its not even debatable.Thank you, Dwyane.Unfortunately, Wades departure from Miami also resonates. It resonates like a thud. It signifies the end of an era. An era that produced more professional championships than any other in South Florida sports history.The old man was crushed.I was in town covering free agency for SportsCenter and I went by the house. He showed me the newspaper. He was clearly looking for answers. I gave him my thoughts. He rolled his eyes and shook his head in disbelief. Everywhere I went in town people had a similar reaction. Complete disbelief.Everything comes to an end, I get that. But Dwyane Wade should be Kobe, Magic, Bird, Dirk, Jeter and Marino. He should have finished his career as an icon who played for one team.Heat President Pat Riley is the patriarch of basketball in Miami. Fans call him The Godfather, and rightfully so. Hes also known to wax poetic about loyalty. Except that loyalty comes with a caveat. One day, just when you least expect it, it wont be reciprocated.Self-preservation 101.When asked to comment on Wades departure in the immediacy of it, Riley began a text to my colleague Dan Le Batard by saying, SADDDDDDD!!!! SO saddddddd!On Thursday night, weirdly, even though hell be 100 feet from his rightful home, Wade will pull on his game jersey in the visitors locker room of the American Airlines Arena. The jersey will be bright red and say BULLS across the front. And hell go to work trying to defeat the Miami Heat.My dad will be watching. And he told me, by nodding at the right moments, over FaceTime, that hell be rooting for the Heat to win. But he also nodded when I asked if hed be rooting for Wade to have a great game. Because to my dad, Wade is a forever man. Thomas Morstead Youth Jersey . -- Devin Hester is done returning kicks in Chicago. Alvin Kamara Womens Jersey .com) - The Montreal Canadiens embark on their first road trip of the season as they head out west to battle the Calgary Flames on Wednesday night. http://www.authenticsaintssportsonline.com/saints-michael-thomas-gold-jersey/ . -- The proud fathers huddled near the Dallas Stars dressing room, smiling, laughing and telling stories while wearing replica green sweaters of their sons team. Rickey Jackson Youth Jersey . The International Olympic Committee released the official list of bid cities on Friday after the deadline for applications had passed. The candidates -- all previously announced in their own countries -- are: Almaty, Kazakhstan; Beijing; Krakow, Poland; Lviv, Ukraine; Oslo, Norway; and Stockholm. Erik McCoy Jersey . -- Chicago Bears cornerback Tim Jennings was selected Monday to his second straight Pro Bowl, while guard Kyle Long made it after a solid rookie season. OKLAHOMA CITY -- After four straight blowout victories, the Los Angeles Clippers learned they can handle business in a close game.Blake Griffin scored 25 points, and the Clippers beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 110-108 on Friday night to improve the leagues top record and the best start in franchise history to 8-1.Oklahoma Citys Russell Westbrook missed what would have been a game-winning 3-pointer in the closing seconds.The Clippers had won their previous four games by an average of 24.5 points, so coach Doc Rivers wasnt sure how his team would handle a game with a tight finish. Los Angeles focused on slowing Westbrook, who burned them for 35 points in Oklahoma Citys 85-83 win in Los Angeles earlier in the month that gave the Clippers their only loss so far.Even though Andre Roberson and Domantas Sabonis found their shooting strokes as the Thunder made 16 of 28 3-pointers, the Clippers stuck to their defensive game plan.This is one of those games you can lose your trust in, Rivers said. Roberson was making 3s, Sabonis was making 3s, and were telling our guys to stay and clog the paint. And theyre looking at me like, `Why? We did it, and it worked out for us.Jamal Crawford scored 19 points and Chris Paul added 17 points and 10 assists for the Clippers.Westbrook had 29 points, 14 rebounds and nine assists, but he made just 9 of 25 shots. Victor Oladipo scored 18 points, Enes Kanter had 13 points and 11 rebounds and Roberson added 13 points and nine rebounds for Oklahoma City (6-3).The game was tied at 50 at halftime. The Clippers went on an 8-1 run early in the third quarter, highlighted by a spinning layup and 3-pointer by J.J. Redick, to go up 65-56. Griffin had 15 points on 7-for-8 shooting in the period to help the Clippers take an 82-74 lead in the fourth.I think our offense, spacing-wise, was really good, Griffin said.dddddddddddd We attacked more, got out in transition, got some rebounds. Defensive stops led to some easy buckets.Westbrook tied the game at 102 with a 3-pointer with just over 2 minutes remaining, but the Clippers responded with a dunk by DeAndre Jordan and a 3-pointer by Crawford.The Thunder rallied again, but Westbrooks 28-footer was just off in the final seconds.Yeah, I probably should have drove it, but it was all right, Westbrook said.---TIP-INSClippers: Committed just five turnovers in each half. ... Jordan had 12 points and 13 rebounds. ... Jordan was called for a technical foul early in the third quarter.Thunder: Held the Clippers to 22.7 percent shooting in the first quarter to take a 24-16 lead. ... Oladipo scored 11 points in the first quarter. ... Westbrook was called for a technical after he disagreed with a foul call early in the third period. ... Roberson set a new career high with three 3-point goals. ... Sabonis made 4 of 5 3-pointers.HAPPY HOMECOMINGGriffin, an Oklahoma City native, has been booed in the past because hes been a thorn in the Thunders side. Now, with Kevin Durant gone, the fans have dreams of landing him in free agency. They showered Griffin with cheers during pregame introductions, which surprised him.A little bit, but its always nice to come back home, he said.QUOTABLEPaul, on how he guarded Westbrook: I did a lot differently tonight guarding Russ, he said. I didnt. It was Luc Mbah a Moute. That was the difference. I only guarded him a few times tonight.UP NEXTThe Clippers play at the Minnesota Timberwolves.The Thunder host the Orlando Magic and former teammate Serge Ibaka.---Follow Cliff Brunt on Twitter (at)CliffBruntAP. ' ' '