BOSTON — Luka Doncic didn't stay up all night to watch NBA Finals games as a kid. They usually started at something like 3 a.m. in his native Slovenia. He had school to get to a few hours later. He'd wake up and find out who won.
Make no mistake, though: Doncic was paying attention.
''Every kid who plays basketball dreams about this,'' Doncic said. ''I was one of them.''
Dreams become reality for Doncic on Thursday night, when the 25-year-old makes his NBA Finals debut for the Dallas Mavericks as they take on the Boston Celtics in Game 1 of this year's title series. He could become the first player to win a scoring title and a championship in the same season since Shaquille O'Neal in 2000, and a title surely would only add to the argument that Doncic — who leads all players in this postseason in points, rebounds and assists — may be the best player in the game right now.
''This is going to be the international finals,'' said Kyrie Irving, Doncic's backcourt mate in Dallas. ''Everybody's going to be watching. Every finals is international, but the world is watching.''
He didn't have to clarify why. Yes, the NBA Finals have long been available in more than 200 countries and territories, broadcast in something like 50 different languages and dialects. And it's hardly a new thing for foreign players to star on the NBA's biggest stage; two of the past three NBA Finals MVPs were Greece's Giannis Antetokounmpo for Milwaukee in 2021 and Serbia's Nikola Jokic for Denver last year.
''Amazing. First time here. Hopefully it's not the last," Doncic said Wednesday at NBA Finals media day in Boston. ''But never take it for granted. You never know if you are going to come back, so just enjoy the experience.''
Doncic — who became a father for the first time this season, calling that development ''the greatest thing in the world'' — is a global corporation by himself, a player who speaks four languages fluently and has an enormous following everywhere. And a championship would only add to his rapidly growing legend.