Rampage Mode | Lost House Match Betting Laugh After Them: "Pastor And Rastafarian Fight" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRoO3GcBgGg --~-- Meek Mill bet on the wrong team and so did this guy! The Philly rapper apparently lost $200,000 on the Golden State Warriors. The San Francisco team fell to the Toronto Raptors during Game 6 of the NBA Finals on Thursday. Evidence of Meek’s loss cropped up in a video of him and a friend, where the friend says, “$200K down, he good. Easy, come on. Super easy.” The Raptors won their first NBA championship in franchise history, defeating the Warriors on Thursday with a final score of 114-110. Meek loves a good bet—and it looks like sometimes he wins, too. Back in May, YG revealed that he owes Meek $10K after losing the wager during a Patriots game. However, he’s only willing to pony up when Post Malone pays his $20K debt to YG for a Cowboys-Rams game. OAKLAND, Calif. — The Toronto Raptors had more length, more depth and more athleticism than anyone imagined when the N.B.A. finals began. The Raptors used all of that — as well as their far superior health — to close down Oracle Arena and close out the N.B.A.’s two-time reigning champions Thursday night with a 114-110 Game 6 victory over the Golden State Warriors. The Warriors were presumed to possess the emotional advantage coming in, playing their final game at Oracle and dedicating the evening to their superstar forward Kevin Durant, who was on the other side of the country after undergoing major surgery Wednesday. But Toronto just had too much — especially after Golden State lost the All-Star guard Klay Thompson for the entire fourth quarter after a bad landing on a drive to the basket. The Warriors later announced that Thompson had torn the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee. Three Raptors, remarkably, outscored or matched Kawhi Leonard in the clincher: Kyle Lowry delivered 11 of his 26 points in the game’s first two-plus minutes. Pascal Siakam added 26 points and 10 rebounds of his own. And the undrafted Fred VanVleet made five of Toronto’s 13 3-pointers to finish with 22 points — 12 of which came in the fourth quarter. [For six games, Fred VanVleet had the toughest defensive assignment of his life: Attach himself to one of the N.B.A.’s greatest scorers.] Leonard hit three free throws in the final 0.9 seconds of the game to finish with 22 points and 6 rebounds in what for him ranks as a quiet night. Yet he still wound up snagging the N.B.A. finals Most Valuable Player Award as the unquestioned centerpiece of the Canadian franchise’s first championship.