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duncan228
05-20-2009, 11:36 PM
The national view.

Magic stun LeBron, Cavaliers 107-106 (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/recap?gid=2009052005&prov=ap)
By Tom Withers

No longer untested, no longer unbeaten. The Cleveland Cavaliers finally met their match in the playoffs.

Superman’s team stopped them cold.

Dwight Howard scored 30 points, Rashard Lewis added 22 and the Orlando Magic rallied from a 15-point halftime deficit to hand LeBron James and the Cavaliers their first loss of the postseason, 107-106 on Wednesday night in the Eastern Conference finals opener.

James finished with 49 points, eight assists and six rebounds, but the league MVP walked off the floor with a slight limp after Cleveland’s stunning loss—just its third in 46 home games.

Lewis made a 3-pointer with 14.7 seconds left and the Magic, who dethroned the champion Boston Celtics in the previous round, survived two shots by Cleveland in the final seconds. Mo Williams missed a catch-and-shoot jumper off a jump ball as the horn sounded and the Cavs fell to 8-1 in the postseason.

“It’s a big victory,” said Howard, who broke one of the shot clocks with a dunk in the opening minutes. “We kept fighting the whole game. We kept believing we could win.”

Game 2 is Friday night at Quicken Loans Arena, which fell eerily silent after the Magic’s win.

As fans headed to the exits, they turned to observe James still on the floor and bent over in obvious pain. He seemed to be bothered by cramps in the fourth quarter and was tended to by Cleveland’s training staff before slowly making his way to the locker room.

Cleveland, coming off its second extended layoff of the playoffs after sweeping Atlanta, lost its grip on the game with a stagnant third quarter that carried into the fourth.

Orlando, which went 2-1 vs. Cleveland in the regular season, took its first lead at 85-84 with 10:06 left when Anthony Johnson hit a 3-pointer from the left corner. The bucket seemed to suck the air out of the raucous building and Cavs coach Mike Brown quickly called a timeout to stop the Magic’s run and get James back in.

The Magic, though, kept making big shots with Lewis hitting a jumper with 31.6 seconds left to give Orlando a 104-103 lead.

James then drove and scored on a runner while drawing a sixth foul on Howard, who added 13 rebounds. James completed the three-point play for a 106-104 lead but Lewis came down and buried his 3-pointer over a closing Anderson Varejao.

“You got to play 48 minutes,” Lewis said. “The most important thing is to play 48 minutes. We played only one half but it was the second half.”

On Cleveland’s last possession, Delonte West missed an open 3 but the Cavs were able to force a jump ball. James tipped it behind him to Williams, but his last-second prayer hit the back of the rim.

Williams ended the first half by swishing a 67-footer to give the Cavaliers a 63-48 lead.

Taking the inbounds pass with 1.7 seconds left, Williams dribbled once and sent a high-arching shot like the ones he and the Cavs’ shooters work on at practice toward the basket. When it splashed through, James raised his arms and then wrapped Williams in a bear hug.

It was the third consecutive Game 1 in these playoffs that the Cavs have closed the first half with a buzzer-beating bucket. James did it against Detroit and Atlanta.

Leading by 15, the Cavs got complacent and lost their offensive rhythm in the third quarter. They stood around either waiting for James to do something or settled for jump shots that didn’t fall.

Orlando seized the chance to get back in it and with Courtney Lee and Mickael Pietrus hitting 3-pointers, the Magic outscored the Cavaliers 30-19 in the period to pull within 82-78 entering the fourth.

James followed every detail of the game-day ritual he has followed religiously since his rookie season: shootaround, nap, early workout. He was already on the floor at Quicken Loans Arena at 5:15 p.m.—more than three hours before tip-off—launching jumpers.

“It feel like it’s basketball again,” he said before the game. “I’m excited.”

Unlike the previous two Game 1s in these playoffs, when he came out attacking the rim, James was happy to defer to his teammates early on. He threaded a pass to Anderson Varejao for Cleveland’s first hoop and James had four assists before he scored his first basket on a goal tend by Howard with 3:42 left in the first quarter.

Over the next 2:42, James displayed every aspect of his game.

He made his first 3-pointer to give Cleveland a 28-14 lead and then got behind Orlando’s defense on the break for a soaring dunk.

Back on defense, James flew across the foul lane to swat a shot by Howard with his elbow. James followed that with a steal and hit another 3-pointer to put the Cavs up 33-17 and cap a one-man flurry that had the Magic reeling.

But not for long.

Notes

Orlando’s bench outscored Cleveland’s 25-5. … NFL Hall of Famer Jim Brown sat courtside. … James isn’t surprised that he, Howard, Kobe Bryant and Carmelo Anthony—all members of the U.S. Olympic team that won gold in China last summer— are all still in the playoffs. “We all worked really hard,” he said. “That experience was great for everyone.”

duncan228
05-20-2009, 11:38 PM
Orlando’s Howard strong enough to pull upset (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-magic-howard&prov=ap&type=lgns)

First he took down the backboard. Then Dwight Howard helped quiet the red-hot Cleveland Cavaliers.

Howard scored 30 points and grabbed 13 rebounds before fouling out in leading the Orlando Magic to a 107-106 victory against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Wednesday, giving the Magic a 1-0 lead in the Eastern Conference finals.

It was just Cleveland’s third home defeat this season, and came against a Magic team that has been criticized for showing a lack of mental toughness.

That has changed over the past 72 hours, when Orlando won in Boston in Game 7 to win its semifinal series, then followed it up with a stunning victory over a Cavaliers team that sailed through their first two postseason series.

Howard paced Orlando until its shooters got going in the second half. He scored the team’s first eight points and had 18 of Orlando’s 48 at the half, when the Magic trailed by 15.

Orlando’s shooters heated up in the second half, knocking down 7 of 13 3-pointers to help swing the momentum.

Rashard Lewis’ 3-pointer with 14.7 seconds left was the go-ahead score, but Orlando would not have been in that position without a strong first half from Howard, who fouled out with 25.7 seconds left.

Play was stopped for eight minutes early in the first quarter when Howard’s dunk loosened the 24-second shot clock from the backboard.

Howard played the second half in foul trouble after picking up three fouls— two offensive—in the first half.

At the other end, he was harassed by James, who guarded Magic point guard Rafer Alston much of the night so he could sneak over and help double-team Howard. James caught Howard for three blocks in the game, frustrating Orlando’s star, who felt he was fouled each time.

Howard was whistled for a technical after complaining about a James block in the third quarter.

“He has to understand that a lot of the things that might be called fouls in the regular season are not in the playoffs,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said before the game. “The game is called a little bit differently. It’s always a bit more physical.”

Game 2 is Friday night in Cleveland.

NewJerSpur
05-20-2009, 11:41 PM
My only prayer is that the Magic don't shoot themselves out of Game 2....if they are going to go down.

Indazone
05-20-2009, 11:44 PM
Cleveland's achilles heal is a strong scoring big man and strong power forwards. They can't beat Orlando with Superman nor would they have beaten the Rockets with Yao.

duncan228
05-21-2009, 01:49 PM
James, Cavs absorb first hit of playoffs (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=As.70Ub5QxH43H.GT9yq97W8vLYF?slug=aw-magiccavs052109&prov=yhoo&type=lgns)
By Adrian Wojnarowski

CLEVELAND – As everyone started to leave the Q in a stunned silence, LeBron James bit his lip, squinted his eyes and peered down to discover a most disturbing development: The blood of King James flowed to the floor. All around, the Orlando Magic hugged and Stan Van Gundy pumped a fist to the rafters and together the Magic declared themselves liberated as witnesses to the MVP’s genius.

Now, LeBron’s legs crumpled with muscle cramps, a gash opened on his left shin and soon Cleveland Cavaliers officials rushed to his side. Here was the image that no one expected to see in these Eastern Conference playoffs. LeBron James brought to his knees, bloodied.

Yes, James’ smile was gone and the Cavaliers finally found themselves in the playoffs. After eight straight games and eight blowouts, Cleveland was delivered a sobering message by the Magic. Even LeBron’s most dynamic game of the postseason – 49 points, eight assists and three blocks – couldn’t deliver a victory over the Magic in the opener of the East finals.

The Cavaliers lost 107-106 on Wednesday night, and they lost because the Magic made every immense shot in the final minutes of a fabulous game. They lost because the best defensive team in the NBA couldn’t make stops and lost, maybe, because they hadn’t been forced to play a tough game in weeks.

The free ride in these playoffs ended, but the series is just starting. “We’re going to see what we’re made of now,” Delonte West said. “But it’s not time to get our panties in a bunch yet.”

Long before Rashard Lewis hit a contested 3-pointer with 14.7 seconds left, before Cavs guards Delonte West and Mo Williams missed shots in the final seconds, the Magic listened to Van Gundy implore his team in the huddle that they were best conditioned for these trying times. Orlando had been in these hellacious games with Philadelphia and Boston, and, “He kept saying Cleveland hasn’t,” Lewis remembered.

Funny, but Van Gundy had to build the Magic back up after tearing them down in a screeching halftime speech. After Williams hit one of those running LeBron-esque 67-footers at the halftime buzzer and the scoreboard blinked 63-48, James would leave the floor with 26 points on a dizzying array of drives and dunks and deep jumpers. The Cavaliers had won 43 of 45 games here this season, and they were running over the Magic like they did the pedestrian Pistons and Hawks.

After nine days away, the Cavaliers never had been so sharp, their precision so peerless. Whatever LeBron wanted, LeBron took. Van Gundy marched into the locker room and screamed, “You’re playing like you’re all witnesses.” This was no Nike commercial, he insisted. This was the conference finals and the Magic coach essentially wondered, you know, how many more chin-ups James would get to do on the rim.

The Magic never did get control of James – who made 20 of 30 shots – but they eventually did find a way to get a scoreless Hedo Turkoglu free of the Cavaliers’ blitzes that stifled his shot and passing lanes, and Lewis hit three 3-pointers, and, above all, Howard destroyed the Cavs with 30 points and 13 rebounds.

When it mattered most, the Magic took the ball out of James’ hands on a drive to the rim inside the final 10 seconds. They made him pass to West in the corner, who missed that 3-pointer. James would end up with a jump ball with one second left, and he tipped the ref’s lob to Williams, who missed an off-balance 15-footer as the clock expired.

No more do the Magic have to contend with that soft label that comes with so many jump shooters. With the Game 6 and 7 victories over the Boston Celtics, with this stunning Game 1 victory over the Cavs, the Magic have shown the stomach for pressure playoff basketball.

The Magic would benefit because James suffered cramps through most of the fourth quarter, and he even had to call timeouts to get off his feet. It happened in Game 1 of the Atlanta series and again on Wednesday night. Those long layoffs betrayed his body. The stress of these games – the fans, the lights, the sweating – can never be simulated in practices.

“Your body will tell you when you are ready to move,” James said. “If you try to move before [then], it is going to hurt.”

So, LeBron James, the MVP, welcomed a little uncertainty into the season, the pressure of a Game 2 on Friday night with the world watching to see how the game’s greatest talent brings his team back. He’ll drink his fluids, he said, stay hydrated and James assured that those legs won’t be wobbly when the Magic come for him. The Magic tried everything, but perhaps it was the inactivity, the unchallenging nature of this easy playoff run, that doomed James and the Cavs in Game 1.

“The one thing that I don’t leave this game with, is any idea whatsoever what to do with him,” Van Gundy said. “As a coach, you’re supposed to have some idea. I don’t have a clue.”

When it was time to leave the interview room late Wednesday, James seemed oddly at peace with a test, with playoff pressure crashing into Cleveland’s private party. “Nobody said it was going to be easy,” James insisted. He popped on his sunglasses, walked down the stairs and flashed a smile to a couple of Cavaliers officials.

No, Orlando hadn’t come to be witnesses to the MVP’s championship chase. The Magic took his best shot, and ultimately left LeBron James in the middle of the floor, in the middle of May, bent over and bleeding.