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duncan228
05-28-2009, 11:06 PM
The national view. Updated.

James scores 37 as Cavs win Game 5 (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/recap?gid=2009052805&prov=ap)
By Tom Withers

The message was quickly scribbled on the dry-erase board in Cleveland’s locker room. It said little and said it all: 1:00 AM FLY.

The Cavaliers are heading back to Florida, their wondrous season still alive.

LeBron James wouldn’t let it end.

James, showing off every dimension of his unstoppable game, had 37 points, 14 rebounds and 12 assists, and Mo Williams, who boldly predicted the Cavs would come back and win this tight-as-can-be series, added 24 points in a 112-102 victory over the Orlando Magic in Game 5 on Thursday night.

“It was win or go home,” James said.

Instead, it’s back to amped-up Amway Arena for Game 6 on Saturday night.

You expected anything else?

The Magic overcame a 22-point deficit but missed their first opportunity to close out the Cavaliers, who are trying to become just the ninth team since 1947 to rally and win a series after being down 3-1. Orlando will have two more tries to reach the NBA finals for the first time since 1995.

“They deserved to get this one,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said of the Cavs. “As poorly as I thought we played, we still were there with chances to win and didn’t get it done. We have to get ready to go on Saturday.”

For Cleveland, a city banking on James to deliver a championship after a 45-year drought, the MVP was again in a league of his own.

“His intensity and his passion are out of this world,” Cavs guard Daniel Gibson said. “We will follow him. When he gets it going, there is nothing you can do.”

James scored 21 points in the second half—17 in the fourth quarter—and had a hand in Cleveland’s first 29 points in the final 12 minutes. The last player to post at least 37-14-12 in a playoff game was Oscar Robertson in 1963.

Hedo Turkoglu scored 29 for Orlando, and Dwight Howard had 24 points and 10 rebounds before fouling out with 2:22 remaining while trying to stop James on a drive.

Not even Superman was denying James.

“I was attacking anyone in the way, no matter who it was,” James said. “There’s always a sense of urgency when you are on the brink of elimination.”

And this time James got plenty of help. Williams, his trusty sidekick all season but a near no-show in this series, made six 3-pointers. Zydrunas Ilgauskas scored 16 points, Delonte West 13 and Gibson made two huge 3-pointers in the fourth quarter—both on assists from James.

“He got his teammates involved and then took over,” Orlando’s Mickael Pietrus said. “That’s what great players do.”

The Magic have twice ended series on the road this postseason, winning a Game 6 in Philadelphia and a Game 7 in Boston. For a while it looked like Orlando might do it again, taking a 79-78 lead into the fourth quarter.

James, though, had other plans.

He picked up his first assist of the period on 3-pointer by Williams and his second on a 3 by Gibson. Cleveland then turned to its superstar every time on offense, spreading the floor and forcing the Magic to defend him. If he wasn’t backing down the lane, he was getting to the line or setting his teammates up from the perimeter.

James also had four rebounds and four assists in the final quarter.

“The game is basically all LeBron, all the time,” Van Gundy said. “If he gets in the paint, it’s automatically a foul. One of the things we have to do, we can’t keep putting him on the line 20 times a game. We have to find a way to stop that.”

Down 32-10 with 3:40 left in the first quarter, the Magic started knocking down 3s and outscored the Cavs 45-24 the remainder of the first half.

The Magic, who made just eight 3s after hitting 17 in Game 4, then opened the third with nine straight points as Turkoglu hit a 3-pointer—of course— and Orlando was within 94-93 after Turkoglu made three free throws with 4:46 left. James then whipped a pass to Gibson for a 3 to make it 97-93.

Orlando missed on its next trip and James dropped a jumper. Pietrus missed the next time down and James was able to foul out Howard, who smiled as he headed to the bench knowing he and his teammates are still in control of the series.

Maybe.

Williams, who came in shooting just 32 percent from the floor and 22 percent on 3-pointers, set the tone early. He made three 3s in the first 4:38, and the Cavaliers, playing perhaps their best quarter of the entire playoffs, started 10-of-11 from the field while opening a 22-point lead.

But the never-say-die Magic made it go poof!

Orlando, which overcame 16- and 23-point deficits, respectively, in Games 1 and 2, whittled away by capitalizing on Cleveland’s offensive sloppiness and impatience, and were within 56-55 at halftime.

Notes

West suffered a hip pointer with 3:33 remaining. The Cavaliers said his status will be updated Friday. … Cleveland, hoping to host Game 7, improved to 44-3 at home. … Celebrity row included New York Yankees Alex Rodriguez and CC Sabathia, rap mogul Jay-Z, Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger and Browns QB Brady Quinn. … James said playoff pressure doesn’t rival playing for an Olympic gold medal. “You’re playing for Cleveland and Los Angeles and Denver and every other city in this country,” said James. “That was way more pressure than what’s going on here.”

rayray2k8
05-28-2009, 11:08 PM
sooo.. let me get this straight.. The more he score the more he losses, but the less he scores the more he wins??
That makes sense. :)

duncan228
05-28-2009, 11:12 PM
Updated.

Magic returning home to play Game 6 (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-magic-headedhome&prov=ap&type=lgns)

Stan Van Gundy spent the last two days emphasizing the importance of defense to the Orlando Magic. Now the coach has two days to try and get his point across again.

Despite overcoming another big early deficit, the Magic are heading home for a Game 6 after falling 112-102 to the Cleveland Cavaliers on Thursday night in the Eastern Conference finals.

The Cavaliers scored 34 points in the fourth quarter, shot 50 percent for the game, including going 9 of 18 on 3-pointers. Those numbers upset Van Gundy, who wants to see more out of his defense Saturday night.

“We’ve been living and dying with our offense, which is a very, very dangerous thing,” Van Gundy said. “I thought the Cavs brought a heightened defensive mentality and we did not. They deserved to get this one.”

Similar to Games 1 and 2 in Cleveland, the Cavaliers built a 22-point lead in the first half, only to watch the Magic come all the way back. Orlando grabbed the lead within the first minute of the third quarter and were ahead 79-78 entering the fourth quarter.

That’s when LeBron James took over, finishing with 37 points, getting 14 rebounds and 12 assists while dominating the fourth quarter in the win that kept the series going. James either scored or had the assist on the first 29 points of the fourth quarter.

“It’s really tough because they’re getting him the ball in the middle of the floor,” Van Gundy said. “It’s a difficult area to double-team him. It’s a difficult part of the floor because of the shooters and his passing. If he gets in the paint, it’s automatically a foul.”

After shooting 49 percent from the field and 43 percent on 3-pointers through the first four games of the series, Orlando, which set a franchise postseason record with 17 3s in Game 4, was 8 of 25 on 3-pointers in Game 5. The Magic hurt themselves missing 13 of 41 free throw attempts.

Rafer Alston, who scored a season-high 26 points on 10-for-17 shooting and hitting six 3-pointers in Game 4, couldn’t follow up that performance. He was 1 for 10 from the field, including 1 of 7 on 3s, and finished with three points.

Dwight Howard fouled out for the third time in the series, but still managed 24 points and 10 rebounds. Asked if he could be as physical defensively as he would like, Howard responded curtly, “Nope.”

“I just have to find a way to stay aggressive without fouling,” Howard said. “It is tough, but just got to stay aggressive and not foul.”

Van Gundy and the players are dumbfounded why they continue to start slowly inside the Q. The Magic trailed by 16 points in Game 1 before rallying for the win, then trailed by 23 in Game 2 before James’ 3-pointer at the buzzer evened the series.

On Thursday night, it happened again. The Cavs led early 34-12 in the first quarter before the Magic got rolling.

“If it was my brilliance, I’d figure out how to start better. I don’t have any idea to be honest,” Van Gundy said. “It takes a great deal of energy to dig out of those holes every night.”

The series shifts back to Amway Arena, where Orlando has already beaten the Cavaliers twice in this series. One more win will send Orlando to its second finals appearance, the first coming in 1995.

“We have to play smart, play with intensity, composure and poise,” Alston said. “You can’t worry about what number game it is. You have to go out and do what it takes to win and stick to our game plan.”