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duncan228
05-29-2009, 02:13 AM
For the Cavs, it’s all LeBron, all the time (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=AuJbHaQqegGwrbGZed6KwVO8vLYF?slug=dw-magiccavs052809&prov=yhoo&type=lgns)
By Dan Wetzel

CLEVELAND – There were no secrets, no trick plays, no deception. It was the fourth quarter, a tight game and the Cleveland Cavaliers were facing elimination, facing an uncertain future. No one was going to mess around.

Give it to LeBron.

That was the offense. Give it to LeBron at the top of the key, clear out and let him figure something out. When James was done, Cleveland had a 112-102 victory over the Orlando Magic in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals and a date Saturday night in Florida.

Mike Brown was named the NBA’s Coach of the Year and he proved it Thursday, not necessarily for what he did do, but what he didn’t. “Nothing tricky,” he noted.

Why bother? Give it to LeBron, he told his team. Then get out of the way. So the Cavs did as they were told and LeBron James, possession after possession, time after time, trip after trip, figured out what to do next.

From an assist at the end of the third quarter on a Daniel Gibson 3-pointer that cut Orlando’s lead to one, all the way to an assist on a three-point play by Anderson Varejao to put Cleveland comfortably ahead by 11 with just 1:07 remaining, LeBron James either scored or assisted on every Cavalier point.

All 32 of them. In a row.

He scored 17 points during the run and assisted on five three-point plays as his teammates spread out and feasted on open looks. Just for the fun of it, he also grabbed four rebounds and drew three fouls, which helped send Dwight Howard to the bench.

“The game is basically all LeBron all the time,” lamented Magic coach Stan Van Gundy.

“We just gave him the ball,” Brown smiled.

Sometimes it’s that easy.

“Just take what the defense gives me,” James offered.

The Cavs changed their offense by abandoning using James in pick-and-rolls and instead getting him the ball near the top of the key. With everyone spread out and James still in possession of his dribble, the option of guarding him one-on-one became impossible.

“Something that as a unit, players and coaches, we came up with, trying to find a way to exploit their defense with all our shooters out there,” James said. “When my guys make shots, it makes it a lot easier on me because it allows me to go one-on-one with a defender. They can’t help [on] me as much.”

As amazing as the 25 consecutive points he ran off against the Detroit Pistons in Game 5 of the 2007 East finals were, this may have been more impressive. That was James literally going one-on-five and the one winning.

This was a step up from just pure physical ability. There was that, too, of course. He overpowered defenders at times and outran them at others. He also out-thought them on nearly every trip down the court.

Blessed with myriad skills and an unprecedented combination of size and speed, it’s too easy to ignore James’ gift of pure basketball instincts. With the entire season on the line no one in Cleveland flinched at the idea of letting James freelance the entire quarter.

He passed when it was time to pass. He shot when it was time to shoot. He drove the lane when it was time to drive the lane. He used each teammate perfectly, and, for once, was able to bust a game open so Orlando couldn’t steal it away late.

There was no hesitation, no second thought, no timeout to get everyone in order. It was a straight dose of LeBron’s brilliance, the conductor choosing the tune and the band trying to keep up.

His astounding line – 37 points, 14 rebounds and 12 assists – doesn’t begin to describe it.

Orlando doesn’t rattle, of course. Not from buzzer beaters, not from virtuoso performances. For Saturday, Van Gundy vowed to have an adjustment to the Cavs adjustment. Cleveland still has a way to go to climb out of this hole.

Still, what went down in that fourth quarter was basketball at its finest, individual genius fueling team perfection. One player, 32 points. One player, one critical victory. One player, no regrets.

“At this time of year, you win or you chill at the house,” James said.

He wasn’t ready to chill.

“I signed up to play for a long time in the series and this season.”

So did the rest of the Cavs. So they just gave him the ball and let him force another day. No tricks, just James.

duncan228
05-29-2009, 02:18 AM
LeBron's Most Complete Game Delivers Game 5 For Cavs (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/dailydime?page=dime-090529)
By Chris Broussard
ESPN.com

CLEVELAND -- They told us in his first commercial what his greatest gift is.

"The Chosen One didn't ask for hops,'' the late comedian Bernie Mac shouted from the pulpit in Nike's 2004 spot that some nicknamed "The Soul of the Game." "He didn't aaassskkk for handle,'' Mac continued in the cadence of many a black preacher. "Court vision. The Chosen One asked for crazy court vision!''

LeBron James can score with anybody. He can leap to the rafters, shift the basket stanchion with his strength, move with the grace of a dancer.

But what separates him from the other greats of this generation -- Kobe, D-Wade, 'Melo -- and any generation, is his court vision. His ability to facilitate like the finest point guards in the game and still put up 35, 40 points.

The Cleveland Cavaliers forgot that early in their Eastern Conference final with the Orlando Magic. It's hard to blame them now that LeBron's jumper is as pure as Sunday School. Mesmerized by the one-on-one clinics he's been putting on, they've too often stood around and watched him go to work.

But even when LeBron's hitting shot after shot after shot, the Cavaliers are better when the ball is moving, everybody's getting involved, and he's getting his points within the flow of the offense, rather than on dribble-dribble-dribble isolation plays.

In win-or-, as LeBron put it afterwards, go-home-and- "chill-at-the-house'' mode, the Cavaliers took pains to get back to the team concept Thursday in Game 5. The result was an impressive 112-102 victory, their first double-digit win over the exasperating Magic in more than three years (February 21, 2006).

LeBron, who entered the game averaging 42.3 points and just 7.3 assists, turned in perhaps the most outstanding performance of his otherworldly postseason, recording his first triple-double of the series with 37 points, 12 assists and 14 rebounds. More importantly, especially through the first three quarters, he didn't dominate the ball, and his teammates finally found their groove.

"That was huge,'' James said of the Cavs' equal-opportunity offense. "Getting the ball moving against this team is key.''

Just because James didn't dominate the ball doesn't mean he didn't dominate. With the Cavs trailing 79-75 with 39 seconds left in the third quarter, LeBron turned the game into his own personal showcase, either scoring -- and this part is critical -- or assisting on every Cleveland basket the rest of the game.

He made six shots and dropped five dimes in that stretch, and all and all, he had a hand in 32 straight Cavalier points. The performance was being compared to his Game 5 masterpiece in 2007, when he scored 48 points, including the Cavs' last 25, in a victory at Detroit. But that game put the Cavs up 3-2, this one only moved them within 3-2.

"Some star players just put their head down and attack the basket,'' Cavs center Ben Wallace said. "They put blinders on. But he sees the whole floor, he's aware of what's going on out there, and he can pass over defenders. That's what makes him who he is.''

The Cavaliers isolated James in the fourth quarter, but they put a different, more effective twist on it. Instead of letting him bring the ball up court or catch it high on the wing, they planted him at the foul line and fed him the pass. They then spread the floor with their shooters and put Magic defender Mickael Pietrus in the unenviable position of guarding James one-on-one with the floor spaced.

Facing Pietrus up with the option to take him off the dribble, back him down or hit the midrange jumper -- he did all of those, by the way -- James scored 17 in the final period.

One thing that made the scheme so unstoppable was the fact that James' shooters -- Mo Williams, Daniel Gibson and Delonte West -- had been hot throughout the game, largely because of the Cavs' ball movement. That kept the Magic defenders from leaving them at the 3-point line to collapse on James.

When they did pounce on him, James -- with his court vision -- found them for open treys, Gibson hitting two and Williams one in the fourth.

Williams was particularly good, finally busting out of a 32 percent shooting slump to sink six 3-pointers in dropping 24 points. His six triples matched his total through the first four contests and he became the first Cavs player besides James to score 20 or more points in a game this series. Gibson hit three 3-pointers in scoring 11 points, West scored 13, and Zydrunas Ilgauskas posted 16.

Though the Cavs got other players involved in the offense through the first three quarters of Game 4, they really hadn't clicked as a unit since the first quarter of Game 1. In that one, all five Cavs starters scored five or more points as Cleveland built a 33-19 first-quarter lead.

But from that point on, the Cavs became spectators in The King James Show, standing and watching him pour in 49 points. While he was on fire, hitting 20 of 30 shots, the offense got stagnant and the rest of the Cavs got cold, which led to his career playoff-high being wasted in a loss.

With James' great knack for scoring within the system, there's no need to have him go one-on-five.

A colleague of mine who attended both Kobe's 61-point outburst and LeBron's 52-point night against the Knicks at Madison Square Garden this season, told me this: "It looked like Kobe had about 85 points and LeBron had about 30.''

That's because LeBron got his in the flow of the game, while adding 11 assists to boot.

The Chosen One asked for court vision, and he got it. If the Cavs remember that and utilize it in Game 6, they may have a chance to pull off the rally of the year and reach The Finals after all.

JamStone
05-29-2009, 02:26 AM
Lemasturbating sports writers.

duncan228
05-29-2009, 02:27 AM
How many acts in LeBronathon? (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/ian_thomsen/05/29/cavs.magic/index.html?eref=T1)
Ian Thomsen
SI.com

CLEVELAND -- If you want something done ... what you do is either score or assist in 32 consecutive points in a virtuoso performance.

LeBron James has now personally won two games in these Eastern finals. First of all, he stole Game 2 on a last-second three, which now looks altogether straightforward and painless compared to the enervating route he took in Game 5 Thursday, when every Cavaliers' point was scored through him over the decisive stretch of 11 minutes and 33 seconds. The Cavs were trailing 79-75 when he put his foot down by assisting Daniel Gibson's three-pointer in the final minute of the third quarter, and they were winning 107-96 when James' remarkable 32-point run concluded on the three-point drive created by his pass to Anderson Varejao.

The 112-102 (RECAP (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/basketball/nba/viewcast/2009/05/28/index.html?contestId=25195&vendorId=2009052805&vendorVisitTeam=19&vendorHomeTeam=5&pageType=recap) | BOX (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/basketball/nba/viewcast/2009/05/28/index.html?contestId=25195&vendorId=2009052805&vendorVisitTeam=19&vendorHomeTeam=5&pageType=boxscore)) victory was not so much a game the Cavaliers can build upon -- unless they plan to keep playing through LeBron for entire quarters -- as it was an act of survival. They go to Orlando for Game 6 Saturday still trailing 3-2 in the series, but hoping that the Magic will feel pressure to close them out while his Cleveland teammates are inspired by the extended 32-17 run waged by James down the stretch.

"When my guys make shots, it makes it a lot easier because it allows me to go one-on-one with a defender,'' said James, looking tired after his triple-double of 37 points (on 24 shots), 14 rebounds and 12 assists in 46 minutes. "That's what I need from my guys. I don't add no more pressure on my teammates, but they know we're a very strong team when they knock down shots.''

And yet James succeeded in showing another side of his leadership. Having gone out of his way all year long to be one of the guys, he turned into the boss Thursday and let his teammates know he needed more than they'd been giving. He didn't appear to embarrass anyone, but he didn't indulge Wally Szczerbiak after he had missed an open three at the end of the third and came running back to the bench all fired up; James' slow gait and incredulous body language made it clear that he was interested in nothing more than bottom-line production.

After Varejao had fumbled a fourth-quarter pass back to James, who responded by passing it out wide to Gibson for a three to put Cleveland up 97-93, James turned to Varejao with his fingers clenched to implore him to hold onto the ball. Clearly those orders were taken in the proper spirit, for with 1:07 remaining, Varejao was catching and finishing a sharp James pass along the baseline for the run-ending three-point play (107-96).

"That's what great players do,'' said Cleveland coach Mike Brown. "Great players put the team on their back and everybody steps up.''

The Cavaliers created opportunities for James by delivering him the ball at the top of the key, where it was hard to double-team him as he began his dribble. James went 15-for-19 from the foul line and is averaging 16.6 free-throw attempts in the series. "When you are getting close to 20 free-throw attempts every night, that's just going to make it tough,'' said Orlando coach Stan Van Gundy. "We've got to find a way to keep him from every single time he drives the ball, it is a foul. We've got to do something to keep him off the free-throw line.''

But that's not all they need to fix. Dwight Howard (24 points and 10 rebounds) fouled out for the third time in the series on a three-point drive by James that made it 102-93 with 2:22 to go, and he clearly feels he is getting the raw end of the officiating compared to LeBron, who has been whistled for 15 personals overall compared to Howard's 27. "Can't worry about it, they are either going to call a foul or they are not going to call it,'' said Howard. "My main job is try to stay focused and not worry about some of the calls that tend not to go my way.''

Another negative trend for Orlando was the requisite poor start in this building. The Magic found themselves down 34-12 in the opening quarter before they made their typical extended second-period run to pull within 56-55 at the half. That move left the audience disheartened and often silent while brooding over the likelihood of Orlando closing out the series by winning a second game in Cleveland -- as many as the Cavs had yielded over the entire regular season.

In Cleveland's favor was the return to form of Mo Williams (24 points on 14 shots), center Zydrunas Ilgauskas (16 on eight shots) and Gibson (11 on five). In the fourth quarter, the Cavs held Orlando to 38.5 percent overall, including 2 of 8 from the comfort of the three-point line. The Magic wasted 29 from Hedo Turkoglu, but Van Gundy's bigger concern will be to amp up the defense and create a strong start while keeping Howard out of foul trouble.

As for James, what else can be tried? The league MVP is averaging an unfathomable 41.2 points, 8.2 assists and 8.6 rebounds to keep his team afloat. "The game is basically all LeBron all the time,'' said Van Gundy. Can he limit the LeBronathon to one final episode?

pauls931
05-29-2009, 09:13 AM
I think they need one real star to go along with him to take the Cavs to the next level without the assistance of zebras. It's going to catch up to them depending on one player so much for everything. Even MJ had help and my evidence is the bulls without MJ damn near made the finals, I think the cavs would struggle to make the playoffs in the east without LBJ. Hell, the suns in 1996 without their leading scorer made the WCF.

Without more help, the cavs will repeatedly go down when they meet teams with multiple options on offense and decent defense.