www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/spo...957773.htm
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. - It's about the pass.
Remember that about LeBron James.
Don't pay much attention to the eight points next to his name in the box score.
Or even the 4-for-12 shooting.
It's the passing.
It's the seven assists that could have easily been 10.
It's LeBron James turning the Cavaliers into a team, a process that began Tuesday night as the Cavaliers beat Detroit, 100-96, in the opening exhibition game for both teams before 20,862 fans and more than 100 media members.
No 18-year-old should be able to do this. No 18-year-old who never played a moment of college basketball should be able to command the respect of older, millionaire teammates. No kid from high school has ever made the impact that James will on the Cavaliers this season.
It all goes back to the pass.
Just ask Zydrunas Ilgauskas, who made the first James highlight tape early in the first quarter. The center rolled to the basket, two defenders closed on James - and somehow, don't ask how - somehow, the rookie delivered a perfect bounce pass to the 7-foot-3 center for a dunk.
A perfect behind-the-back bounce pass.
A perfect behind-the-back, no-look bounce pass.
A perfect pass the likes of which the Cavaliers never saw a year ago.
This wasn't Welcome to the NBA, LeBron. It was LeBron saying o to the NBA with an unselfish approach to the game that would leave Magic Johnson smiling.
There was another pass to Ilgauskas, this one on a fast break on which James looked right, passed left, and the result was a wide-open layup.
No wonder Ilgauskas seemed happier Tuesday night than he has in years.
That's because no one has thrown him the ball like this since Andre Miller left town in the summer of 2001.
The Cavaliers are destined to be a better team than they have been in years.
Not a championship team. Probably not a playoff team. But an improved, pass-first team with a style of play that should appeal to the purists.
The Cavaliers opened the game with Darius Miles as the point, James at small forward. This won't last long. Miles is poorly suited to handle the ball, as he had three turnovers in the first four minutes. He also committed two fouls, seemed shaky and ill-prepared.
Instead of a guy heading into his fourth pro season, Miles played like the raw rookie while James was the veteran.
James admitted to being nervous before the game, and he was a bit hesitant during his 14-minute stint in the first half.
But in the third quarter, Miles was deferring to James to bring the ball up the court. James was driving harder to the basket, putting pressure on the defense, finding teammates for open shots.
It's a beautiful thing to watch. That's because James can also make the basic, fundamental, unspectacular pass to a big man in the low post - something else that was an adventure last season. He also can throw passes that make you swear he has eyes in the back of his head.
The longer he played, the more James put his stamp on the game.
In the third quarter, Miles lost the ball, and right out of mid-air, James tapped it directly to Ricky Davis under the basket for a layup.
"His vision," marveled Coach Paul Silas. "He sees passes that no one else does."
Especially on the Cavaliers, a self-absorbed, dysfunctional team that considered pass to be the ultimate four-letter obscenity. They were lucky to win those 17 games a year ago, and every Cavaliers fan should be thrilled with those 65 losses that led to the team winning the LeBron lottery.
James will change all that.
When your premier player passes, the others tend to follow.
James also played surprisingly gritty defense on Detroit's Richard Hamilton, a 20-point scorer a year ago who had 12 points on 4-for-8 shooting. James even blocked two shots, including a Hamilton jumper.
Scoring?
It's almost an afterthought. He swished an 18-footer from the top of the key, and a nice jumper from the corner. But his jumper is probably the weakest part of his game right now, which is often the case when young, athletically gifted players first enter the NBA.
Bottom line?
"We need a lot of work," Silas said. "But I saw some things that were awesome out there."
Like that kid from Akron wearing No. 23 in the new wine and gold uniform.

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