CLEVELAND (May 16) - The Cleveland Cavaliers packed for a weekend
stay in Beantown - not a few weeks on Cape Cod.
They've got at least one more game left, and in the NBA, it's as
big as they ever get.
Game 7. On Sunday. In Boston.
LeBron James scored 32 points - 19 in the second half - and the
Cavaliers forced a decisive and fitting finale to this
home-sweet-home playoff series with a 74-69 victory Friday night
over the Celtics, who have gone from regular-season road kings to
postseason road kill.
"It was either win or go home," James said. "I'm not ready to
go home."
James, whose jump shot has mysteriously been missing in this
series, made two key baskets midway through the fourth quarter to
slow a Boston comeback, Wally Szczerbiak hit a 3-pointer with 2:10
remaining and Joe Smith dropped two free throws with 14 seconds
left as the Cavs moved the series back to the East Coast.
The Cavs are attempting to become the 14th team to overcome an
0-2 deficit and win a series, and to do so, the defending Eastern
Conference champions will have to win in Boston, where the Celtics
are 7-0 in the postseason and play like a team with title
potential.
On the road, they're 0-6 and just ordinary.
Still, the Celtics feel good about going home.
"Mentally we feel like we're a confident team," Paul Pierce
said. "We've been in Game 7s before, and we feel like this is a
game we let slip away. Hopefully, we can go home and take care of
business."
The Celtics are 15-3 in Game 7s at home, but the Cavaliers may
have some confidence playing on the parquet after nearly winning
Games 1 and 5.
Kevin Garnett scored 25 points, Pierce 16 and Ray Allen just
nine on 3-of-8 shooting. The Celtics got just two points from guard
Rajon Rondo, who scored 20 in their Game 5 win. Boston's point
total was the second lowest in franchise playoff history and the
fewest points ever given up by Cleveland in the postseason.
Afterward, Celtics coach Doc Rivers was still fuming over some
calls he felt went against his team.
"Tell the refs to do the interview. They were just as
important," an angry Rivers shouted at a team official as he
walked back from the postgame news conference.
James added 12 rebounds, Delonte West had 10 points and Smith
came off the bench to add nine, none bigger than his two free
throws that closed out the Celtics.
Cleveland's win continued a run of domination by home teams, who
are now 21-1 on their floors in the second round of the playoffs.
Leading by nine at halftime, the Cavs opened the third quarter
with seven straight points from James to open a 51-36 lead.
But just when it appeared the Celtics were in major trouble,
they responded behind Garnett, who scored eight points in a 13-0
spurt that pulled Boston within three. James finally ended
Cleveland's offensive lapse with a layup and the Cavs got a tip-in
and fling-in from Anderson Varejao for a 59-50 lead entering the
fourth.
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Garnett's jumper pulled the Celtics within 65-60 before James
scored on a drive, and the All-Star hit an off-balance 17-foot
jumper to make it 69-60. Eddie House made a 3-pointer for Boston,
but Szczerbiak, who missed his first five 3-pointers, finally got
one to go down, giving Cleveland a 72-63 lead.
Boston hung around as the Cavs came up empty on several
possessions and was still within five when Pierce was whistled for
a questionable charge. Allen made two free throws to bring Boston
within 72-69, but Smith stepped to the line and as 20,000-plus fans
fell deadly silent, made the two biggest free throws of his 13-year
career.
When the final horn sounded, James fired the ball to the other
end and the Cavs left their home floor hoping they can get another
chance to play on it again this season.
The Cavaliers played without injured guard Daniel Gibson, one of
their best outside shooters who helped close out the Detroit
Pistons in last year's conference finals. Gibson separated his left
shoulder in Game 5.
But unlike in that loss, when they let the Celtics cut a
14-point deficit to three in the final few minutes before halftime,
the Cavaliers closed the second period with a 17-2 flurry to open a
42-33 lead.
Sasha Pavlovic, getting more minutes with Gibson out, hit a
3-pointer and Zydrunas Ilgauskas dropped two jumpers on assists
from James as the Cavs opened a three-point lead. After a defensive
technical against Boston, James made two free throws with nine
seconds left.
The Celtics set up a final shot, but West made a steal, dribbled
quickly into the frontcourt and sank a running 3-pointer at the
horn, giving the Cavs their nine-point lead and huge momentum.
As is his custom before big games, James arrived three hours
before the opening tip to get in some extra shooting in the arena's
fourth-floor practice gym.
James was confident the Cavaliers would be able to force a Game
7.
"I don't feel desperate at all," he said.
After speaking with reporters for a few minutes, James relaxed
at his locker and unlaced three pairs of sneakers as he bobbed his
head and rapped along with hip hop blaring through his headphones.
However, he couldn't find his rhythm on the floor early on.
James went 1-for-6 in the first quarter before he began driving
to the basket, something Cavs fans wish he did more often. He drew
fouls and scored nine of his 13 first-half points from the foul
line.
Unable to explain the Celtics' problems away from home, Rivers
said he didn't do anything radical to end Boston's road slide.
"We didn't hold a seance," he said.
The Celtics will now conjure up some of the ghosts from their
glorious past as they prepare for their second Game 7 in these
playoffs.
"We wanted this one bad, but it's OK," Celtics forward Glen
Davis said. "We've got to go home and win."
Notes: James (328) passed Mark Price (327) for the most assists in
Cavs' playoff history. ... James will play on his second U.S.
Olympic team this summer in Beijing. In preparation, the superstar
said he has become better informed about China's human rights
issues so he can address them when asked. "Maybe I can shine some
light on the situation and help people," he said. "I'm not going
on a podium or nothing like that." ... Gibson said he injured his
shoulder when he got his arm bent back reaching for a loose ball in
Game 5. He said learning he couldn't play in the rest of the series
was "heartbreaking. If I could play with one hand, I would."
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