LeBron James has tasted
defeat four times in NBA Finals now but that does not make it any easier to
swallow. In fact, losing to Golden State hurt so much he would rather miss out
on the playoffs altogether than lose another championship series.
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NBA-LeBron steers Cavs
past Warriors to close in on NBA title Reuters
James led the way for
Cleveland with 32 points, 18 rebounds and nine assists in Game Six on Tuesday
but it was not enough to carry the Cavaliers to victory over the Warriors.
Golden State picked up
their first title in 40 years with the 105-97 win in Cleveland.
“When you fall short it
hurts,” James told reporters. “I’m starting to (think) I’d rather not even make
the playoffs than to lose in the Finals. It would hurt a lot (less).”
James finished with
averages of 35.8 points, 13.3 rebounds and 8.8 assists for the six games,
becoming the first player to lead both teams in total points, rebounds and
assists in a Finals series.

There was talk he could
follow Jerry West (1969) and become just the second player to win the Finals
MVP despite losing the series, but that honor went to Golden State’s Andre
Iguodala, who hounded James throughout the matchup.
In the end, effort
could not make up for a depleted roster.
The Cavs lost All Star
guard Kyrie Irving to a knee injury in the series opener and All Star forward
Kevin Love to a shoulder ailment in the first round of the playoffs.
“We never asked for
sympathy when they went down,” said coach David Blatt. “We never made an excuse
and I certainly won’t do that now. The Warriors were better.”
The result of losing two
key players was that Cleveland had to feed James the ball more, but the
increased workload saw him make just 39 percent of his shots.
“I don’t enjoy being as
non-efficient as I was. I don’t enjoy dribbling the ball for countless seconds
on the shot clock with the team looking at me to make a play,” James said.
“That’s not winning
basketball. It was what I had to do, what was needed. We ran out of talent.”
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