CLEVELAND – The King
had been hit across the arm, causing him to stumble and fumble into a row of
courtside cameramen, where head eventually met metal. Now there was a hushed
crowd and cops pushing folks and a white towel collecting LeBron James’ red blood.
It wasn’t a dirty play
by any stretch of the imagination. It was a purposeful one though.
Andrew Bogut had noted
that Cleveland was playing an East Coast style in this series, and that, he
promised, was fine by him; LeBron wasn’t going to get to the rim so easy. For
all the flash and flare of Golden State, it has some Warriors too, guys not
happy about being not just outplayed, but out-toughed by the Cavs.
So here was LeBron,
trying to stop the bleeding off his own dome and up on the scoreboard where Golden
State had already collected a lead it would never relinquish.
Here was LeBron,
watching everything he and the Cavs had clawed and fought for, everything they
had willed and won in this series, disappear all at once.
Golden State 103,
Cleveland 82, NBA Finals squared at two, and here was LeBron rationalizing it,
minimizing it, coping with it by claiming “it’s just basketball,” and that Game
5 Sunday in Oakland isn’t even the most pressurized moment of his career, still
ranking below taking Miami into Boston for Game 6 of the 2012 Eastern
Conference finals.
None of that was
probably what Cleveland fans wanted to hear, but at this point what else is he
going to say? It was after 1 a.m. ET, he looked exhausted after three games in
five days and he noted he had stitches and a “slight headache” courtesy of that
camera.
“I don’t really get
involved in it, the whole thing,” James said of whether he senses the
excitement, the pressure, the desperate expectations around this
championship-starved town. “I understand how important this city is and what I
mean to this city and what our team means to the city, but I don’t get caught
up in it. I just try to go out and play my game. I try to lead the best way I
can, and if I can put my team and my franchise in a position to win the title,
I’m grateful for that.”
These were words that
didn’t match his actions, which across four games has been an exercise in
balled-up fists and hometown pride and prodigal son expectations. He’s just
kept coming and coming and coming, but Thursday he ran into a wall, or a
camera, or just a better team with a far slimmer margin for error.
There is nothing here
that suggests Cleveland should win the NBA title … other than LeBron’s nightly
shows of force. The rest of the team is a collection of parts that can’t
function without him. Someone asked him about possible lineup changes and he
could barely contain a laugh.
“We don’t have many
options,” he noted of an injury-riddled team that is barely seven deep.
When James takes a
one-to-two-minute break to start the fourth quarter, Golden State keeps
crushing the Cavs; nearly coming back Tuesday night, putting this one
effectively away on Thursday. The Warriors quickly rebuilt a double-digit lead
that Cleveland could never counter until the once-amped-up crowd left early.
Not that LeBron could blame the fans.
“I mean, I came out of
the game as well early,” he said. “So we were on the same page.”
This was gallows humor
and it was probably fitting. No one should suggest he’s giving up or has lost
faith, but there’s also a reality to the situation. He wasn’t brooding over
this defeat. He walked out of the Q joking with his crew of advisers and Nike
execs. He looked in desperate need of a day off. Or Kyrie Irving to magically
heal.
There’s a reason that
Cleveland winning this would be one of the finest accomplishments in NBA
history. It isn’t supposed to be easy, not when even 30 seconds on the bench is
like watching a horror show.
“Well, I was hoping our
team could buy me a few minutes,” LeBron said.
They couldn’t.
“I mean, it’s
difficult,” he said. “You want to be out there, but also you want to be
effective. …I was gassed out.”
Golden State kept
throwing bodies at him. This wasn’t completely new. Steve Kerr has rotated a
slew of defenders all series, hoping that a week or so of body blows weakens
James by the end. Maybe it’s working. Thursday there were more double teams,
more hard fouls that got James trying to work the refs and getting out of his
game. He went for 20 points, 12 boards and eight assists, but he probably needs
40-12-8 to win. And the physical stuff wasn’t just on James.
Stephen Curry pushed
Matthew Dellavedova as they headed to a timeout. David Lee got into it a little
with Tristan Thomson after a hard foul. No, these weren’t the Bad Boy Pistons,
but for Golden State it was something, at least something more than they’d
shown across the first three games
“The one thing we’ve
been preaching the whole series is we wanted to wear them down,” said Golden
State’s Draymond Green, the bruiser out of Michigan State who earned all five
of his fouls.
Was it fatigue that did
in Cleveland, or just a return to norm for a group of role players? J.R. Smith
went 2 for 12 and when asked to assess the current state of his game was
succinct and accurate.
“Horses---,” he said.
Then he got on his new
PhunkeeDuck motorized scooter – sort of like a handle-less Segway. He said
Jamie Foxx gave it to him and he might be the first NBA player to own one (it’s
been all over the Instagram feeds of some rappers and R&B stars, he noted).
Since he just got it Thursday, he figured he’d bring it to the game and joked
it was a good way to rest his legs. Then he rode it out of the postgame locker
room.
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