Calgary Herald

CAVS MAKE SHORT WORK OF RAPS

Toronto collapses in Game 4, ending season of such promise in ugly fashion

- SCOTT STINSON

CAVALIERS 128, RAPTORS 93

The Toronto Raptors have taught their fans a cruel lesson in these playoffs: it can always get worse.

After three games in which the Raptors deserved better than an 0-3 hole, they collapsed utterly in Game 4, allowing the Cleveland Cavaliers to score at will in sweeping them out of the postseason with a 128-93 blowout win.

The repercussi­ons of this defeat could be significan­t, as the Raptors reinvented themselves in the off-season and rose to the top seed in the East, only to end up with yet another casual dismissal at the hands of LeBron James. No top seed had ever been swept in the conference semifinals in NBA history before Monday night.

It wasn’t the late blown lead of Game 1, or the heartbreak­ing James dagger of Game 3, but Game 4 was dispiritin­g for the Raptors in new and ugly ways. From the outset, they were a disaster on defence, repeatedly losing Cavs players on screens, which turned into wide-open shots, or allowing them to penetrate the lane easily, which turned into layups. Cleveland shot 65 per cent for the first quarter and 62 per cent for the first half.

This time it wasn’t even James torching the Raptors, although he had 29 points to lead the way. The non-LeBron starters, who had been lampooned on television on the weekend in a Saturday Night Live skit about the “other Cavs,” roared out of the gate with 47 of Cleveland’s 63 first-half points. Kevin Love ended up with 23 points, Kyle Korver had 16 and J.R. Smith added 15. George Hill and Korver also shot a combined 73 per cent for the half.

Perhaps someone in the Toronto organizati­on could talk SNL into mocking the Raptors in time for next year’s playoffs.

If there was a sequence that demonstrat­ed Toronto’s neartotal lack of answers, it came with about two minutes left in that first half. Raptors coach Dwane Casey, who had already shuffled his starting lineup by benching Jonas Valanciuna­s in favour of C.J. Miles, brought Lucas Nogueira in for Serge Ibaka. The lanky Brazilian, who had played only two minutes since Game 3 of the Washington series, looked understand­ably out of sorts at both ends. The Cavs closed the quarter on a 12-2 run to get to halftime with a 16-point lead. The Raptors, in a season so full of promise, were down to their last wheeze.

That this was the best the Raptors, who hadn’t lost three straight games all season until Saturday night, could come up with in an eliminatio­n game was alarming.

For two days, they kept saying they knew they were better than the team that dug itself such a huge hole.

“I haven’t given up on our team, I think we have a group of guys that are warriors, you know, and I know that they are going to bounce back,” Casey said Monday before Game 4. “As far as the fight, I love what we did the other night, and (if ) we cut down that 17 turnovers, get it down to our normal 12, 13, somewhere in there, it’s a different ball game. You know you’re down 3-0, but you don’t give up on this group because we’ve been resilient the entire season.”

Miles said there was regret over the missed opportunit­ies of the first three games, but the Raptors still felt like they could turn it around.

“There’s no lack of confidence. We don’t feel over-matched or anything, there’s none of that. It’s just about knowing where we have to draw the line in some of the things we need to do to get over that hump.”

Miles said it wasn’t like the Raptors had no idea what to do: “It’s not like there’s no door to get out of the room, you know?”

But instead of cleaning up those mistakes, Toronto’s small lineup was continuall­y punished on Monday night. Play after play, one Cavalier or another was burying an open jumper or finishing easily at the rim. Valanciuna­s is not a great rim defender, but he was Dikembe Mutombo relative to what the Raptors were getting in interior defence from the combinatio­n of Miles and Ibaka. Valanciuna­s finished with 18 points while Miles and DeMar DeRozan each finished with 13.

From a 59-win team that swore up and down they were confident and comfortabl­e in facing the Cavs this time, to a quivering wreck, all in the space of a week. Cleveland was getting big contributi­ons from all of its starters, and Casey was throwing out unfamiliar lineups and combinatio­ns the Cavs were able to exploit.

Eventually, with the game out of hand, James was back to hitting tough fadeaways like he was doing it for kicks. In the spring, LeBron is the cat and the Raptors are the dying, crippled mouse. His Cavaliers have eliminated the Raptors in three straight playoffs and have won 10 straight games against Toronto in the post-season.

On Sunday after practice, DeRozan said he hated the waiting that came after LeBron’s heartless Game 3 buzzer-beater.

“There’s nothing much you can do but watch the time go by and wait for the time to come to be able to get this feeling off you,” he said.

“Extremely long night.” And now, a long summer.

 ?? JOHN WOODS/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Nashville Predators forward Filip Forsberg, left, and Ryan Johansen celebrate Forsberg’s goal against Winnipeg Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck during the Predators’ 4-0 win in Game 6 of their Western Conference semifinal series Monday night in...
JOHN WOODS/THE CANADIAN PRESS Nashville Predators forward Filip Forsberg, left, and Ryan Johansen celebrate Forsberg’s goal against Winnipeg Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck during the Predators’ 4-0 win in Game 6 of their Western Conference semifinal series Monday night in...
 ?? JASON MILLER/GETTY IMAGES ?? LeBron James, middle, and the Cleveland Cavaliers celebrate early Monday on their way to eliminatin­g the Raptors.
JASON MILLER/GETTY IMAGES LeBron James, middle, and the Cleveland Cavaliers celebrate early Monday on their way to eliminatin­g the Raptors.
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