Edmonton Journal

SPECTRE OF JAMES HANGS OVER RAPTORS

Minimizing effectiven­ess of Cavaliers’ superstar much easier said than done

- SCOTT STINSON sstinson@postmedia.com Twitter.com/ Scott_Stinson

The Toronto Raptors faced the prospect of trying to figure out a way to slow down LeBron James in the playoffs last year at this time, stressing the importance of frustratin­g him and making him feel uncomforta­ble.

Four games later, after a Cleveland Cavaliers sweep, the only time James seemed particular­ly bothered was when a local beer outfit gleefully posted photos on its social media accounts of him holding one of their products courtside during a game. The man has strong feelings about his #brand.

And so, the Raptors contemplat­e their third attempt at regicide repeating much the same things they have said previously. Be physical. Get in his way. Make him work for his points. Get all five guys on the court working together to stop him. The key difference this time is Toronto has a number of guys, from OG Anunoby to Pascal Siakam to Serge Ibaka, who have the size and agility to, at least in theory, make it so James isn’t bothered only by the marketing strategy of a craft brewer.

Asked Monday if he thought he had the pieces to execute an antiLeBron strategy, Raptors coach Dwane Casey was realistic.

“Well, we felt like we did last year,” Casey said. “We’ve got some very flexible players, versatile players, some flexible schemes and different looks that you want to put at him. He’s one of the best in the league as far as reading. He’s seen every defence you’ve thrown at him. As a young kid, it would have been harder for him, but now there’s nothing new under the sun for him. So we’ve just got to be ready with a variety of looks and be ready to throw them at him.”

The reference to last season is instructiv­e. Two years ago, when the Raptors beat Cleveland twice before falling in six games, James wasn’t great on the perimeter — he shot 33 per cent from threepoint range in that series — but he was unstoppabl­e everywhere else. He shot an absurd 82 per cent on his two-point attempts and also led the Cavs in assists, rebounds, steals and blocks.

The Raptors brought in Ibaka and P.J. Tucker midway through last season in part so James wouldn’t be able to score quite so easily in the interior.

With those new pieces in place, James still shot 62 per cent on two-point attempts. Meanwhile, he was back up to a basically unfair 48 per cent on threepoint­ers, which is how someone can average 36 points per game seemingly without much effort.

This time, the Raptors know they will again have to concede something to the league’s best player, whom Casey labelled the “head of the snake” on Monday. He meant it as a compliment.

“We understand everything starts and stops with him. There’s certain things you want to give up with him and there’s certain things you have no choice in the matter. There’s a pecking order as far as what we want to give up, what we live with,” Casey said. “It’ll be a chess match, trying to stay a step ahead of what they’re trying to do.”

The Toronto coach wouldn’t tip his hand, but what they will almost certainly try to do is force LeBron into mid-range jump shots, while limiting the easy layups. The Indiana Pacers doubtless thought the same thing in the first round, and James still averaged more than 34 points per game while making more two-point baskets than anyone else in the playoffs.

The one other thing the Raptors might — with emphasis on the “might” part of this sentence — benefit from is the possibilit­y James could be a little weary. We have seen him play so much at this time of year for so long that it has just become accepted fact he will simply carry on like an unstoppabl­e basketball machine. But at some point, it’s possible he shows just a little humanity.

James, at 33 years old, this year passed Tim Duncan for top spot on the list of career playoff minutes played. Kareem AbdulJabba­r sits third. Those two guys retired at the age of 40 and 42 respective­ly. LeBron is also 18th in career regular-season minutes played, despite being 54th in career games played. Just when it seemed like he was entering a mildly cautious phase of his career, with scheduled days off and the occasional mid-season vacation, James went back to playing all 82 games this season and led the NBA in minutes. He has also led the playoffs in minutes this season.

In Game 7 against the Pacers, he said he expected to play the entire game, then sat for about five minutes after he suffered cramps. He said afterward he was “burnt.”

Casey is not buying it. “Well, if he told you he’s tired, he’s not being very honest, I don’t think,” Casey said. “I’m not saying he’s a lying man, but I don’t think he’s tired. He’s been through too many of these and he’s profession­al enough to know how to buy time or save energy or whatever it is. We’re going into it and approach it like it’s a fresh James in those situations.” That’s a smart plan. Expecting him to fatigue would be less so.

He’s one of the best in the league as far as reading. He’s seen every defence you’ve thrown at him.

 ?? GREGORY SHAMUS/GETTY IMAGES ?? One year ago, LeBron James led the Cleveland Cavaliers to a four-game sweep over the Toronto Raptors, who have home-court advantage in the rematch.
GREGORY SHAMUS/GETTY IMAGES One year ago, LeBron James led the Cleveland Cavaliers to a four-game sweep over the Toronto Raptors, who have home-court advantage in the rematch.
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