National Post (National Edition)

Cavs’ lack of depth glaring

- Ryan Wolstat rwolstat@postmedia.com

What a long, strange route we took to the outcome most of us expected: Golden State against Cleveland for the NBA championsh­ip. Again.

Lebron James once more had to be superman in leading a shoddy supporting cast back to the NBA Finals for a fourth straight meeting (the Warriors took a 2-1 edge in the overall series last June behind new addition Kevin Durant), boosting his nearly peerless resume.

The Warriors battled injuries, were lucky enough to not have to face an injured Chris Paul and then saw Houston plumb new depths of shooting blanks (fivethirty­eight.com pegged the odds of a team missing 27 straight three-pointers like Houston did at 1-in72,000). And down they went in Game 7 in the Western Conference final.

Both conference champions rallied from 3-2 deficits, something that has only happened 16 per cent of the time and they are the first squads since 1983 to win a Game 7 on the road in Round 3.

Golden State is once again the massive favourite, and it says here it will take five games to make it three titles in four years, but it’s still never easy to bet against James, who now undeniably must be placed among the best of the NBA pantheon: Michael Jordan and Bill Russell (with Wilt Chamberlai­n, Kareem Abdul-jabbar and Oscar Robertson also in the mix if you talk to old-timers).

James has played every game this year, hasn’t even bothered resting for a minute for some of the recent outings and is 7-2 in eliminatio­n games since returning to Cleveland. Both defeats, of course came against the Warriors.

Depending on the status of Kevin Love, James might have to turn back the clock to the 2015 Finals. He averaged an absurd 35.8 points, 13.3 rebounds and 8.8 assists minus Love for all six games and Kyrie Irving for all but the opener as the Cavs slowed it down and worked everything through James, before eventually falling.

And while James probably has a bit more help compared to 2015, even if Love is a no-go for all or part of the series, Golden State still has ample firepower (though former Finals MVP Andre Iguodala has ben sidelined recently and won’t be 100 per cent even if he does suit up, largely to guard James).

Durant has been unstoppabl­e at times, oddly not so good at other times, but Stephen Curry or Klay Thompson have been there when needed, dropping jaws and turning games with their shooting prowess.

That’s the beauty of the Warriors (or the horror if you are facing them). There are simply too many great options on hand, too much elite talent.

But the presence of James should at least make it competitiv­e, albeit briefly.

Meanwhile, this fourth consecutiv­e Finals meeting is a first across the four major North American sporting leagues.

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