The Peterborough Examiner

RAPTORS VS. CAVALIERS: FIVE KEYS TO EASTERN CONFERENCE SEMIFINAL

-

STILL THE KING — So much of this series is about LeBron James. The four-time National Basketball Associatio­n MVP has averaged 30.9 points against Toronto in their past 12 meetings, and proved once again in Cleveland’s 4-3 series win over Indiana that he can almost singlehand­edly win games, scoring 45 points in Game 7. James, 33, logged 41.1 minutes a game in the opening round, sitting briefly in Sunday’s deciding game because of muscle cramps.

IS FREDDY READY? — Toronto’s fondly named “Bench Mob” led the league in the regular season, and then closed out the Raptors’ seriesclin­ching win at Washington on Friday by outscoring Washington’s bench 17-2. Led by guards Fred VanVleet and Delon Wright, the second unit makes Toronto, from top to bottom, a better team than Cleveland. The Raptors need VanVleet to remain healthy, however. A shoulder injury kept him out of all but three minutes of the first five games against Washington, and his presence was sorely missed.

GETTING A BREATHER — When the Raptors faced Cleveland in the conference finals two seasons ago, the Raptors had played 14 games, while the Cavs had eight days off awaiting their opponent. Last season was similar: the Cavs had a week off, while Toronto and Milwaukee battled through a six-game series. The Raptors are the more rested team this time around, dispatchin­g Washington on Friday, two days before Cleveland’s series finale. And Lowry played just 31 minutes in Game 6, while DeMar DeRozan played 33.

HOME COURT HELP — The Raptors achieved one of their biggest goals of the regular season when they locked down the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference, giving them home court for the conference playoffs. The Raptors have lost just seven times at the Air Canada Centre this season. The two games Toronto took off Cleveland in the 2016 conference finals came at the ACC. The Raptors hope to get off to a running start with wins in Game 1 and 2 in Toronto.

ROLE PLAYERS — Canadian Tristan Thompson has made more headlines on TMZ than on the court for his indiscreti­ons. But, in his first start since March 28, Thompson made his presence felt in Sunday’s win, finishing with 15 points and 10 rebounds. He could be a handful for Jonas Valanciuna­s. George Hill also returned after missing three games with back spasms. While they focus on LeBron, the Raptors have to hope no-one else comes up big.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada