The Province

James takes Warriors’ threat in stride

Cavaliers superstar embraces team’s underdog role and challenge of facing an all-star lineup

- TOM WITHERS

INDEPENDEN­CE, Ohio — There’s a four-headed, shotmaking, scoreboard-breaking monster out West awaiting LeBron James and the Cavaliers.

The Warriors are stomach-churning scary.

James, though, can’t run or hide. With eight NBA Finals appearance­s under his belt, he is ready to face a team he’s called “a beast.” After all, he has slayed behemoths before.

After Sunday’s practice, James was asked to assess the task at hand: beating Golden State’s All-Starstudde­d lineup of Kevin Durant, Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green in the NBA Finals, beginning Thursday in Oakland.

Is this the biggest challenge of his career? “It’s probably up there,” he said. And then, almost as if he was trying to remind himself that he’s got three championsh­ip rings and is frightful in his own right, James recalled other fearsome post-season opponents — San Antonio and Boston.

“I’ve played against four Hall of Famers as well, too, with Manu (Ginobili), Kawhi (Leonard), Tony (Parker) and Timmy D (Tim Duncan) on the same team,” said James. “And if you add Pop (coach Gregg Popovich) in there, that’s five Hall of Famers. So, it’s going to be very challengin­g. Those guys are going to challenge me, they’re going to challenge our ball club. “This is a high-powered team.” James also took on a Celtics team loaded with big-name talents.

“I’ve played against Ray (Allen), KG (Kevin Garnett), Paul (Pierce), (Rajon) Rondo and Doc (Rivers). So, it’s going to be very challengin­g not only on me mentally, but on our ball club and on our franchise.”

Cleveland-Golden State 3.0 is the matchup fans worldwide expected and wanted, and James believes they’re in for quite a show.

Both the Cavaliers and Warriors have upgraded their rosters from a year ago, when they went seven games in an epic series that spawned the first comeback from a 3-1 deficit in Finals history.

That Warriors team James conquered in 2016 won 73 games during the regular season and was being mentioned as one of the best to ever take the floor.

Hard to believe, but this version might be even better. Golden State has been putting on a basketball clinic over the past two months, winning 27 of 28 games since March 11 and becoming the first squad to start the post-season 12-0.

Durant, who previously faced James in the 2012 Finals with Oklahoma City, has taken a great team and elevated it to a nearly unstoppabl­e level.

The Warriors are using Durant in every imaginable way on offence, and James isn’t surprised to see his good friend and Olympic teammate more mobile than he was with the Thunder.

“You adapt to the culture,” he said. “You adapt to the style and that’s the same thing that happened to me when I went to Miami.”

On the brink of becoming the first player since the early 1960s to play in seven straight Finals, James finds himself in a similar — and somewhat surprising — situation.

The Cavaliers are being given little chance to defend their title against the vaunted Warriors, who have been winning by an average of 16.3 points per game in the playoffs.

But James is having one of his finest post-seasons, and the Cavs are gelling the way they did at this time last year. Maybe James has nothing to fear. “I feel good about our chances,” he said. “Very good.”

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Cleveland’s LeBron James drives past Golden State’s Kevin Durant during regular-season action. The two will see a lot of one another in the NBA Finals.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Cleveland’s LeBron James drives past Golden State’s Kevin Durant during regular-season action. The two will see a lot of one another in the NBA Finals.

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