The Province

Familiar lament for Raps against Cavs

James hits game-winning bucket as Cleveland draws first blood in Eastern semifinal

- SCOTT STINSON

TORONTO — In their last six playoff games against the Cleveland Cavaliers before Tuesday, the Toronto Raptors were a cool 0-6. They did not lead once at halftime. One of the losses was by 38 points, and on average they were beaten by a smidge under 21 points.

This, then, was better. It probably just feels worse.

In a game in which Toronto had the lead for 47 minutes and 30 seconds until LeBron James tied it with a fadeaway jumper, and in which the Raptors had several attempts at a tip-in around the rim in the dying seconds of regulation, the Cavaliers finally took their first lead in overtime. They would not relinquish it, dealing the Raptors a 113-112 loss that allows the team’s fans to consider which is worse: the blowout or the narrow late collapse?

The loss saw Toronto roar out of the gate, and it was basically the ideal quarter for the home side, the kind that fans of their team have imagined them playing against LeBron James and Cavaliers in the playoffs for about a year now. The Raptors spread the ball around, and everyone was hitting shots, largely because most of the early shots came from inches away from the basket. The Raptors showed off their young legs, and the Cavs huffed and puffed and tried to catch up. James was his usual terror, but the non-LeBron Cavs couldn’t hit the ocean from a boat and Toronto finished the opening frame with a 14-point lead.

Oh, so this is what management meant when they said in the summer that they had to figure out a way to beat these guys?

It couldn’t be that easy, though, and it turns out it was not. Cleveland trimmed the halftime deficit to three, Toronto bumped it back up to five by the end of the third, and then the Raptors and Cavs played a post-season fourth quarter that actually mattered for the first time in forever.

Toronto missed a bunch of opportunit­ies to open up the lead again

late, particular­ly when Jonas Valanciuna­s couldn’t finish multiple attempts around the rim, but Cleveland matched the misses on their end. With the Air Canada Canada on its feet in the dying minutes, the Raptors could not do what they set out 12 months ago to do. They could not close out the Cavs. It was close, but when they needed a basket at the end of overtime, they couldn’t get it. DeMar DeRozan even made a pass, but Fred VanVleet missed the potential game-winner.

The Raptors, understand­ably, were both tired of the LeBron James storylines by the time the series began and aware that it was going to be the only thing anyone talked about. James has ruled the Eastern Conference for a decade, his Cavs had knocked Toronto out of the playoffs in each of the past two seasons, and he had just finished a series against the Indiana Pacers where he scored more than a third of Cleveland’s points over the combined seven games.

“It’s not just LeBron James,” Toronto coach Dwane Casey said before Game1.

Well, yes, it kind of is. It is true that it hasn’t just been James who has killed the Raptors in the past two post-seasons, true that Toronto was also pummelled by the array of three-point shooters that he has variously had at his disposal. But this version of the Cavs, despite Casey’s protestati­ons — “They’ve got other good players around him,” he said on Tuesday before the game

— lacks the firepower of his recent Cleveland teams. Kyrie Irving is gone. Raptor-killer Channing Frye is gone. Kevin Love has not been close to himself. There are other guys, to be sure, but if the Raptors could just keep James from the supernova explosions that he put on the Pacers, then the Cavs could be had. It was, and remains, a big if. James scored 26 and added 11 rebounds and 13 assists for one of his seemingly effortless triple-doubles.

 ?? — PETER J THOMPSON ?? Cleveland Cavaliers star player LeBron James, right, bobbles the ball as Toronto Raptors’ Jonas Valaciunas and C.J. Miles look on during their Eastern Conference semifinal opening game at Toronto’s Air Canada Centre on Tuesday.
— PETER J THOMPSON Cleveland Cavaliers star player LeBron James, right, bobbles the ball as Toronto Raptors’ Jonas Valaciunas and C.J. Miles look on during their Eastern Conference semifinal opening game at Toronto’s Air Canada Centre on Tuesday.

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