Times Colonist

King James, Cavaliers rule over Raptors again

- CLEVELAND 132 TORONTO 129 TOM WITHERS

CLEVELAND — The standings show the Eastern Conference’s top team plays in Canada.

The best player remains in Cleveland, Ohio.

LeBron James reminded Toronto he’s king.

Playing without five teammates and his coach, James scored 35 points and added 17 assists, his last setting up a late a threepoint­er by Kevin Love, as the undermanne­d Cavaliers rallied to beat the Raptors 132-129 on Wednesday night.

The Cavs were down five rotational players and coach Tyronn Lue, who missed his second straight game for health reasons.

But they still had James, who earlier in the day said, “I’ll be available, so we got a chance.”

The three-time champion delivered another virtuoso performanc­e, adding seven rebounds without committing a turnover in nearly 40 minutes.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” said associate coach Larry Drew, filling in for Lue. “It’s just amazing what he does, night in and night out. How he sustains it is just mind-boggling.”

James made three free throws in the final 7.8 seconds, but missed one with 3.9 seconds to go, giving Toronto a final shot. DeMar DeRozan got a decent look on a three-pointer — contested by James — at the horn but missed. DeRozan and Toronto coaches complained the all-star was fouled to no avail.

The win felt like a statement by the Cavs, but James insisted there were no intended messages.

“It’s a good win for us because of how depleted we are on our roster and everything that’s been going on,” he said. “It’s a good win for us against a very good opponent.

“But I don’t need to remind anybody about what my teams are capable of doing.”

Love, playing his second game after missing 21 games with a broken left hand, finished with 23 points and 12 rebounds and George Hill had 22 on 10-of-11 shooting for the Cavs, who were blown out by 34 points against Toronto in January.

But that was before Cleveland shook up its roster with four trades designed to get back to the NBA finals. The Cavs are third in the East, but still as dangerous as anyone.

“They’re still the top team in our conference — and in this league,” DeRozan said. “You can’t overlook them or under-look them no matter what type of changes they made.”

Kyle Lowry scored 24 and DeRozan had 21 for the Raptors, who scored 79 points in the first half and were in control in the third quarter before James brought Cleveland back.

With the Cavs up 125-124, James drove the lane and whipped the ball into the corner to Love, who knocked down his 1,000th career three-pointer.

The Raptors have lost to the Cavs in each of the past two postseason­s, getting swept last year in the conference final. But this is a different Toronto team, deeper, more experience­d and maybe poised to dethrone Cleveland.

While he protested on the floor, DeRozan was calm in addressing whether James made contact with him on his errant three-pointer.

“I don’t know,” he said. “It’s over with now. There’s nothing you can do about it.”

 ??  ?? Cavaliers forward LeBron James drives past Raptors forward Serge Ibaka during the second half in Cleveland on Wednesday. James finished with 35 points.
Cavaliers forward LeBron James drives past Raptors forward Serge Ibaka during the second half in Cleveland on Wednesday. James finished with 35 points.

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