The Asian Age

King James looks for ‘expected’ road win

- SANIA IN QUARTERS

Sania Mirza and her partner Ivan Dodig of Croatia stormed into the mixed doubles quarter-finals with a 6-2, 6-4 win over Elina Svitolina of Ukraine and New Zealand’s Artem Sitak in a second round match.

However, Rohan Bopanna, partnering with Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay, crashed out of the men’s doubles event after losing to Jamie Murray of Great Britain and Brazil’s Bruno Soares 6-7, 2-6 in a third round match.

— Agencies Oakland, June 4: LeBron James has won a road game in an NBA record 29 consecutiv­e playoff series and the Cleveland superstar must stretch that streak for the Cavaliers to defend their title.

Golden State owns a home-court edge in the NBA Finals and opened the best-of-seven championsh­ip series with a 113-91 home triumph, although James will have another chance to win at Oakland in game two Sunday.

If “King” James and the Cavaliers don’t take advantage at Oracle Arena, the Warriors will stretch their NBA playoff win streak record to 14 games and could become the first champions to run undefeated through the playoffs by winning Wednesday and Friday in Cleveland.

The 32-year-old playmaker has won a road game in 35 of 38 playoff series over his 12 NBA playoff campaigns, last failing to do so with Cleveland against Orlando in the 2009 Eastern Conference finals.

“He’s a great player,” Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue said. “Anytime you want to win a championsh­ip, you have to win on the road. And we understand that. With Golden State having home court the last three years, we know it’s going to be tough.

“You have to win on the road to be great.”

James was coached by current Warriors acting coach Mike Brown with the Cavaliers, who appreciate­s the streak and the longevity James has shown in reaching eight career NBA Finals, the last seven in a row.

“It just speaks volumes to who he is as a player. He’s one of the greatest all time,” Brown said. “When you have his ability, when you have his intelligen­ce and feel and all that other stuff, you’re able to lead your team in difficult situations and tough environmen­ts. And he’s done that for many years. So you take your hat off to him.”

James is 3-4 in NBA Finals appearance­s but his teams, the Cavaliers and Miami from 2011 to 2014, are 1-7 in NBA Finals openers.

“That’s testament to where he has kept his team together and helped them overcome tough situations and still come out on top,” Brown said.

For his part, James said his attitude about a playoff game doesn’t change whether he is playing before supportive fans in Cleveland or crowds yelling against him on the road.

“I approach every game the same way, no matter if I’m at home or on the road,” James said. “But I understand the road is very challengin­g, especially when you get to this level.

“I don’t get caught up in what I’ve done over the years,” James said. “I get drawn in too much of what I’m doing right now in the present and my only focus is what I can to help this team be better for game two.”

 ??  ?? Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James (23) shoots against Golden State Warriors guard Shaun Livingston (34) in Game 1 of the NBA Finals in California on Thursday.
Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James (23) shoots against Golden State Warriors guard Shaun Livingston (34) in Game 1 of the NBA Finals in California on Thursday.

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