The Freeman

Thompson's injury another blow for struggling Cavaliers

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CLEVELAND — The worst four-game stretch of LeBron James' career and a shocking start for the Cavaliers got a little worse Thursday.

Forward Tristan Thompson could be out a month with a strained left calf.

One of Cleveland's most dependable players over the past few years, Thompson was injured in the second quarter Wednesday night in a loss to the Indiana Pacers. Thompson, who has been moved out and in of the starting lineup by coach Tyronn Lue, left Quicken Loans Arena using crutches. The team said an MRI confirmed the strain and that he'll need as much as four weeks to recover before he plays again.

Thompson's injury is the latest setback for the Cavs, who have dropped four straight and are 3-5, not where a team expected to make it to its fourth NBA Finals figured to be at this point.

But injuries, new players, an older roster and defensive lapses have contribute­d to make the three-time defending Eastern Conference champions one of the early season's surprises — for the wrong reasons.

Cleveland has lost the past four games by a combined 64 points, the most lopsided fourgame span for James since he lost four in a row during his rookie season. But that's when he was virtually alone on a Cleveland team, not one with All-Stars like Kevin Love, Dwyane Wade and Derrick Rose.

As the Cavs regrouped at practice before leaving to play the Washington Wizards on Friday, there were signs of concern or panic about the slow start from such an experience­d team. Losses are going to happen.

"No one in here is a rookie," Wade said. "Everyone in here has been through it. Lots of guys have been through the highest of the highs and the lowest of the lows. It's frustratin­g when you're going through it. We have to continue to understand that we're going to get out of this together and this is going to be a distant memory at one point, but right now we're in it. We have to figure it out and I think we will."

Wade said communicat­ion, or a lack of it, has been at the root of Cleveland's problems. With the league's oldest roster, it's not a surprise that the Cavs are struggling defensivel­y against younger, and in some cases, more athletic teams.

But what it alarming is that the Cavs have been slow to correct their mistakes and teams are shooting so well against them. Cleveland's opponents are making a league-high 42 percent of their 3-point attempts. Wade joked that it feels like teams are "shooting like 90 percent on open shots and 70 percent on contested shots."

"We have a long way to go defensivel­y," he said. "If we was at our best defensivel­y and they was tagging us like this, it'd be red alert. Right now, as we said, we've got to continue to get our coverages down, our communicat­ion down."

Lue has been scrambling to come up with combinatio­ns that work, and his job has been made more difficult by injuries to Rose, Iman Shumpert and with James working himself into shape after missing most of the preseason with a sprained ankle.

Also, the Cavs are still without All-Star guard Isaiah Thomas, who is still recovering from a hip injury.

Wade, who signed a one-year deal for a chance to play alongside his close friend James again, likened the Cavs' current state to something he experience­d a few years ago in Miami.

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