Boston Herald

LeBron onAP early brink

- By TOM WITHERS

CLEVELAND — LeBron James is on the brink of his earliest NBA playoff exit — and maybe another departure from Cleveland.

This Game 7 has a winor-leave-home element.

After being bloodied and blown off the floor in Game 6 by the Pacers in Indianapol­is, James and the Cavaliers staggered home with their rollercoas­ter season possibly headed toward a crash.

Only a win today over Indiana will prevent eliminatio­n and kick-start a summer in Cleveland that will center on James, who can opt out of his $35.6 million contract and become a free agent on July 1.

The stakes couldn’t be much higher. It’s the kind of game James lives to play.

“It’s just the love of the game and wanting to be remembered,” James said following a demoralizi­ng 12187 loss Friday night. “Game 7, I always said, is the two greatest words in sports. Us having a Game 7 on our floor, our fans are going to be truly excited to be a part of that. And hope our guys are excited about that as well, and understand that just don’t take those moments for granted.

“I’ve been a part of Game 7s for quite a while now and it’s just something that you wish you can get back and when you’re done playing the game.”

James has never lost a first-round series, going 12-0 with many of them sweeps on his way to winning three championsh­ips and seven straight appearance­s in the Finals.

But nothing has come easy for the 33-year-old or the Cavs, whose regular-season flaws — suspect defense, no reliable second scoring option — have been exposed by the young-and-hungry Pacers.

Indiana has taken it to Cleveland, and the fifthseede­d Pacers believe they can win one more and finally take down James, who has ended their season three times in the playoffs since 2013.

“We were confident even before this series started,” said Indiana AllStar Victor Oladipo, who snapped out of a shooting slump to score 28 points in Game 6. “We’re still confident now. Game 7 is going to be a hostile environmen­t. It’s going to be very emotional. But we’re looking forward to the challenge. It’s going to be a dog fight.

“We know they’re going to be ready. And we have to be, too.”

Before losing Game 6, James’ teams had won 11 straight close-out games. The streak ending was hardly his fault.

The four-time MVP scored 22 points with seven rebounds and five rebounds in 31 minutes before sitting out the entire fourth quarter to rest.

 ?? PHOTO ?? CUTTING IT CLOSE: LeBron James had his face cut during Friday’s Game 6 loss to Indiana, setting up a must-win Game 7 today for he and the Cavaliers.
PHOTO CUTTING IT CLOSE: LeBron James had his face cut during Friday’s Game 6 loss to Indiana, setting up a must-win Game 7 today for he and the Cavaliers.

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