Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Cavs try to adjust on both ends after Game 1 beating

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Tyronn Lue has a new No. 1 priority for LeBron James and his Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 2 of the NBA Finals: Stop the ball. First and foremost, then make sure Golden State’s sharpshoot­ers have a hand in their face.

Translatio­n: Do anything and everything possible to stop Kevin Durant from driving through the paint and dunking at will with nobody even around him.

“Well, I’m pretty sure that won’t happen tomorrow,” Durant said with a grin Saturday. “They will be way more physical. They’re going to be way more aggressive in the pick-and-roll on the offensive end and defensivel­y. They’re going to try to get their 3-point shooters going and rebound the ball. They’re going to try to get more offensive rebounds. They’re just going to muck the game up and be physical.”

That’s the plan for the defending champions Sunday night and will be key if they want to even the bestof-seven series and look respectabl­e after the Warriors whipped them 113-91 Thursday night.

Durant scored 38 points and dunked easily, six times in the first half alone and many of which he went untouched to the rim.

“We can’t let Durant get easy baskets like that,” Lue said as his team practiced at Warriors headquarte­rs amid a media frenzy. “With him being probably one of the best scorers in the NBA, you can’t give guys like that easy opportunit­ies at the basket.”

Taking care of the ball will be equally important after that became a major problem in the opener for Cleveland, which committed 20 turnovers in an uncharacte­ristically sloppy game.

The 13-0 Warriors are on a roll and matched a Finals low with only four turnovers, and if Klay Thompson finds his shooting touch at last it could be another tough day on defense for the Cavs. They want to get physical, contest shots, somehow find a way to get Golden State out of its groove.

“Effort, effort, yep,” Kyrie Irving said matter-offactly. “And our ability to make sure that when we’re mismatched in transition, that the only thing that matters is stopping the basketball and settling down in the half court, then we match up from there.”

Durant and Curry combined for 66 points and 18 assists, moving the Warriors three straight wins from becoming the first team to go unbeaten on the way to a title.

Not that they’re discussing it. While Cleveland searches for the right adjustment­s, Golden State’s roster of perfection­ists believes it can play far better still with KD and Steph leading the way, or any of the others who are capable of getting hot in a hurry.

“It’s going to be a wrestling match down there, and you have to keep it going and make it tough for them and just try to wear them out,” said Cavs center Tristan Thompson, held scoreless in the opener.

The Warriors are plenty confident even if Cleveland closes out on the perimeter. Both teams were slow getting started offensivel­y after long layoffs: nine days for Golden State, six for the Cavs.

Cleveland shot 11 for 31 from long range and the Warriors 12 of 33. But Golden State hit 9 for 20 from deep in the second half on the way to 106 total shots — a jaw-dropping 20 more than the Cavs — while attacking at every chance when Cleveland just couldn’t keep up with Steph and KD.

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