Houston Chronicle

The Cavaliers beat the Raptors by 38 points to take a 3-2 lead in their series.

- By Tom Withers

CLEVELAND — Back home, the Cavaliers were not hospitable.

They rudely roughed up the Raptors again.

LeBron James scored 23 points then sat the fourth quarter, Kevin Love scored 25, and Cleveland unleashed tenacious defense on Toronto to regain control of the Eastern Conference finals with a 116-78 rout of the Raptors in Game 5 on Wednesday night.

On their court in front of 20,000-plus screaming fans following two straight losses in Canada, the Cavs opened a 34-point lead in the first half and never slowed while taking a 3-2 series lead.

They can clinch their second straight conference title and trip to the NBA Finals with a win in Game 6 on Friday night in Toronto.

“We ought to be able to transfer that on Friday,” James said. “Playing in that beast of an arena that we’re going to we’ve got to be composed, we’ve got to be tough, and we’ve got to be sharp.”

The Raptors, who came in with momentum and confidence after winning games 3 and 4, left Quicken Loans Arena shaken and one loss from having their deepest playoff run stopped.

“They kicked our butts, bottom line,” Raptors coach Dwane Casey said. “That’s been all three ballgames.”

James had eight assists and six rebounds in 31 minutes before checking out late in the third quarter with the Cavs up 37. He spent the fourth quarter resting on the bench while Cleveland’s reserves finished the romp.

Kyrie Irving added 23 points, and he, James and Love outscored the Raptors 43-34 in the first half. Cleveland has won its three games in the series by a combined 88 points.

“They are a different team here,” Casey said. “We came in here with a chance to do something special and we didn’t get it done. They pushed us around and took what they wanted.”

DeMar DeRozan scored 14 points, and Kyle Lowry had 13 for the Raptors, who were overwhelme­d from the start. Bismack Biyombo had just four rebounds after getting 40 the past two games.

The only positive for Toronto was center Jonas Valanciuna­s, who returned after missing eight straight games with a sprained right ankle. He scored nine points in 18 minutes.

 ?? Jason Miller / Getty Images ?? The Cavs’ J.R. Smith, left, and Tristan Thompson annoy the Raptors’ DeMar DeRozan with their pressure.
Jason Miller / Getty Images The Cavs’ J.R. Smith, left, and Tristan Thompson annoy the Raptors’ DeMar DeRozan with their pressure.

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