The Day

Cavs are in recovery mode

Warriors steal opener after taking advantage of wild series of events

- By JOSH DUBOW

Oakland, Calif. — J.R. Smith's blunder, a disputed replay overturn and a key missed free throw dealt the Cleveland Cavaliers an emotionall­y crushing loss in an opener of the NBA Finals that was ripe to be taken away from the defending champion Golden State Warriors.

The Cavs spent the off day Friday trying to recover from one of the oddest and possibly debilitati­ng defeats in the finals, and awaiting word from the NBA on the status of two key big men for Game 2 on Sunday night.

Kevin Love will not be suspended for leaving the bench and being on the court during an altercatio­n in the closing seconds of Cleveland's 124-114 overtime loss Thursday night. A person familiar with the decision said the league ruled Love left the bench to argue a flagrant foul against teammate Tristan Thompson and not to join the altercatio­n. He then retreated to the bench area immediatel­y, so he did not deserve punishment. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the league has not announced a ruling.

There has been no ruling yet on possible discipline for Thompson, who was ejected for a flagrant 2 foul against Shaun Livingston and then shoved a ball into Draymond Green's face before leaving the court.

Cavs guard George Hill said it would be "petty" if it warranted a suspension. The Warriors weren't concerned about how the league would rule.

"I thought it was unnecessar­y when he shoved the ball in Draymond's face," guard Klay Thompson said. "That was very uncalled for, especially if two guys are just talking. That's not the way to play. But honestly, I don't care if he plays or not."

Everyone is still trying to figure out what went

on in the final minute of regulation in Game 1. It started after LeBron James converted a three-point play to give Cleveland a 104-102 lead with 50 seconds left.

James appeared to draw a charge on Durant. But officials went to the replay to see if James was in the restricted area, which would make it a block. While James was clearly outside the restricted area, officials also had the chance to review whether James was in legal guarding position and changed the call to a block because they determined he turned his body and moved into Durant.

Then the game really went off the rails when Hill got fouled with 4.6 seconds left and the Cavs trailing by one. He made the first free throw to tie it, missed the second.

Smith grabbed the offensive rebound, but instead of putting it back up or passing to an open James up top, he dribbled toward half court and threw a pass, running out the clock.

Coach Tyronn Lue said after the game that Smith though the Cavs were ahead, although Smith said he knew the game was tied and was waiting for a timeout to be called. Lue said he talked to Smith about what happened, but wouldn't give an explanatio­n.

Lue expects a big bounce-back performanc­e in Game 2.

"J.R. can shake off anything, and when everybody tends to count J.R. out, that's when he comes through," Lue said. "So he's definitely going to start again. He's a big part of what we do. That last play is over, it's behind us, and now we've got to move on."

Hill said he couldn't sleep last night, reliving the missed free throw.

"I felt like the team did a great job. Put ourselves in a (position) to win the game. Me not hitting the free throw, I feel like cost our team the win. And I dealt with that last night," he said. "We're moving on as a team. We blew our chance, blew our opportunit­y. But we've got to focus on Game 2 now. It being one of the worst losses, got to kind of put it behind you now."

The Warriors had some questions of their own in terms of availabili­ty for Game 2. Thompson, who briefly left the series opener after Smith slid into his left leg, said he is still sore but feeling much better, and he doesn't expect any issues for Sunday.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP PHOTO ?? Cleveland’s LeBron James (23), Tristan Thompson, right, and head coach Tyronn Lue, bottom, argue with referee Tony Brothers after a officials changed a call from a charge to a block on James late in regulation that helped the Warriors tie, and...
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP PHOTO Cleveland’s LeBron James (23), Tristan Thompson, right, and head coach Tyronn Lue, bottom, argue with referee Tony Brothers after a officials changed a call from a charge to a block on James late in regulation that helped the Warriors tie, and...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States