The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Lue: ‘Best player’ will save Cavs

- Jeff Schudel

As rocky as things have been for the Cavaliers the last four weeks, Coach Tyronn Lue can sleep easy every night when his head hits his pillow for one simple reason:

“Because we have the best player in the world,” Lue said Jan. 15 before the Cavaliers hosted the Warriors at Quicken Loans Arena.

Lue was answering a question asking whether he still believes the Cavs are the best team in the Eastern Conference.

They were third in the East with a record 26-16 when play Jan. 15 began. They lost three straight and eight of 11 before playing the Warriors.

A couple minutes later, Lue amended his original answer.

“We’re not right now, but we will be the best team in the East,” Lue said. “We’re not playing the best right now, but we will be at some point.”

LeBron James is third in the NBA in scoring (27.1 points a game), fourth in assists (8.8) and third in minutes played (36.9).

The Cavaliers’ recent struggles did nothing to diminish the intensity of playing the Warriors in the TNT feature game on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

The Warriors are on top of the Western Conference with a record of 35-9. That’s how it should be.

The Cavs, though, are better than their record, and Golden State coach Steve Kerr knows it. He saw enough of the Cavaliers while facing them in three straight NBA Finals (the Warriors win twice) to know though the Cavs aren’t at their best in midJanuary they will be by late May.

“I am very aware they have LeBron,” Kerr said in his pregame news conference. “I guarantee there was a moment like this (for the Cavaliers), at least once, sometimes more, in each of the last three seasons. He’s always going to get the ship righted. What happens now has nothing to do with what happens later.”

So many qualities of LeBron James separate him from his peers they are difficult to enumerate, but let’s start with his durability. He has started all 43 games the Cavs have played this season, but his durability goes beyond that. He gets pounded like a Lake Erie breakwall in a storm night in and night out. With a minute to play, when his 33-year-old body should be weary, he drives to the hoop like it’s the first quarter.

His scoring and assists numbers speak for themselves. What can’t be measured in numbers is the way he wants to take the team and city on his battleship-sized shoulders at crucial times or the way he speaks his mind on social issues, because that makes him a leader as much as anything else.

About six weeks or so ago, James after practice in Independen­ce one day said he hasn’t reached his peak yet. He wasn’t boasting. Kerr was asked about James’ remark.

“I know he’s better now than he was four years ago,” Kerr said. “That’s insane when you think about it. That should have been his prime four years ago when he already was an MVP and a champion.

“He’s better. He’s a better shooter, a better player. He keeps getting better, so I believe him.” So does Tyronn Lue. That’s why the Cavs coach isn’t worried.

Schudel can be reached at JSchudel@News-Herald.com; on Twitter: @jsproinsid­er

 ?? TIM PHILLIS — THE NEWS-HERALD ?? LeBron James seeks to bat down a pass by Stephen Curry. Tyronn Lue said the Cavs will be fine “because we have the best player in the world.”
TIM PHILLIS — THE NEWS-HERALD LeBron James seeks to bat down a pass by Stephen Curry. Tyronn Lue said the Cavs will be fine “because we have the best player in the world.”
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 ?? TONY DEJAK — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? LeBron James dunks against the Warriors’ Patrick McCaw in the first half on Jan. 15 in Cleveland.
TONY DEJAK — ASSOCIATED PRESS LeBron James dunks against the Warriors’ Patrick McCaw in the first half on Jan. 15 in Cleveland.

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