The Sentinel-Record

On time, on target Cavs pound Celtics in Game 3

- TOM WITHERS

CLEVELAND — Before taking the floor, LeBron James stood in the hallway with his teammates outside Cleveland’s locker room and pounded his chest with both hands. The Celtics got thumped next. James had 27 points and 12 assists, Kevin Love added 14 rebounds and the Cavaliers looked like a different team on their home court, tightening the Eastern Conference finals with a 116-86 victory in Game 3 over Boston on Saturday night.

Outplayed during two losses in Boston, the Cavs used a three-day break in the series to regroup and re-grip this series. With James leading the way, they built a 19-point lead in the first quarter, pushed it to 30 in the second half and overpowere­d the Celtics, who fell to 1-5 on the road in the postseason.

Any discussion of Cleveland’s demise is premature. Kyle Korver made four of the team’s 17 3-pointers, six players scored in double figures and the Cavs, who have spent the season seeking chemistry and cohesion, were connected defensivel­y.

“Even when things broke down, we just covered for one another,” James said. “We made them make extra passes. We made them make extra dribbles. We were flying around, and I just happened to be one of the guys on the floor that wanted to fly around as well.”

Game 4 is tonight before the series returns to Boston.

Jaylen Brown was in foul trouble all night and scored just 10 for the Celtics after averaging 23 in the first two games. Jayson Tatum scored 18 and Terry Rozier 13 for Boston, which couldn’t match Cleveland in any aspect.

“They took it to us,” Celtics coach Brad Stevens said. “Point blank: They just outplayed us.”

The Cavs focused their defense on slowing Brown, and it worked. He was 3 of 8 from the floor and never found his flow after getting two early fouls.

“They were denying me the ball, and when I did get it, it was in positions that I’m not comfortabl­e in,” Brown said. “Give credit to Cleveland. They were physical and we settled for jumpers too much.”

Only 19 of a possible 300 teams have ever overcome a 2-0 deficit in the playoffs. James and the Cavs, who previously did it in 2007 and again in 2016 while winning the NBA title, took the first step toward a third comeback.

To return to the NBA Finals for the fourth straight year, the Cavs have to win four of five and re-write Boston’s illustriou­s history. The Celtics are 37-0 when they win the first two games in a series.

The Cavs came in wanting to play faster and be more physical with the younger Celtics, who were the aggressors in Games 1 and 2. Not this time.

“The toughest team sets the rules,” Rozier said. “They came out aggressive from the jump and never looked back. We’ve got to play aggressive from the rip. Tonight, we were all over the place, playing too fast and doing things we didn’t want to do.”

The Cavs needed more from point guard George Hill after two poor performanc­es (8 points, 1 assist) in Boston. Hill responded with a driving layup to start the game and drained three 3-pointers in the first quarter as Cleveland wasted no time taking control.

Hill finished with 13, J.R. Smith 11 — they were outscored 41-3 in Game 2 — and Cleveland’s supporting cast played so well that James was only on the floor for 37 minutes.

Stevens was confident his team would play better on the road than earlier in these playoffs, but the Celtics were shaky early, committing four turnovers and shooting 2 of 10 while the Cavs opened a 27-11 lead.

James said earlier Saturday the fact he has twice rallied from 2-0 deficits in the postseason offered no relief.

“There’s nothing about the playoffs that’s comfortabl­e until you either win it all or you lose and go into the summer,” he said.

Summer might not be as close as it once seemed. The long layoff between Games 2 and 3 seemed to revive the Cavs.

“It was three days of stewing on Game 2,” Korver said. “It probably did something good in us. It’s frustratin­g to have to wait that long for another game. We were able to put in some new things on offense, too.”

Before the game, Stevens downplayed his team’s road issues, saying there was a “small sample size.” It got a little bigger, and a little more troubling. Still, he said he will not focus on Boston’s road woes.

“In my 11 years as a head coach, I probably haven’t talked about road and home five times with our team,” he said. “It’s about how you play between the lines. Because I think if you start talking about that, then you find excuses in both places. We can’t play like we played tonight no matter where we played. If we would have played in Boston like that, we would have gotten beat.”

Stevens said he was relieved to learn that Boston legend Bill Russell was recovering after a hospital stay brought on by dehydratio­n. Russell won 11 NBA titles with the Celtics.

“He’s the ultimate basketball winner,” Stevens said. “The way he impacted winning, the unselfishn­ess of a teammate, what he stood for off the floor — everything about him.”

James needs six field goals to surpass Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (2,356) for the most in postseason history.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ON TARGET: Kevin Love (0) scores Saturday over Boston’s Jaylen Brown during the Cavaliers’ 116-86 victory in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals in Cleveland. The Celtics lead the series, 2-1.
The Associated Press ON TARGET: Kevin Love (0) scores Saturday over Boston’s Jaylen Brown during the Cavaliers’ 116-86 victory in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals in Cleveland. The Celtics lead the series, 2-1.

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