Toronto Star

Cavaliers continue to befuddle Hawks

- TOM WITHERS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND— Rusty, rested or reeling, LeBron James and the Cavaliers find a way to beat the Atlanta Hawks in the playoffs every time.

James scored 25 points, Kyrie Irving added 21 and Cleveland withstood a strong second-half surge by Atlanta to maintain its chokehold on the Hawks with a 104-93 victory Monday night in the opening game of their second-round Eastern Conference series.

James converted a critical threepoint play with 2:09 left for the Cavs, who blew an 18-point lead in the second half and fell behind with 8 minutes left in the fourth quarter before making several clutch plays down the stretch.

Cleveland swept Atlanta in last year’s Eastern Conference finals and has won eight straight over the Hawks, moving to 9-0 against them in the post-season.

This was by no means easy, however.

“We needed everything,” said James, who gave his team just that, adding nine assists, seven rebounds and five steals. “We played an okay game. I don’t think we played to our standards. The first game is always kind of a feel-out.”

Dennis Schroder scored a playoff career-high 27 and rallied the Hawks before they crumbled in the closing minutes. Atlanta’s offence bogged down in crunch time and the Hawks only scored two field goals in the final four minutes.

Paul Millsap had 17 points and 13 rebounds, and Kent Bazemore added 16 points for Atlanta, which got just eight points from Jeff Teague. Game 2 is Wednesday night. Despite the loss, the Hawks were mostly pleased with their effort.

“We felt good that we gave ourselves a chance,” said Bazemore, who left the floor clapping his hands. “No moral victories, but you want to keep your mojo positive. We’ll get another crack.”

James’ three-point play, which he punctuated by flexing his biceps, came after he stripped the ball from Schroder and the Cavs kept their possession alive with a pair of offen- sive rebounds, one by Tristan Thompson, the other by J.R. Smith.

The Cavs didn’t show any rust following an eight-day break after the first round until the third quarter, when their offence slowed and the Hawks got hot. But when it mattered most, the defending conference champions came through, and as always, James led the way.

Kevin Love, who was injured when the teams met in the post-season last year, added 17 points but was just 4-of-17 from the floor and appeared to hurt his right shoulder. Thompson added 14 rebounds, including seven on the offensive end.

Thompson has been a rebounding marvel for the Cavs, comparable to what Dennis Rodman once did for Michael Jordan and the Bulls.

“What Dennis did for the Bulls on the floor,” James said, pausing for dramatic effect, “Double-T does for our team, just giving us extra possession­s.” The Cavs came out strong and seemed intent on knocking out the Hawks. Love, who missed six of his first seven three-pointers, knocked down a pair from long range and James finished a 2-on-1 break with a thunderous dunk to give Cleveland a 72-54 lead with four minutes left in the third.

 ?? KEN BLAZE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Hawks centre Al Horford tangles with Cleveland’s LeBron James under the hoop during first-half playoff action Monday at Quicken Loans Arena.
KEN BLAZE/USA TODAY SPORTS Hawks centre Al Horford tangles with Cleveland’s LeBron James under the hoop during first-half playoff action Monday at Quicken Loans Arena.
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