Toronto Star

Melo finds his groove ... Expect a whole lot of trade Love

- Doug Smith

It took Carmelo Anthony and the Portland Trail Blazers a bit to get used to each other. The Blazers lost their first three games after signing the veteran before he hit for 25 points in a win over Chicago. One of the great narrative aspects of Anthony’s return was that he would get a chance to leave the NBA on his terms, rather than the way he left early last season when he was unceremoni­ously released by Houston early. But that’s not how Anthony sees it. “This ain’t a damn farewell tour,” he told the Athletic this week. “My love for the game don’t stop. I don’t know where this farewell-tour thing came from. I’ve never talked about a farewell tour. I know what I can do and I believe in myself. When a farewell tour comes, it comes. That’s not something I think about. I’m not thinking about retiring right now. I had (thought about it) during this past stretch over the summer. But ain’t no retiring in my mind. I believe in what I have left.”

Ready to go? When the real NBA trade season gets into full swing, when teams bail on this season or decide they need one piece to have a legitimate shot at success, one of the names you’ll hear bandied about a lot is Kevin Love of the Cavaliers. He’s a 12-year veteran on a goingnowhe­re team but also averaging 17.9 points and 11.8 rebounds per game and shooting about 36 per cent from three-point range. He can still play. Maybe too well for a Cleveland team that needs a high draft pick, but certainly well enough to help a contender. And he’s philosophi­cal about what the next few months might hold. “I’m just going to let the chips fall,” Love said. “I know that this is a young team. I think I can help them. I’m going to do right by Cleveland, the organizati­on. This is a league where teams want to rebuild, teams want to go young but certain teams are looking for a piece, a guy who’s played in the Finals ... I don’t know what’s going to happen, but I think it definitely lessens the burden and the anxiety.”

Managing that load: Kawhi Leonard missed his sixth game with the Los Angeles Clippers this season when injury management of his sore left knee kept him out of a Wednesday game in Memphis. He sat out two games on back-to-backs early in the season and has missed four with the knee soreness. The Clippers are 3-3 without him in the lineup and 11-3 when he plays.

Informatio­n for other publicatio­ns, wire services and websites was used in the compilatio­n of this report.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada