China Daily (Hong Kong)

Cleveland relishing role as underdog

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INDEPENDEN­CE, Ohio — Las Vegas is betting against them and the bookies are hardly alone.

Let’s be honest, not many are giving the Cleveland Cavaliers much of a chance in the NBA Finals. They may be defending champions and they may have LeBron James, but against the Golden State Warriors, they are definite underdogs.

Just don’t try to tell them that.

“The whole underdog thing is funny to me because, yeah, at the end of the day we are defending our title,” Cavs forward Kevin Love said following Saturday’s practice.

“We’re trying to repeat, which is so hard to do. I think we will use it as fuel. We will use it as motivation, but the idea of playing into it? It’s tough for me to say that is the case. I don’t feel like we’re underdogs.

deserve this.

“I’m happy for the manager. To get another FA Cup, I’m delighted.”

Gunners striker Danny Welbeck didn’t get on the scoresheet, but he was a threat to Chelsea’s defense with his tireless running and astute movement.

The former Manchester United star praised his teammates for refusing to let their spirits drop after Diego Costa’s late equalizer threatened to spoil the party.

“We stuck in there when it looked like things were against us,” he said.

“You always worry when you concede and it was a game full of surprises. It was a great team performanc­e.” The whole underdog thing is funny to me because, yeah, at the end of the day we are defending our title.” Kevin Love, Cavs forward

“We match up well with them and I think they’d say the same about us.”

However, as the teams gear up for Thursday night’s series opener in Oakland, comments made by Warriors forward Draymond Green in October are reverberat­ing around Cleveland.

Still stinging after the Warriors blew a 3-1 lead in last year’s Finals against Cleveland, the vociferous Green, who was suspended from Game 5, said he plans to “destroy and annihilate” the Cavs.

Love compliment­ed Green’s competitiv­eness and aimed a verbal volley at Golden State.

“He’s a guy who said he wanted us,” Love said, “and he has us — starting next Thursday.”

Act III in this trilogy is overloaded with storylines, the biggest being whether James and co. have enough firepower to go toe-to-toe with the Warriors, who added superstar Kevin Durant to a team that won 73 games a year ago before its Finals flameout.

Golden State has glowed in this postseason, becoming the first team to start 12-0 while winning by an average of 16.3 points per game — the highest margin league history.

It’s no wonder then that the wise guys have installed the Warriors as heavy favorites to beat the Cavs for the second time in three years and wrestle back the Larry O’Brien Trophy that slipped through their hands last June.

James referred to the Warriors as “that juggernaut” and “a beast” following Thursday’s Game 5 in at Boston, a night in which he passed Michael Jordan as the career postseason scoring leader.

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