Los Angeles Times

Somehow, James comes up just short

LeBron scores 51, but Warriors get some late breaks and win Finals opener again.

- By Tania Ganguli

OAKLAND — LeBron James sat on stage wearing the suit jacket and suit shorts in which he’d entered the arena. He was agitated. His answers were clipped. He knew this was one the Cleveland Cavaliers should have had.

“Tonight we played as well as we’ve played all postseason,” James said. “And we gave ourselves a chance possession after possession after possession. There were just some plays that were kind of taken away from us. Simple as that.”

The final score shows a double-digit win for the Golden State Warriors, but the Cavaliers pushed them to the brink of an unthinkabl­e Game 1 loss Thursday.

Ultimately, the Warriors prevailed in overtime 124-114 in a tightly contested matchup that saw both teams’ stars shine, trade daggers and then jaw at each other in the game’s final seconds. The Warriors are in their fourth consecutiv­e Finals against the Cavaliers and Golden State has won Game 1 every time.

James contribute­d 51 points, eight rebounds and eight assists, with 49 of his points in regulation. Stephen Curry led the Warriors with 29 points while Kevin Durant scored 26 with nine rebounds and six assists.

The game went to overtime after Cleveland’s JR Smith ran out the clock following an offensive rebound. James screamed at Smith on the court after the play, and Smith appeared to tell him he thought the Cavaliers

were leading, not tied at 107.

In his postgame news conference, Cleveland coach Tyronn Lue said Smith thought the Cavaliers were winning.

But Smith had a different story.

“I knew we were tied,” Smith said. “I thought we were gonna call timeout because I got the rebound. Pretty sure no one thought I was going to shoot over [Durant]. If I thought we were ahead I would’ve just held onto the ball for them to foul me. Clearly that wasn’t the case.”

James wouldn’t go further into what he knew about Smith’s mentality after the game. A persistent line of questionin­g about that subject caused James to put down his microphone,

put on his sunglasses and walk off the podium, ending the interview.

“I would never give up on JR,” James had said earlier in the news conference. “That’s not my MO. I don’t give up on any of my players, any of my teammates.”

James’ frustratio­n was about more than that final play in regulation.

The Cavaliers traded runs with the Warriors in a first half that felt largely inconseque­ntial, due to both teams’ penchants for lategame heroics. Cleveland took an 11-point lead in the second quarter, even going on a 7-0 run with James on the bench. But Golden State steadily closed the gap.

As the halftime buzzer sounded, Curry sank a deep three-pointer. He counted off with his fingers the three points he’d just scored, and then wagged his tongue in celebratio­n. That shot tied it at 56.

The Warriors had a rather mediocre third quarter by their standards. They outscored opponents by 18.5 points per 100 possession­s in the third quarters of games this season, but Cleveland trailed by only after three quarters.

The Cavaliers even took

the lead in the fourth quarter and James tried to will his team to another victory, this one the most improbable of them all.

James scored five points in the game’s final minute to keep pace with the Warriors, and he attempted to take a charge that would have won Cleveland an extra possession while leading by two. He stepped in front of Durant and drew the whistle he wanted.

“I thought I read that play just as well as I read any play in my career, defensive,” James said. “I seen the drive, I was outside the charge line, I stepped in, took the contact. It’s a huge play.”

Officials changed it from a charge to a blocking foul upon review.

Had that call gone the Cavaliers’ way, they might have avoided the opportunit­y for Smith’s blunder. Instead, the game went to overtime, where the Warriors took control.

Warriors coach Steve Kerr called it a lucky win in some ways.

“Sometimes you need a little luck,” Warriors forward Draymond Green said. “It’s good to be lucky sometimes.”

 ?? Ben Margot Associated Press ?? DESPITE scoring the most points in a Finals game in 25 years, LeBron James couldn’t get the Cavaliers the upset.
Ben Margot Associated Press DESPITE scoring the most points in a Finals game in 25 years, LeBron James couldn’t get the Cavaliers the upset.
 ?? Ezra Shaw Associated Press ?? GOLDEN STATE’S Kevin Durant breaks away from Tristan Thompson for a first-half dunk. Durant scored 26 points as the Warriors survived in overtime.
Ezra Shaw Associated Press GOLDEN STATE’S Kevin Durant breaks away from Tristan Thompson for a first-half dunk. Durant scored 26 points as the Warriors survived in overtime.

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