The Mercury News

Cavaliers bring the trophy home

Fans celebrate city’s first championsh­ip in 52 years

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CLEVELAND — LeBron James stepped off the plane and into a blizzard of red-and-gold confetti before hoisting the Larry O’Brien trophy. It gleamed in the bright summer sun, a symbol of hope and history.

As promised, James brought home a championsh­ip, the one on hold the past 52 years.

“This is for you, Cleveland,” James shouted into a microphone.

The superstar, born and raised in nearby Akron, powered the Cavaliers to a never-seen-before comeback in the NBA Finals, bringing them back from a 3-1 deficit to stun the Golden State Warriors.

On Monday, more than 10,000 fans gathered at Hopkins Internatio­nal Airport welcomed James and his teammates, who made a pit stop in Las Vegas for late-night partying before completing this unlikelies­t June journey. The Cavs not only defied the odds to make history, but they ended Cleveland’s pro sports title drought stretching to 1964, when the Browns won an NFL title.

It’s been a surreal ride for Clevelande­rs and shortly after showing fans the trophy from afar, James, the four-time league MVP, paraded it around the perimeter of the parking lot so fans behind the chain-linked fences could see they weren’t dreaming.

“I kept waking up during the night and saying, ‘Did we really win’?” said Diana Beetler of Oberlin, Ohio. “I couldn’t believe it. I’ve never had a championsh­ip since I was born. We’ve been waiting years and years for this.” She watched Sunday night’s game at home with family. “I cried,” said Beetler’s 18-year-old daughter, Zoe. “Everybody cried.”

It seems the entire city choked up after James capped his MVP series with a sensationa­l Game 7, a triple-double performanc­e that will long be remembered for his chasedown block of Warriors forward Andre Iguodala in the final minutes — a rejection that seemed to erase so many bad memories in Cleveland.

Even Golden State’s Draymond Green, who nearly shot the Warriors to a win in Game 7, was happy for Cleveland.

“That’s huge for that city,” he said. “They wanted it bad, and they got it. It will be huge.”

James fired back at n some of his critics on Instagram. James, who won his third title by leading the Cavs back from a 3-1 deficit against Golden State, posted a message aimed at those who have doubted him. James stayed off social media during Cleveland’s postseason run.

Accompanie­d by a photo of him clutching the Larry O’Brien trophy, James wrote: “They said u lost a step, wasn’t explosive as once was, the best days was in the (rear) view, questioned your drive, your leadership, your commitment, you don’t have killer instinct, going back home is the worst mistake in your career, he got the coach fired, players traded, won’t work between him and Kyrie, Him and Kev won’t work, love your teammates to much, there’s no way he can deliver a championsh­ip in his hometown, etc etc etc .... But guess what THATS NONE OF MY BUSINESS #StriveForG­reatness #ThisOneIsF­orTheLand #PutSomeRes­peckOnMyNa­me Hahahaha!!! Yes sir”

Game 7 drew the highest n television rating for the NBA Finals since Michael Jordan’s last championsh­ip. It averaged a 15.7 rating and nearly 30.8 million viewers on ABC.

 ?? JASON MILLER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kyrie Irving, left, LeBron James, center, Tristan Thompson, bottom right, and J.R. Smith, far right, of the Cavaliers return to Cleveland after wining the NBA Championsh­ip.
JASON MILLER/GETTY IMAGES Kyrie Irving, left, LeBron James, center, Tristan Thompson, bottom right, and J.R. Smith, far right, of the Cavaliers return to Cleveland after wining the NBA Championsh­ip.

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