CLEVELAND (AP) Still unbeaten, still undeniable.
The Cavaliers are rolling through the
East with ease.
LeBron James hardly missed and scored 24 points in three quarters,
Kyrie Irving scored 27 and
Cleveland picked up where it left off before a long layoff by thumping the
Toronto Raptors 115-84 in
Game 1 of the
Eastern Conference finals on Tuesday night.
James made his first nine shots - one an arena-rattling powerhouse dunk - and the
Cavs, healthy and hungry after losing in the Finals a year ago, shot 67 percent from the field in the first half while improving to 9-0 this postseason. Cleveland is the first team to start the playoffs with nine straight wins since
San Antonio reeled off 10 in a row in
2012.
But although the Cavs are more than halfway to winning a title - and ending the city's 52-year championship drought - James isn't satisfied.
"I think don't think we have complacency in our minds," he said. "We have a goal and our goal is not nine wins.
I've won nine games before. I've won 14 games before. We will face some adversity."
The 31-point win is the most lopsided in Cleveland's postseason history.
But unlike their second-round series when they made 77
3-pointers and swept
Atlanta, the Cavs did most of their damage from close range. Cleveland made just 7 of 20 3-point attempts.
DeMar DeRozan scored 18 points and
Bismack Biyombo added 12 for
Toronto, which had just one day to prepare for the Cavs after going to seven games with
Miami.
"I thought they were the fresher team, the quicker team," Raptors coach
Dwane Casey said.
Kyle Lowry, who scored 35 points in the Raptors' series-clinching win over Miami, was held to just eight as he and the Raptors were roughed up in their first appearance in the conference finals.
Unless Toronto figures some things out quickly, these Raptors will be extinct, too.
Game 2 is Thursday night.
And James, as is almost always the case, led the charge. He finished 11 of 13 from the field and added six rebounds and four assists in just 28 minutes. James spent the final quarter on the bench cheering on
Cleveland's reserves.
These are the Cavs at full force, not the version missing
Love and
Irving in last year's Finals.
"They waited a full regular season to get back to this moment," James said of his teammates. "They trained their bodies all season long to get back to this
point and those guys have been spectacular."
The Cavs outscored the Raptors 33-16 in the second quarter when James personally welcomed
Canada's NBA franchise to the East's final round with a devastating dunk.
Driving baseline past
DeMarre Carroll, James cut across the lane and hammered home a right-handed windmill. He celebrated the slam by tilting his head, backpedaling and letting out a primal scream along with 20,
000 fans.
The impressive bucket capped a 20-2 spurt for the Cavs, whose swarming defense was making life miserable for
Lowry and his teammates. Toronto didn't get its first field goal until 6:28 remained in the quarter. The Raptors regrouped for a moment and closed within 12 before the Cavs decided enough was enough and closed the half with a 12-4 flurry to go up 66-44.
The Raptors came in as overwhelming underdogs, but
Casey wasn't worried about the stage being too big or his team fearing the Cavs.
He's still confident his group will bounce back.
"This score is embarrassing," he said. "But it's just one game."
And that might be the scariest thing of all.
OFF THE
LINE
DeRozan and Lowry did not attempt a free throw despite both playing more than 31 minutes. They combined to take 18 foul shots in
Game 7 against Miami, and DeRozan said he and Lowry needed to be more aggressive.
"We've got to come out the gate with that mindset, being aggressive like we usually do, and I think we didn't try to do that until later on in the game," he said.
CHAIRMEN OF THE BOARDS
The Cavs dominated the Raptors inside, outrebounding them 45-23.
TIP-INS
Raptors: Didn't have center
Jonas Valanciunas because of a sprained right ankle. He's doubtful for Game 2
. ... Casey nearly hired Cavs coach
Tyronn Lue two years ago before he signed with the Cavaliers as
David Blatt's top assistant. "We talked, and he made a good decision," Casey said. "He's a good young coach, a good person."
Cavaliers: Cleveland's nine-game winning streak is the longest for any Cleveland team in postseason history. The Cavs also won nine straight in 2009. ... Lue, who is unbeaten in the playoffs, is flattered that Lowry calls him a "father figure." The two became tight when Toronto's guard entered the league. "When he first came in, he said that he wanted to be like Tyronn Lue," Lue said with a chuckle. "He wanted to compare himself to me. I was like, `Well, you can be much better than me.' He's very well surpassed me as a player."
UP
NEXT
Game 2 is Thursday night in Cleveland at 8:30 p.m.
- published: 18 May 2016
- views: 64