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Demetri Inembolidis

152062903 Raptors Cavs Kyle110 0To say that the Cavs started the game against the Raptors on Tuesday night poorly would be the understatement of the year. The Cavs missed 14 out of their first 15 shots in the game and were giving up open shots to the Raptors. Cleveland was trailing the Raptors 21-7 with 3:07 remaining in the first quarter. Despite shooting 24% in the first quarter, the Cavs only trailed 20-25 after the first 12 minutes of the game.

The scripts on Cavs games lately is that they come out of the gate passively despite Tristan Thompson playing hard. Once again, he played like a bull in a china shop in the first stretch of the game. Perhaps he wanted to send a message to the many detractors who believed the Cavs should have drafted Jonas Valansciunas. Thompson secured 8 rebounds in the game and 5 of them were in the first quarter. Thompson missed all of his 5 shots in the first, but it once again felt like he helped set the tone. Even on nights when his shot isn't falling, It feels like he is making more of an impact lately than he did earlier in his career.

Shaun Livingston made his second straight start for the injured Kyrie Irving. Despite his foul trouble, Livingston was able to play 33 minutes. In addition, it did not appear that he allowed his 5 fouls to heavily affect his defensive intensity. Livingston had 15 points, 5 rebounds and 6 assists. One of the most entertaining moments of the game came with 54 seconds left in the game. Only leading by 5 points after giving up a 9 point lead earlier in the quarter, it felt like the game could go either way. Rudy Gay and DeMar DeRozan were hitting seemingly every shot that they took. Livingston had a great no-look pass to Alonzo Gee who lost his man on a screen. Gee had a reverse dunk which helped shift momentum.

Once again, Luke Walton was exceptional. Although he only scored 5 points, he also had 7 rebounds and 7 assists. Walton led the Cavs in +/- with a positive rating of 20. The offense seems to flow much better when he is in the game and a part of the offense. Walton had a great no-look bounce-pass through his own legs to Wayne Ellington who converted on an 18 foot jump shot with 32 seconds left in the game. It happened on the very next possession after the great Shaun Livingston pass to Alonzo Gee. Needless to say, it was the most entertaining sequence in the game and it left the crowd at the Quicken Loans Arena overjoyed.

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Andrew Clayman

cavsheat2-24-13If an “Oscar Clip” showcases a riveting performance condensed into a matter of seconds, then Daniel-Day Lewis had nothin’ on C.J. Miles last night. Sure, C.J.’s Cavaliers fell once again to the hated Heat in South Beach, just as “Lincoln” took it on the chin against “Argo.”  But for 60 remarkable seconds of the third quarter, Cleveland’s back-up two-guard transformed himself convincingly into Reggie Miller at the Garden in ’95—erasing a Miami lead in a tidal wave of triples and silencing the King’s Court, if only for a moment. Final count: 109-105.

Up until Mr. Miles (19 points) put his method training to work, the script had been all too familiar—the young, overmatched Cavaliers (18-38) rendered helpless at the hands of their former leader, embarrassed and mocked before the imbecilic masses of Miami: Sportstown USA. Cleveland came in just 1-7 against the Heat since “The Decision,” and despite losing by just 2 points on their last visit to the American Airlines Arena back in November, the absence of Anderson Varejao in this rematch looked obvious early. LeBron greeted his old (and presumably future) team with a dunk to start the game, and a string of three-pointers from Mario Chalmers (16 pts), Ray Allen (11 pts), and effing Chris Bosh (7 pts) sent Miami off on a 14-2 run to close the first frame. It was 33-20. Fun.

The second quarter concluded in similar fashion, with three inside bunnies by James (game-high 28 pts and 8 assists) and three-pointers from Allen and Chalmers leading to a 12-1 Heat run in the final 3 minutes. It was 64-46. Might as well watch ‘dem purdy dresses on the red carpet now.

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Demetri Inembolidis

imagesThe night was May 22, 2003. The Cleveland Cavaliers were fresh off a season that saw them win 17 games and lose 65. Although there were some a lot of knuckleheads on the team, general manager Jim Paxson did something he hadn't been able to do in any other year: he put the Cavs in a position to win. They weren't looking to win a game, a playof series or a championship. The prize was the rights to draft local basketball phenom LeBron James in the upcoming draft.

The stakes were high. The Cavs needed a shot in the arm. Forget about hoping for a championship. They needed a superstar. There were some promising young players on the roster such as Carlos Boozer and Dajuan Wagner, but those guys couldn't be counted on to build a team around. They were better suited to be supporting cast members. Unfortunately for the Cavs, they simply couldn't be counted on. One was given a raw deal in his genetic makeup and the other took advantage of gullible businessmen into a bigger contract in Utah. Regardless, the Cavs needed a franchise player.

In the book Tales from the Cleveland Cavaliers: The Rookie Season of LeBron James by Roger Gordon, Austin Carr described how vastly important the events of May 22, 2003 were. After discussing broken feet in key playoff games, being in the same division as the Jordan Bulls, Brad Daugherty's bad back, Zydrunas Ilgauskas' foot injuries and even his own injury-laden career, Carr said that "the basketball gods looked down and said 'It's Cleveland's turn." And indeed it was. Carr openly wept tears of joy at the draft lottery watch party at Champps in Valley View. Strangers who were openly crying were hugging in a raucous scene. Carr proceeded to say that "it meant so much to the area and the franchise."

Things weren't going to be easy. Teams do not win immediately even with a talent like LeBron James. After All, there is a reason the Cavs only won 17 games in the previous season. This was blatantly obvious when the Cavs lost in his first NBA game to the still-elite Sacramento Kings by a score of 106-92. James lived up to the hype and delivered a 25 point, 6 rebound, 9 assist and 4 steal performance. The announcing crew was gushing over his unselfishness James gave up an open dunk so he could pass to a trailing Ricky Davis.

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Jesse Lamovsky

The Cavaliers didn’t need Kyrie Irving to be big to win big Saturday night in Orlando. Kyrie’s supporting cast stepped up, particularly the bench, as Cleveland dominated the failing Magicians 118-94 in Confederated Products Arena. The win was the second in a row for the Cavaliers, who are now 18-37; Orlando is a miserable 15-41 after its fifth consecutive loss.

It wasn’t as if Kyrie didn’t play well. He did, notching nine assists against just turnover. On this night, however, he traded his scoring punch for floor leadership, getting his teammates involved and running Cleveland’s offense with smooth precision. He took just nine shots and scored 12, one of seven Cavaliers to score in double figures.

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Jesse Lamovsky

Fresh off his show-stopping All-Star Weekend performance, Kyrie Irving had another opportunity to display his talents in front of a national audience Wednesday
night against New Orleans at the Q- and once again he didn’t disappoint. Cleveland’s newest superstar rescued his struggling team with a sublime fourth-quarter performance as the Cavaliers began the second half with a hard-fought 105-100 victory over the Hornets err Pelicans.

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