Gearing Up for Game 4

After a Heartbreaking Loss in Game 3, the Cavs Know It’s Do-or-Die on Friday

The day after a stinging defeat in Game 3 at The Q, the Cavaliers know that
their margin of error is now nil and have to be wondering if their best is going
to be good enough.

What the Cavaliers had done to Eastern Conference foes through the first three
rounds of the 2017 Playoffs is being done to them by Golden State.

In Game 1, Cleveland held the Warriors to 43 percent shooting and lost by 22. In
Game 2, they forced 20 turnovers and Golden State scored 132 points. In
Wednesday night’s loss, LeBron James, Kyrie Irving and J.R. Smith combined for
93 points and the Cavaliers led by six points with three minutes to play.

LeBron James said pointedly before the series began that the biggest difference
between the back-to-back Finals meetings of the past and this year’s matchup is
Kevin Durant. That looks like the understatement of the NBA season – with K.D.
averaging 34.0 points on 56 percent shooting through the series’ first three
games.

On Thursday, James was asked if it was “fair” that the Warriors – who won 73
games one season ago – were able to add a former NBA MVP to their
already-stocked roster.

“I’m not one to judge and say if it’s fair or not if guys are adding players to
their team,” said James. “Is it fair that the New York Yankees in the ’90s were
adding piece after piece after piece after piece? Is it fair that the Cowboys
added Deion Sanders? It happens. It’s sports. You have an opportunity to sign
one of the best players, and you can do it, go ahead and do it. Why not? If I
become an owner, I’m going to try to sign everybody.”

LeBron posted another herculean Finals performance on Wednesday night –
finishing with 39 points, his 12th 30-point game of the postseason, going
15-for-27 from the floor, including 4-of-9 from long-range, adding 11 boards and
a game-high nine assists.

As impressive as LeBron’s numbers were on the floor, it was the two minutes that
the four-time MVP didn’t play that might’ve been the most telling.

Coach Lue talks to J.R. Smith during the game against the Golden State Warriors
in Game Three of the 2017 NBA Finals on June 7, 2017 at Quicken Loans Arena in
Cleveland, Ohio. Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images

Put simply, in the 46 minutes that LeBron was on the floor, the Cavaliers were a
+7, and they lost by five.

Kevin Love was outstanding through the first two games of the series – snagging
21 boards in Game 1 and notching 27 points in Game 2. Kyrie Irving was good in
Game 1 and excellent in Game 3 on Wednesday night – netting 16 of his 38 points
in the third quarter, finishing 16-for-29 from the floor overall.

As great as Irving was in the last-second loss, the step-back three-point miss
with 26 ticks to play – following the Kevin Durant bomb that gave Golden State
back the lead – was obviously still weighing on him.

“When it’s a do-or-die game like Game 3, you want to make that play – not only
for your team, but just for your confidence,” said the four-time All-Star. “I’m
always constantly unwavering with my confidence, but that’s the type of shot you
want to nail. After the game, it hurt. You feel like you let your teammates down
because you didn’t necessarily make the right decision. It didn’t go in, so
yeah.”

J.R. Smith had his best game of the 2017 postseason on Wednesday – finishing
with 16 points, going 5-of-10 from beyond the arc. Unfortunately, that’s been
the biggest contribution anyone outside the Big Three has made through the first
three games of the series.

And that’s been one of the major reasons Cleveland finds itself down, 0-3, in
the series. It takes a perfect game with contributions across the board to beat
a loaded squad like the Warriors. And the Big Three hasn’t gotten much help so
far.

The Warriors have essentially taken Tristan Thompson – who’d been a thorn in
their side throughout the previous two Finals – out of the third act of the
trilogy. He’s 4-of-11 from the floor in the series with 11 combined rebounds.

“We’re not going to give in, we’re going to keep competing.”

Head Coach Tyronn Lue

Meanwhile, Warriors players who struggled early in the series are on an upward
trajectory – most noteworthy Klay Thompson, who bounced back from a 3-for-16
shooting performance in Game 1 to go a combined 19-for-30 over the past two
contests. On Wednesday night, he finished with 30 points, canning six triples in
the process.

As dire as things look at the moment – with NBA teams going 0-126 in a Playoff
series after trailing, 3-0 – the Wine & Gold aren’t out of it yet. One win on
Friday night puts them in the same position they were heading back to Oakland a
year ago. And they did something no other team had done up until that point.

But it all starts with one win on Friday night.

“We’re not going to give in, we’re going to keep competing,” said Coach Tyronn
Lue. “We had a chance to win last night, and if we come out with the fight and
intensity that we played with last game, clean up a few mistakes, then we have a
chance to win on Friday. So by no means are we giving in. We’re going to be
ready to play on Friday.”

After falling in Game 4 last year at The Q to fall behind, 1-3, in the series,
Lue famously told his squad: “If you don’t think we can win it, don’t get on the
plane.”

If they’re able to get a victory in Game 4, his troops will know better this
time.

Player: Kyrie Irving

Player: LeBron James

Player: Kevin Love

Player: JR Smith

Media Content: http://www.nba.com/cavaliers/features/gearing-game-4

Media Keywords: NBA, Sports, Cleveland Cavaliers, Kyrie Irving, LeBron James,
Kevin Love, JR Smith, Tyronn Lue, Cleveland Cavaliers, Golden State Warriors

Media Thumbnail:
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Taxonomy: Features, Joe Gabriele, 6-9-17 vs. Warriors, 2017 Playoffs, 2016-17
Season

Story Link: http://www.nba.com/cavaliers/features/gearing-game-4

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Five Keys to Cavaliers vs. Warriors, Game 4