LeBron James continues to show his playoff mastery in Cleveland Cavaliers’ takedown of Boston Celtics

BOSTON – “LeBron’s playing at a whole new level,” Cleveland Cavaliers guard Kyle
Korver said, standing in front of his locker a few minutes after the Cavs
vanquished the Celtics in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference Finals, 130-86.
“Like, I’ve never seen him play at this level. The aggressiveness, the accuracy…
I mean, he’s playing incredible basketball.”

The James that Korver was referring, of course, was LeBron James, Cleveland’s
multi-faceted forward who played just under 33 minutes but finished with 30
points, seven assists, four rebounds, four steals and three blocked shots in the
Cavs’ win. James shot 66 percent (12-for-18) from the floor, 66 percent
(4-for-6) from the 3-point line, and finished with a +45 plus/minus rating.
James is now tied with Michael Jordan as the only players in NBA history to
score at least 30 points in eight consecutive playoff games.

“We’ve been having this talk for a long time now, but he’s playing at an
unbelievable level and he’s really setting the tone for us early in games,” said
Cleveland coach Tyronn Lue.

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After Cleveland’s 117-104 win in Game 1, LeBron said, “I don’t even think we
played that great tonight.” Apparently Friday night is what happens when the
Cavaliers play great. After the first quarter, the Cavs led 32-18 — not ideal
for the Celtics, but also not an insurmountable difference for a team accustomed
to playing from behind after repeatedly posting lackluster first quarters
throughout the regular and postseason.

Then the second quarter began, and the floodgates opened. It began with James
knocking down a three. A few plays later, James blocked an Avery Bradley layup
in traffic, then isolated against Al Horford and dropped in a midrange jumper,
then forced a steal against Marcus Smart, then drained a three over a contesting
Jae Crowder. It was like the sellout crowd at TD Garden blinked and suddenly
Boston was down 45-20.

The Cavs outscored the Celtics in the second quarter 40-13, with James playing
the entire period. James had a +27 plus/minus rating in the second quarter
alone. By halftime, the Cavaliers were sitting on a 72-31 lead. Cleveland led by
as much as 50, and eventually won by 44, but it was that second quarter
domination spearheaded by James that effectively ended the game.

“We’re at our best when we’re out running,” Korver said of that second quarter
spurt, “and you can’t get out and run unless you’re getting stops. So, we were
able to get some stops and then get out and run, and you know, obviously, LeBron
and Kyrie [Irving] putting a ton of pressure on the basket, and Kevin [Love]’s
shooting the ball well, and we’ve got a lot of shooters. It’s just really hard
to guard.”

“Two games in a row now,” said Boston coach Brad Stevens, “I’ve felt like when
we’ve missed multiple opportunities offensively, we’ve really let that dictate
how we played on the other end of the court. That’s disappointing. They’ve taken
advantage of us both nights.”

At some point, just before tipoff, the top three finalists for the NBA MVP award
were announced: Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook; Houston’s James Harden; San
Antonio’s Kawhi Leonard. Conspicuous by his absence was James, who was typically
terrific in this regular season (26.4 ppg, 8.7 apg, 8.6 rpg), but did not finish
among the top three.

James later said he had not seen the results before tipoff and his play wasn’t
fueled by any disappointment.

“What are you going to do?” James asked. “My only job is to try to be the MVP
for this team every night, put my teammates, put our franchise in position to be
successful and ultimately compete for a championship. For me, I know what I
bring to the table. This league knows what I bring to the table. That’s for you
guys to write about. It’s not for me to be concerned about.”

While we won’t know who actually won the MVP Award until the NBA Awards Show
airs on June 26 (9 pm EST, TNT), as the Cavs romp through the postseason, James
is making a pretty strong case for perhaps at least a runoff vote.

“I look at LeBron like Shaq,” said Lue, who was teammates with Shaquille O’Neal
on the 1999-2000 Lakers when O’Neal won the MVP award. “I think every year he’s
the MVP, and you can give him the award every year if you wanted to. When guys
have incredible seasons like James Harden did and Westbrook and Kawhi, then you
kind of credit those guys and give those guys the nod. But to me, I mean, LeBron
is MVP, just like Shaq, you can give it to him every year if you wanted to.”

With the Cavs two wins away from a perfect run to a third consecutive trip to
the NBA Finals, it’s easy to forget this is a Cavs team that stumbled into the
postseason, going 23-23 over their last 46 games, and losing seven of their
final 11.

“It’s just being in sync,” said Korver. “There’s nothing like playing a game. We
don’t do anything live, because Ty doesn’t want someone to get hurt. So we just
do drills, cardio, spot-up shooting. So there’s nothing like a game, so to kind
of get in game shape it takes a couple of games.”

“I’m a guy who lives in the moment,” said James. “Our team is in a great groove,
and I’m happy to be a part of that groove. At the end of the day, we want to try
to put ourselves in position to win every game. That’s the goal. Can you do
that? Sometimes you come out with an L, but it’s how you learn from those
experiences that’s going to help you out the next time. We are in a good groove
as a team, and we want to try to continue that going home.”

Lang Whitaker has covered the NBA since 1998. You can e-mail him here, find his
archive here or follow him on Twitter.

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