Recap: Warriors 108, Cavs 100 OT (or, It’s the Little Things…)
2015-06-05After more than a week of off-days, re-hashed narratives, overheated theories, injury smokescreens, supreme anticipation and absolutely zero actual basketball games, Game 1 of the 2015 NBA Finals finally got underway last night at Oakland’s Oracle Arena. What was advertised by many (outside of the State of Ohio anyway) as the beginning of an expectedly lopsided series between the “best team in the NBA” and the “best player on the planet” was decidedly much closer in its outcome.
The Cavs shelled the Warriors early, building as much as a 14 point lead on their wide-eyed hosts, before letting Golden State’s deep stable of bench workhorses charge their way back into the fray by halftime. From there, both squads traded blows, drawing even at the end of each successive quarter, and forcing the issue to overtime, to the delight of impartial fans of the game and network executives who suffered through a paucity of Conference Finals contests.
For Warrior fans, the final shot of regulation that fell just centimeters short resulted in a sigh of relief at dodging the closest of calls. For Cavalier fans, a groan at seeing a small window for stealing the opening game on their opponent’s floor evaporate into five of perhaps the toughest minutes of the season. After all, close rarely counts, and sometimes, the small stuff just sweats you.
A Little Strategy
Steve Kerr and David Blatt pulled out most all of the stops in finding ways to out-duel each other on match-ups and substitutions. They started with big lineups, then limbo-ed down to see how small they could go before getting their seven-footers back on the floor. Eventually, Blatt decided to return to the bigger line-up that helped provide the Cavs initial margin in the first quarter by playing Timofey Mozgov for large portions of the final frame. Additionally, both coaches displayed a keen sense of when to use their timeouts to stop runs and make course corrections on both sides of the ball.
They also both game-planned in opposite directions to take some element of their opposing star’s game away: one to try and get the ball out of a star’s hands; the other to force that star to beat them. For Blatt, it was finding a way to limit the looks that Steph Curry could get from the perimeter, and force him into drives and mid-range jumpers or to pass the ball to less dangerous scorers. For Kerr, it was packing the passing lanes to force LeBron into trying to beat the Warriors on his own with his outside shot and ISO-game. Both strategies seemed to work to a degree with Curry going just 2-6 from deep, and LeBron dishing out a mere six assists, while taking a game high 38 shots.
In the end, though Blatt’s gameplan of keeping the pace slow enough to keep the Warriors from blowing things open almost worked (the Warriors would have been held under 100 if the Cavs had been able to convert their last possession), Kerr’s plan to play the passing lanes to convert steals and loose balls to fast-breaks and transition threes finally prevailed in the overtime period when the Cavs simply couldn’t buy a basket.
A Little Short
LeBron James had his highest-scoring game ever in the playoffs with 44 points. Yet, with only a handful of his teammates knocking down shots around him, he needed to take 38 shots of his own to get that total.
LeBron James' 38 field goal attempts were the most he's ever taken, in the playoffs or regular season.
— Ethan J. Skolnick, 5 Reasons Sports (@EthanJSkolnick) June 5, 2015
It’s hard to say that he could have been better, but even he admitted he wasn’t great by his own lofty standards. Mostly, it was the lack of assists that detracted from an otherwise stellar scoring display from the King. The ball movement of the first half slowly became the isolation offense of the second half. Part of it was due to the Warriors’ defensive scheme, but part was also due to his supporting cast’s inability to put the ball in the bucket. In fact, other than Kyrie and Timo, no other Cav (outside of LeBron himself) scored in the second half — after the final JR three of the game to end the second quarter.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S4uw_YiSt2o
Yes, LBJ was in beast mode early, tallying 31 points through three periods and 42 by the end of regulation, and he put the Cavs on his back with an impressive array of post-moves, back-downs and mid-range jumpers. However, he had a full 24 seconds to try and win the game, following a second amazing Kyrie block of a Steph Curry drive, and he wound up attempting probably his highest degree of difficulty shot of the game. After pounding the rock for 20 seconds on the perimeter with Andre Iguodala guarding him, LeBron went for a step-back, fade-away, high-arcing, long two that drew iron. The ball bounced fortuitously to Iman, who (with a second left on the clock) tossed up a put-back that looked nearly true. Unfortunately, it was just a little off, and the Cavs had to settle for overtime, which featured just one more meaningless LBJ layup to finish the scoring.
A Little Help From His Friends
Steph Curry, on the other hand, didn’t have to do it all by himself. Even though the MVP had an off-night, by his standards, from beyond the arc (getting off just six threes and making only two), he still shot 50% from the floor for 26 points, and dished out eight dimes to his pals. He also got a little help from two late, somewhat questionable bail-out calls in overtime, and finally got to the line to sink 4-4 crucial free throws to help ice the game.
His supporting cast also did enough to help him spread the wealth and stuff the stat sheet. The other Splash Brother, Klay Thompson, overcame a rough start (1-6 for five points in the first half) to turn things around in the second half (4-8 from the field, 7-7 from the line) to end up with 21 points and six rebounds. Both starting forwards, Harrison Barnes and Draymond Green chipped in a half dozen boards and a dozen points (actually Barnes only tallied 11, but hit a dagger of a three in overtime to all but end things). They both took shifts helping to defend LeBron, and Green got the worst of it, picking up five fouls and having a miserable shooting game (4-12, 0-3 from deep). And Andrew Bogut, though he didn’t score much, snagged seven rebounds, blocked a couple of shots and was a presence in the middle.
A Little Smokescreen
In the days leading up to Game 1, there were constant reports about what percentage of Kyrie’s ability would be on display. There were some stories that he’d suffered a set-back (which Kyrie later refuted as false). There were others that claimed his progress was slow. With all of the conflicting information, it was hard to know what to expect from Uncle Drew. However, from the jump, it was fairly clear that Kyrie’s nickname might have to be changed to “Uncle Sandbag.”
For much of the night, Kyrie looked… well, like Kyrie. The jitterbug moves were back. The slick, sleight-of-handle was back. The “how the hell did he just do that?” drives to the rack were back. But something else was happening as well. Somehow, some way, through all of his lower extremity issues, Kyrie wasn’t just getting buckets, he was defending like an absolute demon possessed. Uncle Sandbag was seemingly all over the court, hounding Steph Curry, making key steals (he had four on the game), fighting through screens, and even blocking two shots (the second, a chase-down of a Curry layup to set up the shot for LeBron).
And he did “get buckets” too, hitting 10 of 22 shots for 23 points on an array of drives and pull-up shots. He only hit 2-8 from downtown, but filled the stat sheet with seven boards and six assists. It was the kind of performance many had hoped for, but few believed he was still capable of achieving given his multitude of nagging injuries. Sadly, the brilliance of his night was dimmed somewhat ominously by yet another apparent knee injury three minutes into the extra period.
A Little More Moz
One of the big revelations in this game was how effective Timofey Mozgov became once Coach Blatt gave him a little more time on the floor, especially in the once seemingly forbidden fourth quarter. After a couple of lapses early (mostly getting his timing down both with Kyrie on passes, and on switching assignments), the big Russian was a force to be reckoned with, not only pulling down seven rebounds (along with volleyball tipping several others out to waiting Cavs), but also throwing down dunks faster than the speed of light (seriously, it sometimes made you wonder if the ball actually passed through the cylinder, it was such a blur).
Mozilla had six of his 16 points in the fourth quarter, when he, LeBron and Kyrie formed a new temporary “big three.” He also calmly drained two huge free throws to tie the score at 98, as if he had ice cold vodka in his veins. Though he only clocked one block, he changed the trajectory of several others, including an outside shot from Curry where the big man switched out and used his considerable length.
One of the toughest “little things” of the game, though, came at a pivotal point in the game and directly involved Moz. His fancy footwork on a turnaround bucket (with the score tied at 96) was deemed a travel by the officials, even though the replay showed what appeared to be a legal move that would put Baryshnikov to shame.
A Little Too Much Dynamite
TT was again a monster on the glass, pulling down 15 total and six offensive rebounds. He found it tough sledding against the Warrior bigs, however, scoring just two points on 1-4 shooting. As a result of the Cavs’ razor-thin bench and frontcourt, Tristan had to log a game high 47 minutes, and it appeared that the extra duty took its toll on him. It was especially apparent when he was taxed with guarding a rejuvenated Mo Speights (back after missing the previous two series due to injury). The former Herculoid took it to TT on the offensive end, and also got fairly handsy with him on the defensive side of things. A little more of a break would have probably helped TT, but with almost zero depth, he’s likely to see a continuance of massive minutes.
A Little Bench Disparity
Okay, that’s an understatement. The bench play wasn’t even close in Game 1. In fact, the herd of veteran horses the Warriors were able to draw from were primarily responsible for dragging them out of their early double-digit deficit. For the game, the Warrior bench out-scored the Cavs bench by a whopping 34-9. Every member of their deep rotation logged a score, a rebound and an assist. They shot a combined 50% (14-27), with 19 boards and eight assists, compared to the Cavs bench (mostly just J.R.) with 3-14 shooting, six boards and four assists.
With Kyrie logging major minutes (44), Delly was only on the floor for nine, and James Jones for just 17. Neither hit a shot in one combined attempt. J.R., on the other hand, nailed three triples in the first half (including a long one to close out the first half scoring), but went ice-cold in the second half, missing all six of his remaining shots. Overall, he shot a miserable 3-13, and was covered well by both Klay Thompson and Andre Iguodala.
While the entire Golden State bench contributed, Iguodala (aka Steve Kerr’s security blanket) gave them the most lift. Iggy shot a blistering 6-8 (including two huge corner threes — one even missing a shoe) for 15 points, and played defense on both LeBron and J.R. like a literal blanket.
#Cavs LeBron vs Iguodala: 11 points on 4-14, including 2-7 in 4th Q/OT. Against everyone else: 27 points on 12-22
— Chris Fedor (@ChrisFedor) June 5, 2015
A Little Concern
While the Cavs proved that they could not only hang with the high-octane Warriors, and that their massively improved brand of defense was not just a product of a reportedly weaker Eastern Conference, a big part of their effort on both ends of the floor in Game 1 involved a rejuvenated Kyrie. The fact that he was performing at such a high level was certainly reason for optimism, just as much as his newest injury is cause for concern.
OFFICIAL STATUS UPDATE: @KyrieIrving (left knee injury) will receive an MRI tomorrow. [MORE]: http://t.co/5CLiVcLux0 pic.twitter.com/BY56gBPXqc
— Cleveland Cavaliers (@cavs) June 5, 2015
With an MRI scheduled for Friday, the Cavs should find out more about Kyrie’s potential availability going forward in the Finals. If he’s out for any length of time, their already thin ranks will shrink further, and Delly will be forced to try and recapture his SuperDova mode.
A Little Hope
Despite a horrible shooting night from everyone except LeBron, Kyrie and Moz, the Cavs had the Warriors right where they wanted them for much of the night. They managed to slow the game down, get physical, and attack on defense like a school of frenzied pirhanas. With better shooting games from J.R., Shump, JFJ and TT, they should still be able to make up for what they’ll potentially lose if Kyrie is unavailable.
The other good news is that, while it’s tough to let an opportunity like this to steal a game go by, the Cavs have another chance to do so on Sunday to still earn a split going back to Cleveland. They gave themselves every chance to win Game 1, and with just a few little things breaking differently, the outcome would have been much more satisfying.
Nobody ever said winning a championship was easy. The Cavs are close, but they’ll need to take care of the little things to win it all.
Yup, why even go out and play? Just surrender now. After all, as is well known by the “experts,” professional sports, and especially so for the NBA, is just one collection of resumes competing against another collection, and so, always, you just figure out who has the better collection of resumes, and that team is the one that invariably wins. In fact, let’s face it, in the sweep of professional sports since 1900, the great big joke is teams play the games at all. After all, the superior teams always wins, and so, there’s never any reason to ever make… Read more »
You sound like a dog that’s got peanut butter on the roof of your mouth.
Looks like a cake walk season for the Dubs.
@RuiterWrongFAN: #Cavs say fractured left kneecap for Kyrie Irving; out 3-4 months following surgery
Yeah, that’s it. Damn. What a blown chance to take game one and have KI healthy. Just sickening.
Of course, I felt the same way when Love went down, that no way we could win the finals. Still, Curry breaking his own knee cap would help.
Warriors in 4 or 5.
Great recap EG, as always. My 2 cents (adjusted for inflation) Kyrie was magnificent. Best game I’ve ever seen him play on both ends of the floor. Contrary to popular opinion, however, he never looked 100% to me. He look like he was in pain and gutting through it. When he wasn’t playing with or on the ball, his steps looked a little less sure. Dude just toughed it out and nothing but respect for him going forward, whatever happens with this series. He has proved he was worth a max deal, if there was ever any question. Lebron. Sigh.… Read more »
You didn’t watch the same game as me man…jr was definitely engaged. He rebounded well, fought over screens, stayed long on the perimeter. He was annoyed at himself for missing open looks. That’s not being disengaged
@AdamZagoria: Hearing via source the Kyrie Irving injury is ‘serious’ and he will miss the remainder of the series. Tough blow for him & the Cavs.
This is a telling stat that I missed for the recap… Offensive rebounds are less effective when you don’t convert the second chance opportunities. Cavs clean this up in Game 2 and it will make a difference…
As much as I hate Draymond Green he did a great job on TT after the first quarter.
I didn’t see that statement, but I sure thought it was something like that. Gotta capitalize on those opportunities.
Sigh. This question just never goes away. Maybe they should hook Kev up to a lie detector machine… Wait, that’s the last thing they’d want since it would put an end to an entire click-bait narrative… http://espn.go.com/nba/playoffs/2015/story/_/id/13016786/2015-nba-finals-impending-free-agent-kevin-love-says-game-1-wants-return-win-cleveland-cavaliers Best excerpts: “I had so much fun watching it because I want to be in a moment like that,” Love told ESPN after the Cleveland Cavaliers’ 108-100 overtime loss to the Golden State Warriors. “I’d rather be out there helping those guys, and I saw a lot of places where I could help. “I’ve never wanted to be in a game more than… Read more »
All I hope for was a chance to win on the road at the end. It struck me that both teams were feeling each other out after a long layoff. With respect to this, the Cavs’ first quarter was one of the most enjoyable of the season. Except for the overtime period, this game had a lot of symmetry: the Cavs hot/Warriors cold, then the Warriors hot/Cavs cold, then trading baskets or trading blown possessions until the tie at the end. Yet, the Cavs’ defense was up to the task against a team that is built to make errors on… Read more »
What does Coach Derek Fisher think about his former Knicks players in the finals?
Can’t have LeBron ISO all night next Sunday….. JR and Shumpert need to drive the ball and whatever happens the Cavs have to live with it.
With that being said on a scale from 1 to 10 I believe the Cavs chances stand at 3.
With no Kyrie there is no chance… All i hope is that they can keep this Cavs squad together and they can have a rematch next year but with both teams healthy.
#imreallypissed %*$&#*%:!!!!!!!!
Cavs gave it their all and made Cleveland proud. Didn’t get the W but those might be hard to come by in this series. Still impressed and looking forward to Sunday!
I think LeBron needs to add a shot fake to his offense. Most great scorers had it MJ, Kobe, Wade and even Curry got 2 free throws out of his shot fake against Kyrie.
What would’ve happen if LeBron pulls that fake against Iguodala yesterday? A trip to FT line with 2 chances to give the Cavs the lead.
I know is easy for me to say it but it could’ve work.
For as annoying as that call is, refs NEVER call the fake-and-flail with the game on the line. Wouldn’t have worked. Part of the inconsistencies of basketball officiating.
guys relax, take a deep breath. four years in the wildness, moving thru and fro with no light in sight. we see the light now. The team will fight, have been fighting all season. #Allin
Nate, kyrie’s tendinitis has repeatedly been branded as a “not career threatening” condition even if it worsens a bit. There was no indication of structural damage. I agree he shouldn’t have played that much but mostly because he just wasn’t in game shape and we need him for the rest of the series, not because he is young and has a potentially career threatening condition. That’s straight from the cavs doctors btw, according to kyrie’s comments earlier in the playoffs. The idea that delly was ineffective because he can’t handle the Warriors defense is silly. Nate you nailed it when… Read more »
I agree with your take, to some extend, especially, “he shouldn’t have played that much but mostly because he just wasn’t in game shape and we need him for the rest of the series.” However, pretending that there isn’t risk involved with playing long minutes on current injuries is just — well, it defies common sense. Playing 44 minutes on an injury is a recipe for injuring yourself worse or injuring something else.
What about LeBron’s minutes? He’s injured too. What if he more seriously injured his back from playing 45 minutes?
Just to be clear, I’m not worried about that happening. I’m just saying that in the finals you’ve got to risk something to win. If there’s little potential for long-term damage, now is the time to fight through it.
Kyrie was moving so well last night, it didn’t look like he was at risk of injuring anything else by favoring the knee. And until the tendinitis is gone completely, which will likely take 6-8 weeks of rest and recovery, there’s always the chance of aggravating it.
I thought his minutes in game 6 against the Bulls were much more troubling because in that game he was playing on one leg. That’s when it’s easy to injure something else.
If Kyrie does not go down, no one is complaining about his minutes. It’s the Finals for goodness sake. Put it all on the line, these opportunities don’t come along very often.
Everyone, including the coaches, are in it to win it.
I know what you mean. But perhaps not surprising for Cleveland fans to have a sense of “we’ve seen this before”. Bummed here, but then I remember that the Cavs have repeatedly surprised folks in these playoffs. Still big mountain to climb if Kyrie can’t go.
You gotta give people time to feel and deal. Plenty of time to recover before Sunday. Cavs fans (like all fans of Cleveland sports) get down, but nobody pulls themselves off the mat and finds that inner will to believe quite like them.
#ForeverAllIn
#
Cavs will unleash their lockdown lineups next game, which didn’t play too much last night. Too much Kyrie.
I hear what you’re saying, but Kyrie played maybe the defensive game of his career last night. Those two blocks on Curry? The four steals? Fighting through picks? Yes, he played too many minutes, but he wasn’t a liability.
I have to agree with EG, here. On Kyrie’s defensive reputation, I’d agree with Nate. But, on Kyrie’s actual performance last night, he didn’t seem to be hurting us at all on the defensive end.
Also, these two pump fake crap calls?
http://on.nba.com/1dRfMst
http://on.nba.com/1KeMhwY
Weak sauce. The NBA has to change this. Pump-fake-and-flail is actually what gave Klay a concussion.
And what gave the Warriors the lead. They were 1-5 in OT but ended up winning by 8.
I did not sleep well. Such a close game.
Warriors got PLENTY of bail-out calls last night. The rate at which other teams get calls like that compared to us seems very high. Maybe I’m just being a homer… sigh
LeBron got away with a couple of travels, I thought. But the call on Moz was terrible. Overall I’ve seen much worse officiating. I agree that the fake-n-flail has to go.
Yeah. Bron got away with some chicken wings too.
Yes. Overall a fairly officiated game with one crazy travelling call.
You know it’s a crazy call when even Mark Jackson admits it…
Moz does a jump stop, so he can use his either foot as his pivot foot. Ref must have thought: “Seven-foot Russian cannot move like Baryshnikov. Must be travel.”
http://on.nba.com/1G01XRA
Pump, Fake and Flail. Sounds like a legal firm. But I agree, NBA should get rid of it.
Yeah, but you knew they were coming at some point though, right? I was actually surprised we didn’t see more of this actually, especially from Steph. And I counted at least two occasions where Klay tried it and the refs weren’t buyin’ the act…
It’s not a basketball play. And I hate when Love does it too. It’s an injury risk to both people, and it’s unnecessary. You beat your man, now shoot the shot. If he doesn’t jump into your space to shoot it should be an offensive foul.
It was a great game and it was so unfortunate that they couldn’t pull it out in regulation because then Kyrie does not get hurt, which is obviously the biggest issue going forward. The bigger long-term issue for the Cavs is a better bench. With AV and Love coming back, the front court will be deep (assuming they resign TT). But we still need one more quality backup guard. Unfortunately, Jones, Miller and Marion turned out to be too past their primes to help this year. Sorry to all you Delly lovers out there, but I want a back-up who… Read more »
That was a great game with some great coaching moves on both sides. Deploying secret weapon Mo Speights tipped the balance for the Warriors. That and a great game from Iggy. The end of this felt like a classic Cleveland heartbreaker. If that last shot goes down then no overtime, no loss, and no injury to Kyrie. Overall, I think Kyrie played too many minutes, and that led to the injury in overtime. Of course, given that they ended tied, playing less minutes could easily have meant a loss in regulation. The Cavs defense was not nearly as cohesive as… Read more »
Moz was more important the TT this game. They needed his 14 points.
Agree. Moz was the only Cav besides LBJ and Kyrie who scored in the second half…
Totally agree that Moz was a key plus factor for the Cavs. I just thought he looked a little lost at times and didn’t quite deserve a “heroic effort” kudo. Whatever, he’s awesome, love that guy.
TT on the other hand, looked fluid and at home. One of the big questions was whether Draymond Green could keep TT off the boards and the answer was a resounding, NO WAY.
TT was just OK. We needed him to score a bit more.
We really did. He was great on the glass, but it would be nice to see some of those turn into putbacks
Waiting for the news on Kyrie’s MRI is hell. Way too anxious.
And yeah. Great recap, EG.
I think you mean EG.
Edited.
That is awesome to read post-edit. “THAT’S WHAT I SAID”
It was probably the most difficult one I’ve had to write. It reads to me as schizophrenically as I felt writing it in the wee hours.
Some thoughts: As much as I loved Kyrie’s play, and thought the Cavs played brilliantly for 48 minutes, someone on the training staff, assistant’s row, or Blatt himself (who will probably take the blame) has to be held accountable for playing Irving for 44 minutes. That’s simply an unacceptable amount of minutes for a guy coming off an injury who is only 23 years old. Kyrie’s Dad was rightly pissed off about it. I don’t care if it loses you the game, you can’t play a guy with knee tendonitis 44 minutes. I’ve defended Blatt much of the season, but… Read more »
Honestly I disagree that Blatt played Kyrie too long. He was playing great. If Blatt took him out and we lost a close one, Blatt would get blasted. Kyrie looked healthy when he played. I certainly didn’t want to see him come out.
Third person I’ve talked to with this opinion. Is one game worth Kyrie’s career? No. He should have been on a minutes restriction. If they lose, they lose, but playing with someone’s health because you’re afraid to lose is coaching out of cowardice.
Obviously I agree that the risk to his future health is worth considering. Maybe we just disagree on exactly where to draw the line. After all, his doctors cleared him to play to my knowledge, with the belief that it would be painful but not dangerous. I could be wrong about that of course. He looked HEALTHY all game until the injury. It seemed reasonable to think he was recovered after the long break. He himself said he felt great.
If Shumpert’s shot went in, no one would be criticizing the Cavs staff for playing Kyrie 40 minutes in a win. The decision about whether to limit Kyrie’s minutes was between him, the coaching staff, and the team doctors, and I don’t think we know enough of the facts to start questioning it.
I haven’t been hearing much of the rag on Delly crew. What was he supposed to do with the nine minutes he was given? Also, Steph actually defended him like he was a legit threat. He’ll have his chance to show up big going forward if Kyrie is unavailable for any length of time.
I’m just nervous because Delly isn’t quick enough to stay tight on Curry and keep him from driving. I have a feeling Blatt will cook some rotations up to counter that. Delly could deny and pressure, and u just have to have a guy ready to move. I also think we’ll see some lineups with Shump on Curry and the Pipe Fitter on Klay. I’m not giving up hope. Blatt is a game planner. We need bigger nights from several people.
Long time lurker, first time poster. Thanks for that excellent recap that’s calmed my nerves somewhat, however with a once again hobbled Kyrie, I’m resigned to the fact that we may not win this championship. Hopefully will be surprised again like the Bulls series but that Warriors bench is far superior to ours.
Welcome Dr TJ! Glad you enjoyed it, and glad you commented. Contrary to how many feel this morning, there are still at least six games left to change the narrative.
#AllIn
Awesome recap, that I almost didn’t read for self preservation. The Cavs could have finished it multiple times and played the juggernaut Warriors to a draw through 48 minutes. The sad part about Kyrie was that he gave probably his most all around performance of his career. A year ago, I never would have imagined him being such a defensive factor.
Thanks man. Agree on Kyrie. He was so good. Maybe too good, since he fooled the coaching staff into playing him 44 minutes. I hate that this has become the prevailing narrative in the wake of his unfortunate injury. It does a dis-service to how well he competed…
I couldn’t comment at all last night after the game. I was too dejected. I’m slowly working my way towards a more positive outlook. Though I am super concerned about Kyrie’s knee. Without him, its going to be VERY difficult to beat these Warriors. We just need more viable legs! Having a successful ten man rotation won the Warriors the game as it was evident that in OT the Cavs didn’t have much left. I had a bad feeling going into OT, as I did not want to push Kyrie’s knee/foot any more than we needed to. On the bright… Read more »
Was last night’s game written by Game of Thrones writers? The story began with everything seemingly going well, good guys persevering against all odds…. victory is within arms length… then BOOM – your best guy’s head gets chopped off (or knee gets crushed) and you are in a worse position than when you started…
Evil, nice recap. Good job of maintaining perspective in the wee hours after a tough loss.
Thanks Phil. My computer is littered with discarded vitriolic subtitles…
That Kyrie block on Curry was incredible.
Best play of the night
Despite the loss and OT, I thought it was a great game.
When the Cavs acquired Mozgov, little did we know they were picking up someone who could suspend the laws of physics. On his dunk, the net DOES NOT MOVE as the ball goes through, only a little when Moz brushes it with his head.
I noticed that too. Watching online on league pass in the UK I kept thinking he’d flat out missed the rim when trying to dunk but the refs thought it went in so that’s all that matters!
Haha. The wife and I thought he missed too. We were like “Wait, that went in”?
So LeBron has only won game one of the Finals one time. When they lost to the Mavericks.
There’s still lots of hope. Just have to hope Kyrie can go.
Can I quibble with the recap? This is a Cavs blog?! I don’t want to see a vine of a GSW highlight. Put Kyrie’s block up or any number of LeBron highlights. But no GSW highlights
They won the game. It’s called impartiality… look it up.
Cavs played pretty well last night. GSW played pretty well. It was a great game. Sucks we lost. If Kyrie wasn’t injured I think this points to a series win. With Kyrie out though, I don’t know.
But this team has been through injuries all playoffs. JR Smtih will need to get going and then we will be back in it.
One thing that cannot and will not happen again in this series is the Cavs losing the rebounding battle. We are undefeated so far this postseason when outrebounding the opponent and this is a team we should be able to take huge advantage of on that front. The big lineups seemed pretty effective this last game so I’m not sure where the Warriors gained the edge. I’d also like to give a s/o to Mozgov who looked great most of the game. He seemed to be the only other player who was on the same page as LeBron with those… Read more »
Really, Smith and Shump were awful yesterday. They couldn’t hit at all. They need to get going.
They need to touch the ball more to get going. However, I also think a large part if it is that the Warriors’ length really frustrated Smith and Shump by the second half last night. That team’s perimeter defense is absurd — what makes them so tough to beat is they don’t allow guys on the outside shoot themselves back into games once in a deficit. The Cavs bullies are gonna be what wins us this series, if anything.
Yeah, they did a good job of doubling down on LeBron and then getting out to Shump/Smith when he passed it to them.
James did what everyone wanted an played most of this game in the post. What a beast. Just need one more FT, one bogus travelling call not to be called, or one more shot. So close.
So much for this being a tremendous mismatch of the GREATEST TEAM WITH BEAUTUFLU OMG ANALYTICS I LOVE THE WARRIOS vs UGLY HORRIBLE WORST TEAM TO EVER MAKE THE FINALS.
I’d like to see a few more looks for shumpert on pick and rolls. I think that 1-2 pick and roll worked really well in the last two series. I think if Shump got some looks moving to the basket it would benefit his shot.
Just because they didn’t score a lot of points doesn’t mean they were awful. Shump did look tenative to shoot, but he had four steals and played tough D all night. By my recollection, JR had three shots rim out….he was feeling it, they just weren’t falling. Then towards the end he got frustrated and forced a few he shouldn’t have.
I didn’t think Golden State played very well and they won.
They hit their averages and had great games from Iggy and Mo.
They played pretty well. So did we. That’s why it was tied in regulation.
If Irving came out of this healthy I’d be encouraged about last night. I mean they’ve lost 3 games in that building all year and we showed that we could play with them and beat them. Irving out changes everything.
Yeah I’m gonna agree with this. We played them to a draw in a tough environment most of the game and withstood the expected scoring barrages that are gonna happen with that team. There WOULD be so much to be encouraged about from this game…
but man, if that Shumpert putback rolls the right way, the game doesn’t go into overtime and Irving doesn’t hurt his knee. SO frustrating *SIGHHHHHHHH*
Yeah that was about 1 cm from going in.
I thought it was a good game but I also thought they have played much better this season. If Shump hits that shot we win and Kyrie isn’t injured. Poop sandwiches all around.
Yeah. That’s one big “Turd Burger”
We’re done! I don’t see Irving coming back at all.
If there’s one thing I’ve learned about this playoff run is that the coaching staff has a winning mentality. These aren’t the MIKE Brown days. The Cavs will make adjustments. This is the most excited for a payback game that I have ever felt. All in!
The missed Moz jumper with 1 minute haunts me. He looked like he had no confidence there and should have taken it to the basket. A zillion things could have happened (dunk, foul, +1, kick for 3, block and scramble).
Everyone played well (Smith was shaky in the 2nd half) but in the end it’s a loss. I think most of us expected a split in Oracle for the first two games so it’s not the end of the world. If Kyrie is out, it will be much tougher.
Of all the times for LeBron to pass, that situation with Moz wasn’t one. Moz wasn’t going toward the basket or ready to shoot. He was in what for him is no man’s land. He was going to have to initiate something on his own, which isn’t exactly his strength.
I don’t think he wanted Moz to shoot, I think he was looking to reset a bit.
From Jason Lloyd’s final thoughts:
22. It’s never healthy to speculate without more information, but the early look at Irving is anything but encouraging.
23. He sat at his locker with his head in his hands after the game, then pulled a towel over his face for a few moments. After showering, he needed assistance to hobble into a private room to meet with his father, agent and Cavs GM David Griffin for a few minutes.
24. His father, Drederick, slammed the door after the meeting and clearly looked concerned leaving the locker room
That’s a juicy tidbit. Is Dredrick mad because he shares his son’s frustration, or was he the lone man with an opinion that was not shared with others in the room? I want to know!
Right I’ve calmed down a lot after last night and so am seeing more clearly I feel. We played brilliantly all game and a couple of breaks here or there win it for us. I would rather have had Kyrie with the ball for the final shot (particularly after that stunning block) but as Cols said almost all final shots are contested awful looks. The worse thing about the game is the fact that we came so close with so little bench play but an incredible Kyrie. He was NEVER going to be healthy for all 7 and so our… Read more »
Assuming we hold serve at home and don’t drop any games in Cleveland. I think we will need to win 2 in Oracle to win this series, and we missed out on a grand opportunity to get one of them last night. Ugh.
It was a great GE. The only disappointment for me (outside of the loss) was the lack of hard-nosed physicality from the Cavs. It worked so well in the first three series.
Should have said “great game.”
James went to the post a ton. If smith or shump could’ve hit some of the looks James gave them we win easily.
What looks? In the 2nd half they hardly got any good looks. And the ones they did get were with the shot clock winding down and the ball was passed to them for a bail-out attempt. The Cavs don’t run plays for anyone not named James or Irving. They never got the ball often enough to develop a rhythm and yes, JR often plays well like that but you can’t expect him to do that every single game. JR was hot in the 2nd quarter and then didn’t come back in until late in the 3rd. One of the tv… Read more »
I agree with this. I commented the other day that LeIso would actually be one of our best weapons in this series and I still stand by that. It’s not so much the end result of possessions (long LeBron 2) I had an issue with but what happened during them. There may have been a decent amount of open looks but as you mentioned many were of the bailout variety. I think the best fix for our offense is simple passing. This isn’t to say players not named LeBron need to be taking more shots, but they do need to… Read more »
That’s when you throw the ball as hard as you can at their nose.
Yes, more off-ball movement is in order.
GSW shot 46 uncontested shots.
Cavs shot 43
I think we can stop comaining about the offense now. We missed some
Shots we usually make. Heck we make the free throws we win the game. It was a tough loss. But it doesn’t show some fatal flaw in Cleveland. The game came down to one or two shots. We missed they made.
If Irving is done then that changes things. Otherwise there wasnt anything that showed he Warriors are unbeatable. We will get them in game two.
First off, we wouldn’t be in this position without Lebron and we owe all of this success to him. But damn if he doesn’t frustrate the hell out of you when he iso’s up and everyone else just stands around, especially at the end of quarters. Twice at the end of 2 of the quarters, his iso and stubborness to take the last shot led to steals and Iggy dunks at the other end giving GS 4 unnecessary points. And then there was that ridiculous fadeaway stepback Dion Waiters type shot at the end of regulation. Yes, LBJ is the… Read more »
Yeah. Lebron had a great, great game tonight, but I totally agree. There is absolutely no reason to shoot such a terrible shot when you have a full 24 seconds to work with. It was the same left knee for Kyrie btw
Strongly disagree. Even teams that don’t generally run isos tend to run isos in those situations. With the score tied and a short clock you have to minimize risk. Lebron’s shot was fine, nearly went in. They needed to compete better in the overtime.
It’s the finals. If it’s a “risk” to run one of your staple offenses to get a higher percentage shot, then they wouldn’t run them all game. I agree on the last shot. Run a high screen and roll. Iguadala even said he knew exactly what he was going to do. It’s a lot harder to defend moving parts. That being said, LeBron played amazingly last night. I disagree with the shot selection, but it was still the best player taking a shot. His jump shot found the bottom quite often.
I 100% co-sign this as well, especially considering the fair disclaimer in the first sentence.
Great recap… I’m way more nervous for Sunday than this last night’s game ,I’m sure I’ll be looking at all the ‘little things’ more on Sunday , #together #allin
Was impressed with the way they defended Lebron in the post, frankly. Doing that while mostly smothering the perimeter was an accomplishment. It’s not surprising, though, since they’ve been so good all year.
I think with that Irving performance, they needed to take that game. I fear that game two might be much tougher…this one was right there for them.