Game 6 Recap: Cavs 113, Raptors 87 (or, Got Your Six)
2016-05-28There’s a saying in the military that goes “got your six,” which essentially means “I’ve got your back.” The idiom originated with World War I fighter pilots referencing the rear of an airplane as the six o’clock position. It’s use continues to perpetuate today not only in the armed forces, but in other close knit brotherhoods like law enforcement and fire departments. Tonight, it rang true for another group of men who persevered to overcome adversity, and worked together to take one step closer to realizing the championship dreams of a team, an organization, a fanbase, a city and an entire region.
The Cleveland Cavaliers have done it once again. They are going to The Finals for the second straight year… only this time fully healthy. Though it took more than the expected four or five games, they finally subdued their scrappy and resilient neighbors to the North, beating them in six… in The Six (as it’s commonly referred to — at least by Drizzy). And, in doing so, got each others’ “six” while helping LeBron James arrive at his sixth straight Finals appearance, matching only the great 1960s Celtics teammates Bill Russell, Sam Jones, K.C. Jones, Bob Cousy, Tom Heinsohn, Satch Sanders and Frank Ramsey (oh yeah… and some dude who goes by “The Champ” — or JFJ if you’re C:tB savvy).
As Canadian Dynamite himself, Tristan Thompson, said in his post-game interview, one of the keys to approaching Game 6 for the wine & gold was to treat it as their Game 7. In their minds, they had already made two border crossings too many in this series. They would not allow for another. But, to execute that plan in the hostile environs of the Air Canada Centre, a place in which they were 0-4 this year, they’d need to have each others’ backs on both the offensive and defensive ends, as well as in the locker room and the sidelines. Boy did they ever… and, none more than their in-the-running-for-G.O.A.T. of a leader, The Chosen One… King LeBron Raymone James.
Tyronn Lue had said publicly that he wanted to see a “vintage” game from his superstar… and vintage game did he receive… to the tune of 33 points (on a highly efficient 13-22 shots), 11 rebounds, six assists, three blocks and a steal. LeBron was seemingly everywhere on the court in the first half of the game (well, maybe not seemingly… since he did play all but 37 seconds of the first 24 minutes). King James didn’t just have his teammates’ backs… for the first time in the series, he put them all on his own for a while. Alternating between converting transition opportunities off of Kyrie Irving steals and assists, and knocking down a couple of rare three-balls (he was 2-3 from downtown in the first quarter, 3-6 for the game), LeBron racked up 14 points in the first period and 21 for the half (the most in any playoff first half this post-season).
Locked in from the jump on both ends of the floor, he looked to score early and often, even giving the Cavs a six point margin at the end of one (31-25) with a freight-train drive to the hoop. LBJ continued his onslaught in the second, scoring another seven points, but also leading the defensive attack on Toronto. He notched a block on both DeMarre Carroll and Kyle Lowry, while pulling down three boards. With 4:30 remaining in the half, LBJ’s driving dunk (off another Kyrie assist) gave him almost half of the Cavs’ scoring total (21 of 44 points). From essentially that point on, the Raps got no closer than a double digit margin.
His earlier triple-double in Game 2 notwithstanding, this was as complete a performance as LeBron had delivered in the series, and possibly the entire post-season. He was a man on a mission… a dynamo turned loose… a legend carving yet another signature game into his ever-growing lore. He didn’t just take over this game to provide the Cavaliers a cushion… he sucked the life and oxygen right out of an arena full of hyped up Raptor fans. When his team, coach and fans needed him most… he had their backs… and then some.
Yet, it wasn’t as if the King didn’t have help, even if it didn’t arrive in the form of scoring until the last two minutes of the first half. Kyrie Irving had (as Nate accurately described it) a bit of a Jekyll and Hyde kind of night. He shot just 2-8 to start the game, although he finished 10-16 (12-24 total) to finish with 30 points and maintain his team-leading scoring average. Even though he couldn’t get his shot to go down much in the first half, he still looked to distribute the ball (at least in the first quarter when he notched five dimes), and played some fairly tenacious defense with three steals while helping to hold Lowry to 12 first half points.
His real troubles came in the second quarter, though, as he stopped moving the ball in favor of tunnel vision dribble-drives into traffic. However, after a couple of turnovers and some relatively stagnant offensive sets that allowed the Raps to cut the lead to six, Kyrie started to find LeBron again, assisting on another triple and a driving dunk. Then LBJ helped him get going with a terrific pass on an excellent cut to the hoop, which he followed up a minute later with an and-one.
Second half Kyrie was mostly Dr. Jekyll, as he heated up considerably both from mid and long range. Uncle Drew also dazzled with an assortment of finishes closer to the rim… often of the left-hand variety.
Where LBJ did the majority of his damage in the first half, Kyrie did the balance of his in the second, scoring 21 of his 30 (including 12 in the third quarter alone). The only real downside, was his counterpart, Lowry, scoring 18 of his 35 points in the same quarter.
There may be no subject more polarizing on this blog than the subjectiveness of how we collectively perceive Kyrie’s play. There have been entire posts dedicated to things like his ability to use a screen, or his inability to avoid getting stuck on one like so much flypaper. In the end, the stats were gaudy in this game, but they don’t reveal the entire story. Kyrie is unquestionably an offensive force of nature, yet what often holds him back from reaching his ungodly potential is his decision-making off the dribble, and his defensive lapses. To this point, it hasn’t hurt the Cavs because they have his back, especially on defense. Chances are that won’t be the case against the likes of either Curry or Westbrook in The Finals. There’s a thin line between good and greatness… it’s up to Kyrie to navigate it.
The third leg of the tripod also came up big to help close out Game 6 after two sub-par previous games north of the border. Kevin Love started the game with a three, and ended the first half with another one.
In between, he went to the free throw line twice… once after nearly having his teeth knocked out by a stray Biyombo elbow. The elbow was deemed a Flagrant 1, which would have put Big Smack over the limit and DQ-ed him for a potential Game 7. While the blow may have slowed Kev’s shooting, it had the opposite effect on his rebounding aggression. Love wound up snagging nine of his 12 for the game in the first half, helping the Cavs win the war on the glass 38-33.
Love then matched his scoring output (10 points) from the first half in the third quarter alone, drilling two more treys and getting to the line twice more. He totaled 20 points on 5-11 shooting (a healthy 4-8 from beyond the arc) to go with the 12 boards and four assists. Most importantly, he didn’t wilt or disappear, and often had the Cavs’ “six” on defense underneath.
The common denominator of the difference between the Cavs’ 12 wins vs. two losses is the play of Kevin Love. It may be cliche to say “as Kev goes, so go the Cavs,” but it’s a fairly accurate assessment. No matter how amazing LeBron and Kyrie are in any given game, without KLove coming up strong as he did in the first and last two games, winning a championship will be a much tougher endeavor.
As good as J.R. Smith was as one of the few bright spots in the Game 3 loss, he was even better in this game. He didn’t score as much as in Game 3 (15 points vs. 22 in that one), but he did it on a lot fewer shots (5-9, 5-8 from deep vs. 7-16, 6-15 from deep), and ones with a much higher degree of difficulty.
He also ran around on defense like a man possessed, jumping passing lanes, chasing down loose balls and preventing transition baskets. On one offensive set, it seemed like Swish ran about a half mile through the defense in an attempt to get open. It’s just amazing to watch the revelation that continues to be this version of J.R. on this team. Right now, his shovel is sharp and his will is outstanding…
TT had a fairly quiet night by his standards with just two points and five boards in 24 minutes, although he did pull down two gigantic offensive rebounds at extremely opportune moments. Tristan likely would have preferred to have at least one breakout rebounding game in his native country, but he had his hands full with Biyombo in all three Canadian games. Bismack did seem to get quite a bit of uncalled holding on TT under the hoop, but that’s playoff basketball for you. It won’t get any easier for Tristan if OKC winds up being the Cavs’ Finals opponent, as the length of their front line may be tough to combat. Maybe Draymond and his jersey yanking and donkey kicks are actually preferable in this instance…
Because Coach Lue rode his starters hard to ensure there would be no chance of a Game 7, there wasn’t much input from the bench bunch in this one. However, almost all of the primary subs had that one signature moment in the game. Channing Frye, aside from draining another couple of timely triples to kick off the second quarter, had a retaliation block on Big Smack… after which he wagged his index finger all the way back down the court.
Aside from a couple of assists in his scant nine minutes of play, Delly’s only bucket came on a beautiful broken-play give-and-go with LeBron that had to have taken some wind out of the Raptors’ sails.
https://vine.co/v/i9VOJuKn7Lg
And, Richard Jefferson, besides hitting a garbage time three, took great offense to taking an elbow to the ribs from Jonas Valanciunas in the second quarter. JV looked like he was trying to apologize, but RJ was having none of it… getting in the big man’s face with his own jabbing index finger.
Shump didn’t really have a signature moment, but he played his usual lock-down defense, putting up a +14 in just 18 minutes.
For Toronto, they were again paced by their two back court All-Stars, Lowry and DeRozan, who both had hot shooting games (11-22, 6-12 from three for Special K and 9-18 for Kobe Lite). Yet, even though the two shooting stars combined for 55 points, the remaining Raptors barely eked out 32 points, and nobody else hit double digits. The Raptors fought hard in the series, and credit especially to Lowry who never gave up. But, they just didn’t have the necessary firepower to hang with the Cavs. They have an interesting summer ahead with DeRozan, Biyombo both reportedly opting out of their contracts to become unrestricted free agents. Toronto might have a tough time replacing either or both of them.
The Evil:
There’s not much to dislike in a blowout close out victory that puts your team into The Finals for the second time in two seasons. For at least a few days, let’s all soak in the amazing accomplishments this team has achieved. We’ll have plenty of time, once their opponent is decided, to debate the merits of Kyrie’s game, whether or not Kev and TT can be effective against big front lines, and Ty Lue’s substitution patterns…
The only other external evil would be the inconsistencies of how the playoff fouls and flagrant fouls have been called. This seems like it will only get worse in The Finals.
https://vine.co/v/i99wrVj3dpQ
The Genius:
Beyond the game itself, the determination and focus this Cavs team showed in treating it like a must win, and the fact that they won a close out game on the road in a place where they hadn’t won in their previous four tries this year, there were some things after it was over that were terrific.
- LeBron getting emotional talking about this team to Doris Burke.
- Doris Burke reinforcing her status as the best NBA sideline reporter working with that “stumper of a question.”
- The Cavs electing to let AC present the trophy to Ty Lue.
- @CavsDan, David Griffin and LeBron all giving up the spotlight to AC, Lue and the young guys during the trophy presentation.
- The class the Raptors showed (particularly Lowry and DeRozan) in coming over to the Cavs bench after they checked out to congratulate them.
- The Toronto crowd, who are as passionate and loud as any fans in the NBA, staying until the end and cheering for their Raps.
- LeBron racing back to the locker room to get the festivities rolling.
- The Cavs improvising with water bottles when they had no champagne bottles.
- The sheer joy this team seems to have about each other, and the belief they have in one another.
- The fact that the Cavs have another five days of rest now before The Finals.
— Dan Gilbert (@cavsdan) May 28, 2016
Parting Shot:
With respect to the subtitle of this recap, despite all of the ups and downs of this season, the turmoil of a mid-stream coaching change, social media dustups and subtweets, and general perception that this team had trouble getting along and “galvanizing,” they certainly seem to have each others’ backs now. And, isn’t that all we really wanted from this team? To be able to enjoy them not only winning, but coming together to form a chemistry as good as the other title contenders? However you felt at the time of the dismissal of David Blatt, or the dumping of Andy so the Cavs could pick up Channing Frye, it’s pretty hard to argue with the results of either of those moves. David Griffin has seemingly pushed all the right buttons… to a degree that even Dan Gilbert is amazed by. The NBA has seen fit to find ways to rescind technical fouls… maybe they should find a way to rescind the Executive of the Year award given the circumstances.
The bottom line is that not only do the Cavs have each other’s backs, David Griffin has their collective backs, and @CavsDan has Griffin’s. And because of that… this team and this organization is back in The Finals.
Don’t worry Cleveland… the Cavs got your six!
Four more wins…
GO CAVS!
I said doesn’t, auto correct said don’t I apologize to anyone I offended with this lack of respect for the English language.
Say what you want about Lebron, but neither Durant, nor Curry are anywhere near his caliber in the playoffs. He’s always been unselfish, but now, surrounded by shooters he has an almost surreal ability to time the correct pass to the correct shooter to get an open look. Watching Durant forcing shots into double and triple teams was a real eye opener. Just cause you can hit those shots don’t make them the best shot available.
Both Durant and Westbrook are “shoot first, think later” kinda players.
I didn’t watch the game last night but I’m not surprised by the outcome. The reason I would had wanted to face OKC in the finals is this exact reason. Challenge KD and RW and they will undoubtedly crumble under pressure.
Well, GS it is unless Klay plays horribly in game 7. IMO he’s the glue on that team that carries the biggest load without recognition.
I really wanted OKC to win, but I’ve gotta grudgingly give respect to the Warriors. Klay was supernova. Thunder should still have been able to pull it out, but they were playing too conservatively and tight at the end, trying to hold onto the lead instead of smelling blood and going for it.
I came to Cavs the blog this morning hoping to see the same loathing and disgust that I was feeling towards the repulsive Warriors. I was not disappointed! Curry has passed James Harden on the list of players who I would like to see humiliated and shamed on a daily bases(I pulling punches a little). Him holding up 7 fingers was the last straw, I hate him. He played dead all night acting like a persecuted baby because OKC played defense on him and he couldn’t go off, rode Klay to victory and then grabbed the spotlight. F him. Kay… Read more »
Count me among those who think okc can still pull this off. They’ve been the better team for four of the six games this series. They just pissed away game six. They’ve got to be beyond angry, but they’ve already won twice in Oakland, and there’s no reason they can’t do it again. Also, GS looked gassed at the end of that game. The first ten minutes will tell us everything we need to know. If okc comes out angry and competitive, they can win. GS won’t have to he energy to blow them out.
OKC can pull it off if both KD and Westbrook go nuclear for the whole game…….and don’t turn the ball over six frieking times in the last 4 minutes or so. I wonder if they collectively had that many turnovers all year in the last several minutes of a game. Durant had the same tunnel vision we always give Irving grief about. Dion was only 1/5 but he was so wide open for several uncontested threes, and never saw the ball. Waiters airball three earlier in the game didn’t help, that’s for sure. Unlike LeBron, neither KD or Russ trust… Read more »
OKC will need to be incredibly mentally tough (as will anyone hoping to win a game at Oracle)…I don’t have a good feeling about game 7…OKC had game 6 in the bag, despite not playing that great. Blowing that one at home has to be crushing.
Looks like I missed a really good thread last night!! How did OKC let this happen on their home court and the most favorable ref they could ask for? They missed critical free throws and KD was an absolute mess. He kept bricking shot after shot. They really got away from their game. I think they are done. What a damn shame. I really didn’t want Warriors for the same reasons expressed below. The fawning and the barrage of insults the Cavs will get from the media. They really take away the joy of NBA Finals. I thought it would… Read more »
Woke up to the expected barrage of FB posts and ESPN fawning after an incredible win by the Warriors. I tip my cap to those guys, however grudgingly. But stepping back a moment, I think about our larger journey. Year 1 we were decimated by injury and, frankly, not yet, a team. There wasn’t a sense “trust” that Lue talks about. We’ve come a long way in year 2. I posted weeks ago that we may not be evolved enough yet to take the trophy, but I like our trajectory. If GS pulls it out, as most people expect them… Read more »
Don’t sleep on Channing Frye, either. That guy is on a mission. So is RJ. This Cavs team goes 10 players deep. I don’t see how they can be defended.
Great point. So many weapons. And those two guys you mentioned are seasoned vets and know they won’t get many more chances.
I’m taking Pluto and Windy’s advice and just savoring the journey. My happiness does not hinge on LeBron’s legacy or Cleveland’s title drought. Bring on the finals and make it entertaining.
Well, no more social media or sports center for me until after the finals…
I’m going to have nightmares of Kyrie getting stuck on a screen and Curry/Thompson splashing threes…
On a Draymond moving screen at that
Silver lining… maybe this is setting up perfectly for the Cavs? GSW will definitely be feeling themselves after coming back from being down 3-1… National media won’t give Cavs a “chance in hell” of beating them… Meanwhile, GS will have just two days rest and will have expended a lot to come back… Anyway, it’s how I’m choosing to look at it…
We can beat them even at full strength. We are a different team noe
We’ll need to defend the 3 and ball movement like crazy and steal preferably game 1 on the road. I really wanted homecourt in the finals, it would have been sweet dammit
Cavs stole one last year without Kev or Ky, and had the 2-1 lead which could have easily have been 3-0… I still like their chances
in fairness that was before the death lineup even existed and the cavs were a grit and grind squad. that said i like our chances. i see draymond losing his shiz at some point and klay and curry having 2 rough games.
also cavs winning is a good narrative for the nba so i see a fairly called series and bogut and green getting what’s coming to them
Kevin Love has to show up
Defensively he is going to have issues against the Warriors.
He’s probably going to be about as unplayable as Kanter against the Warriors.
Literally all of Thompson’s threes were nothing but net…
And most were contested… that’s what makes him scarier than Curry in my book… Curry needs to be kind of open (even for that split second) while Klay has a bit more JR in him…
Helps when you’re freaking 6’7″ like Klay…it’s absurd
Curry’s got the handles to do it though
I won’t count OKC out – they’re playing with house money now
Warriors feeling them self after a big road win, crowd, media behind them, they might just blow open the game VS Thunder in the first quarter….
That’s what I’m afraid is going to happen….they’ll open with a 1st quarter blitz of threes, and win by 30…
Maybe OKC will get physical at least…
My money would be on OKC junking it up. Tired of the bs they’ve been subjected to. Wouldn’t be surprised if things got ugly. To be honest, the Warriors deserve to be beat up. No one has ever gotten physical with them. The refs protect them and allow them to get away with just about as much as they can without every 6 year old in the country realizing the fix is in.
I’ll go 65%-35% in favor of Warriors
more than i want to beat the warriors team i want to beat the warriors ownership group. want to see lacob eat his words.
And Peter Guber is just a bad guy…
Such poor game planning and ISO ball in those last few minutes…
Since OKC was up 89-96 at the 5:09 mark, GS went on a 19-5 run to end the game, (4 3’s in that span), KD 0-2 2PA, 0-1 3PA, 2 TO, no FT
Westbrook: 0-2 2PA, 4 TO, 2-2 FT.. wow now that is a horrible way to end a game, never seen so much turnovers without even an attempt..wow
Most of those 1 on two/ 1 on three shots they had someone open on the wing…gotta try to give it up for better shots, even if it’s Dion or Ibaka…it’d be a different story if Russ or KD were both shooting lights out….but they weren’t…
That’s why KD isn’t LeBron… LeBron pretty much always makes the right basketball play
And also, KD is best when he’s shooting… LBJ is best when he’s driving and either finishing or dishing… KD just doesn’t have the same ball-handling skills, vision or physicality to take a hit and finish that LBJ does…
Just hard to comprehend MikeO. Are they going to watch the tape . . . see it . . . and change?
Probably not…haven’t all year…just not going to beat a good defensive team like GS very often by jacking shots into the teeth of their defense…
Six turnovers in that time but two superstars in unfathomable.
Its nauseating how much national media fawns over the warriors. I have MUCH more crude language to describe it but I’ll keep CtB classy…
Makes you want to scream expletives, doesn’t it? Such a loathesome group of people…
Oh, that has most certainly already happened. Luckily the only people that hear it are my fiancé and future father in law. Thank god school is out so I don’t have to listen to my ever so impressionable students gush about how amazing the warriors are and how authentic their love is for them…
I don’t think it was possible to play any worse the last 4-5 minutes
Since OKC was up 89-96 at the 5:09 mark, GS went on a 19-5 run to end the game, (4 3’s in that span), KD 0-2 2PA, 0-1 3PA, 2 TO, no FT
Westbrook: 0-2 2PA, 4 TO, 2-2 FT.. what a way to end a game for a chance to reach the finals. They wil forever hunt them if they loose on Monday
33 to 18 points in the 4th….not gonna get it done…
I wonder if Kanter / Ibaka could have given them some offense when the big two lost it.
Ibaka could have…he didn’t even see the ball, as far as I could tell…
The iso hero ball down the stretch makes bad Kyrie look like Steve Nash.
Durant’s legacy on the line in Game 7.
And potentially his basketball future and the entire landscape of basketball…
If he leaves… he’ll probably go to GS… if you can’t beat em… join em…
Then we’ll just have to beat them with Durant!
This makes me sick. I pray Durant isn’t as big a bandwagoner as the rest of this country…
Might be to our advantage with how he played tonight…
Just hope game seven gets a draymond flagrant
That’s the least OKC can give us… at least that parting gift…
LMAO, GS woudnt hit 22 3’s again back to back but damn.. OKC is such a disappointment
At least they didn’t get the record!
Now why didnt they show the Q or Cleveland when we won last night ?
They showed a couple of shots… although that was earlier on in the game…
The thunder have these types close games where you need to execute all year long, but I still can’t believe what I just saw
what a waste of my 2:45 hours not being able to kick GSW out the playoffs.
Durant 10-31/Westbrook 10-27, just not good enough
Warriors hit 21 threes….most of those weren’t really open…
Maybe they’re using them all up?
I wish, but I’m afraid not…
They are talking about Curry and to me the clear thunder killer was Thompson.
They should make Billy Donovan do this once he completely blows his 3-1 lead on Monday…
Got me. I’m laughing.
I cannot stand this Warriors team…..I mean I cannot stand them…
Wow…caving to the pressure cooker on home floor? I thought thunder had grown out of this junk. So glad Cavs closed out on the road
OKC basketball intelligence = 0.
No shots from anyone but KD and RW since the 7 minute mark….and those guys have been smothered…where was Ibaka?
Kind of too much hero ball
Never underestimate the heart of a champion! Victory will be all the sweeter when we defeat the “greatest team of all time”
those 3’s killed the Thunder, 22’s 3 for Wariors to 3 for OKC….impossible