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The Cavs were easily swept aside in the 2007 NBA finals, lost in the second round twice in the last three years to Boston, and were upset by Orlando in last year's conference finals.
The Cavs can still offer him the comforts of home and around $30 million more than any team, but several others can make enticing pitches come July 1:
The Knicks can afford James and another superstar, and the chance to make basketball matter again at Madison Square Garden.
The Heat can pair him with Dwyane Wade with winter weather he could only dream of in Ohio.
The Bulls can fit him between a young core of Derrick Rose and Joakim Noah and allow him to pick up winning titles where Michael Jordan left off.
James has never said he wanted to leave the Cavs, but there's long been speculation that he'd be willing to bolt for a larger market. Fans certainly seized on that idea Thursday, chanting "New York Knicks! New York Knicks!" when the two-time MVP shot free throws.
The Cavs thought they'd have more time before they had to face the thought of a future without James. They had the NBA's best record and expected to be playing into June, but found their supporting cast wasn't good enough on nights when James was human.
After scoring 38 points in Game 3, he managed only 37 over the next two games, perhaps bothered by the elbow. He shot down Internet speculation of a torn ligament before the game, but clearly wasn't himself.
As for the severity of the injury, James would only say: "I've got a lot of time to think about it now."
He went more than 19 minutes of game time without a basket from early in the second quarter until late in the third. Balls were stripped from his powerful hands, and those normally pinpoint passes were thrown behind teammates or at their feet.
Still, he somehow ended up with a triple-double. Only 25, he will surely win a title someday.
Nobody knows yet where it will be.
"It's the only thing I can think about right now, this season being over," James said. "You have high expectations going into the postseason and you never can predict the future, but at the same time you hope for things much brighter than what's going on right now."
[Associated Press;
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