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"I don't think the team quit," Gilbert said.
Ferry, who is in the final year of his contract, sidestepped a question about Brown's playoff performance.
"I respect Mike Brown and I've always enjoyed working with him," Ferry said. "All of us are disappointed with how we played at the end. We will spend the next period of time talking about it and figuring it out."
Like Gilbert, Ferry seemed dazed by the events of the past week. Once leading the series 2-1, the Cavs lost three straight, the last home game by 32 points. Cleveland looked nothing like the team that won more than 60 games for the second straight season.
"It's a frustrating thing when you're not playing at the level you think you can," Ferry said. "At the end of the day we weren't able to put it together."
For Ferry, the Cavs' troubles started much earlier, dating to James complaining about a right elbow problem before an April 8 game against Chicago. James refused to use his elbow as an excuse during the playoffs, but Ferry revealed for the first time it was serious enough that the team would have rested him in the regular season.
"We probably would have shut him down for a couple weeks, I can tell you that," said Ferry, who hasn't been told James needs surgery. "But we were in the playoffs and it was that time of year where it is was something he could play with, and we were told that he wouldn't hurt himself further. He was ready to go."
James may be ready to go for good.
In the aftermath of Thursday's loss, James said he and his "team" would follow their game plan into free agency, which opens on July 1. He is expected to visit other cities, whose overtures at the 25-year-old will only raise the blood pressure and anxiety level of Cleveland's paranoid fans.
"It's all about winning for me, and I think the Cavs are committed to doing that," he said. "But at the same time I've given myself options to this point."
The Cavaliers' postseason collapse may have done irreparable damage to their chances of re-signing James, Akron's proud son who wanted to strip Cleveland of its "Loserville" image for good. He may not get another chance, and he may not want one.
Although James can get a longer contract with Cleveland, after seven seasons, he may be itching for a new start.
Gilbert said he hasn't imagined James as anything but a Cavalier.
"I haven't really thought of that," he said.
Perhaps it's time to start.
[Associated Press;
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