Cavaliers regrouping after opening loss to Warriors
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[June 04, 2016]
(Reuters) - LeBron James kept
rolling the numbers over in his mind, dumbfounded over how he and
the visiting Cleveland Cavaliers squandered a shot at stealing Game
One of the NBA Finals against the Golden State Warriors.
"When you get outscored 45-10 on the bench and give up 25 points
off 17 turnovers, no matter what someone does or doesn't do, it's
going to be hard to win, especially on the road," James said after
Thursday's 104-89 loss.
Other numbers indicated Cleveland had a golden opportunity to seize
a quick lead in the best-of-seven championship series.
Golden State's vaunted long-range sharpshooters Stephen Curry and
Klay Thompson mostly misfired as Curry made 4-of-15 from the floor
and Thompson shot 4-of-12 to combine for 20 points, 32 below their
season's scoring average.
"Don't matter what you do with Steph and Klay, don't matter what you
do with Draymond (Green)," said James, who scored 23 points. "Give
up 45 points off the bench and 25 points off turnovers on the road,
it's not a good ingredient to win."
James and Kevin Love were each charged with four turnovers and point
guard Kyrie Irving committed three as the Warriors registered nine
steals in the game.
"I feel like our backs are against the wall but we've thrive in
situations like this all season long," Love told NBA TV on Friday.
"You have to have an us against the world mentality."
The free-flowing Warriors got a huge boost from their reserves and
unselfish sharing of the ball as the team shot nearly 50 percent
from the floor and logged assists on 29 of their 43 baskets.
Cleveland, by contrast, had only 17 assists in the game.
It marked Golden State's sixth win in a row over Cleveland, dating
back to last year's Final when they won the last three games after
trailing 2-1 in the series to lift the trophy.
James said the Cavaliers would have to come up with a different
recipe for success in Game Two on Sunday.
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Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) controls the ball against Golden
State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) during the first half in
game one of the NBA Finals at Oracle Arena. Mandatory Credit: Cary
Edmondson-USA TODAY Sports
"We will have a better game plan going into Game Two for sure
offensively," James said.
Coach Tyronn Lue thought the plan was fine and that sharper
execution was the remedy for the Cavs, who shot a poor 21-of-49 from
inside the paint.
"We didn't finish around the basket, so we've just got to keep
playing the same way we were playing," Lue said. "I thought we were
fine. I feel good about how we played."
On Friday, Warriors coach Steve Kerr credited his team's defense. "I
thought we did a good job of challenging a lot of shots," he said.
"I thought they missed a couple that they would normally make, but
all in all it was a good defensive effort.
"But it's probably going to have to be better in Game Two, because
we know the force that they're going to come with."
(Reporting by Larry Fine in New York; Editing by Andrew Both)
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