LeBron delivers on promise, leads Cavs to NBA title
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[June 20, 2016]
By Rory Carroll
OAKLAND, Calif. (Reuters) - LeBron
James powered the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 93-89 victory over the
Golden State Warriors on Sunday in an electrifying Game Seven to
complete an improbable comeback unlike any seen before and capture
their first NBA championship.
With the win over the top-seeded Warriors, who celebrated a
championship on Cleveland's home court last year, the Cavaliers
became the first team to rally from a 3-1 series deficit in the
best-of-seven NBA Finals and win the title.
"I've had the goal for two years since I came back to bring a
championship to the city," said an emotional James, who returned to
the Cavaliers in 2014 after a four-year stint with Miami that
included a pair of NBA championships.
"I gave it everything that I had. I poured my heart, my blood, my
sweat and my tears into this game."
When the final buzzer sounded to end what was the closest game of
the Finals, an emotional James dropped to the floor before he was
mobbed by his teammates.
James led Cleveland in the championship-clinching win with a
triple-double as he recorded 27 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists
en route to being named the Most Valuable Player of the NBA Finals
for a third time.
The win ends decades of heartbreak for the city of Cleveland, which
had not won a professional sports championship since the 1964
Cleveland Browns of the National Football League.
For James, the win not only marks his third NBA title, but it will
go down as the single greatest achievement of his storied career as
it fulfills his promise to deliver a title to his home state of
Ohio.
"I came back for a reason. I came back to bring a championship to
our city," said James, who was in tears as he wrapped his arms
around the Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy.
"I knew what I was capable of doing. I knew what I learned in the
last couple years that I was gone, and I knew I had the right
ingredients and the right blueprint to help this franchise get back
to a place that we've never been."
The back-and-forth game lived up to its billing as it was tight
throughout and included 20 lead changes while no team was able to
pull ahead by more than eight points.
Facing elimination in each of their previous two games, James
carried the Cavs back from the brink as they became only the third
team to force a Game Seven after falling behind 3-1 in the
championship round.
For the Warriors, who had a record 73 wins during the 82-game
regular season, Sunday's defeat marked the first time since November
2013 that they have lost three consecutive games.
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Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) speaks to media with his
children Lebron James Jr. and Zhuri James present following the
93-89 victory against the Golden State Warriors in game seven of the
NBA Finals at Oracle Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kelley L Cox-USA TODAY
Sports
"It wasn't easy what we accomplished, and it's not an easy pill to
swallow what we didn't accomplish," said two-time league MVP Stephen
Curry, who had 17 points in the loss. "So got to just take the good
with the bad."
After a record smashing regular season the Warriors could not cap
off the campaign with a second successive title, unable to deliver
the knockout punch after going up 3-1 in the best-of-season series.
The Warriors were ultimately undone in the series by the
disappearance of their high-octane offense, a suspension to
defensive stalwart Draymond Green, a season-ending injury to
rim-protecting center Andrew Bogut and defensive specialist Andre
Iguodala dealing with a balky back.
"Just an incredible run that obviously didn't end the way we wanted
it to," said Warriors head coach Steve Kerr. "It's been an
incredible two-year run. We're disappointed that it didn't go our
way at the end, but that's life."
When the Warriors raced out to a 3-1 series lead the Cavs were left
for dead by many impartial observers who expected the Golden State
to run away with the series.
But with their backs against the wall, a Cavaliers team that once
seem overmatched never gave up in their quest for a maiden NBA
title.
"I knew what we were capable of, even being down 3-1 versus the
greatest regular season team ever," said James.
"Everybody counted us out and that's when we strived the most and
that's definitely when I strived the most when everybody counted me
out."
(Reporting by Rory Carroll; Writing by Frank Pingue; Editing by
Steve Keating)
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