Forget the stats, Cavaliers need a better LeBron James vs. the Warriors
There were ominous signs for Cleveland, even as LeBron nearly had a triple-double
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There was no splash in Oakland on Thursday night.
Steph Curry and Klay Thompson, whose shooting had carried the Golden State Warriors past the Oklahoma City Thunder in the conference finals, were nowhere to be found in Game 1 of the NBA Finals. The pair combined to shoot 8-of-27 from the field for just 20 points.
And yet the Warriors defeated the Cavaliers 104-89.
How is this possible? How could the Splash Brothers stay dry, LeBron James have so much more help than last year, and the Cavaliers still get run out of Oracle?
Well, the Warriors'
role players stepped up in the wake of the Cavaliers' defensive decisions. J.R. Smith was uncharacteristically tentative, taking just three shots in 36 minutes. The Warriors' defense wrapped itself around whatever changes the Cavaliers attempted to design.
But beyond all that was this uncomfortable truth: Hidden behind his good box score, LeBron James had a bad game for the Cavaliers.
I'm not just looking at the loss and spitting hot takes after James' 23-point, 12-rebound, nine-assist performance. The box score looks great. But you have to look beneath it, and you have to consider the bar that James has to reach. After his super-human exploits last year in the Finals, it was assumed that James would not have to give what he did last year in putting up 30-to-40-point triple-doubles with Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love healthy. James had the rebounds, and the assists make it seem like he was there, as well.
But James' four turnovers contributed to the 25 points the Cavaliers surrendered off turnovers. He went 0-for-4 after his four offensive rebounds, stymied and limited by Draymond Green. And, bizarrely, James elected not to run various shooters off the 3-point line.
Some of this was designed. James purposefully left Green open on several attempts. The Cavaliers made a concerted effort to focus on Thompson and Curry. It worked, in so far as the Splash Brothers' output was concerned. But some of these, James just elected not to close out.
There were other intangible concerns, a tentativeness mixed with mindless aggression, worrisome body language, and a betrayal of the "spirit" that the Cavs have played with in tearing through the Eastern Conference. James, and the Cavs, were tight.
James shot 9-of-21 from the field, and shot just 6-of-14 in the restricted area. James missed bunny after bunny inside, and was stripped, harassed and bothered by Andre Iguodala and Green all night. Irving
played a bad game, for sure . But he and Love combined for 43 points. Even with the problems for the Cavaliers' bench, an opportunity was there.
James still hasn't figured out how to attack the smaller Curry without picking up offensive fouls, still hasn't found a strategy vs. Iguodala, still hasn't managed to avoid those face-up jumpers from the mid-post that doomed the Cavs' offensive efficiency last year.
Had the Cavaliers won this game, it would have been a story about how the Cavs' bench picked up and stepped up, about Love's coming out party in the Finals, about how James makes everyone better even when his shot's off. But this game was the rare occasion in which a loss was worse than just the 0-1 mark in the Finals.
Game 1 showed that the Warriors can win games when Curry and Thompson don't go nova, and that the Cavaliers cannot without a superhero version of James. What's more, the Warriors are likely to a) get better shooting performances from Curry and Thompson going forward, no matter what the Cavs do; and b) find ways to adjust to what the Cavaliers were doing to bother them. This was a shot for the Cavs, an opportunity to steal Game 1 and rattle the Warriors again. Instead, they were left behind as Shaun Livingston finished with three fewer points than James.
Maybe James could have played his absolute best, thrown 10 assists instead of nine, made a few more jumpers, and the Warriors would have still rolled on the back of their bench dominance. But James didn't overcome the Warriors' interior defense, so they didn't have to commit more resources inside, which meant the perimeter shots weren't available, and the Cavaliers wound up shooting 38 percent for the game.
The Cavs have more weaponry, but everything still goes through James.
It's not so much about saying "the Cavs lost, so it was LeBron's fault." That wasn't the case in a lot of games in last year's Finals. It's that the Cavaliers got an off game from both of the Warriors' elite shooters, and they needed the very best of James to have a chance. That they were so far off with his having 23-9-12, even with help from Love and Irving says that the bar has not changed for James. He has to be as good as he was last year, maybe even better, and even then, it may not be enough.
It's just one game, there's a lot of series left. But Game 1 of the Finals showed a lot of ominous signs for the Cavaliers, and showed that the box score won't be enough. The Cavs are going to need the best LeBron James they can get to have a chance vs. the Warriors.
LeBron James was not his best in Game 1.