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Tuesday, April 16, 2024

‘LeBron being LeBron’

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CLEVELAND—Four-time NBA Most Valuable Player LeBron James delivered one of the greatest must-win performances in NBA Finals history late Thursday, leading his Cleveland Cavaliers in a victorious late charge against the Golden State Warriors.

James scored 41 points to power the Cavaliers over Golden State 115-101 and force a one-game showdown for the NBA title.

“Special, very special,” Cleveland’s Kyrie Irving said of James.

“You try not to sit back and watch because you’re trying to make sure that you create space for him and able to give him outlets when he needs it,” Irving said.

LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers celebrates after making a shot during his team’s game against the Golden State Warriors at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. AFP

But “when a guy’s got it going like that … it’s just unbelievable.”

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James scored 18 consecutive Cavaliers points from late in the third quarter to midway into the fourth, part of a run where he scored or assisted on 35 of 36 Cleveland points.

“That fourth quarter was unbelievable when he’s playing that mid-range, and outside, and driving to the rim and creating opportunities for all of us,” Irving said.

James finished with 41 points for the second game in a row—the first time a player had 40 in back-to-back finals games since Shaquille O’Neal in 2000—and the Cavaliers leveled the best-of-seven series at 3-3, setting up a winner-take-all game seven showdown Sunday in California.

“It’s LeBron being LeBron. He’s one of the greatest of all times,” Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue said.

“Our back was against the wall and he took it upon himself to really put this team on his back and really get us to where we’re trying to get.”

In a virtuoso performance, James played 42 minutes, hit 16-of-27 shots from the floor, passed out 11 assists, grabbed eight rebounds, blocked three shots and made four steals.

“He played unbelievable on both ends of the floor,” Cleveland’s J.R. Smith said. “He was aggressive all night.”

The Cavaliers could become the first team in NBA history to rally from a 3-1 deficit to win the NBA Finals. They became the first team in 50 years, and only the third ever, to recover from such a hole to force a seventh game.

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