Cavaliers hold off Pistons 94-82

By ASSOCIATED PRESS   Tuesday, April 21, 2009
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— For three quarters, the Cleveland Cavaliers were at their basketball best.

“It was beautiful,” Mo Williams said.

It didn’t end that way.

Cleveland blew most of a 29-point lead in the final period against Detroit’s reserves and the Cavaliers had to reinsert LeBron James to restore order before hanging on for a 94-82 win over the Pistons on Tuesday night to take a 2-0 lead in their Eastern Conference playoff series.

James, showing no regard for a defensive plan Detroit spent three days preparing for him, scored 29 and Williams added 21 as the Cavaliers withstood a stirring comeback by the Pistons, who used a 27-5 run to close within seven on Antonio McDyess’ jumper with 3:51 left.

“We lost our focus,” Williams said. “We all knew it. But it’s nothing to get overly concerned about. I don’t think it will happen again.”

Delonte West scored 20 and Zydrunas Ilgauskas 12 for the top-seeded Cavs, who led 79-50 in the first minute of the fourth and were embarrassing the Pistons. But Detroit dug down and gave Cleveland and its raucous crowd a scare the Cavs may never forget.

“We let it slip away from us,” Cleveland guard Daniel Gibson said. “But we got it back.”

James added 13 rebounds, six assists and an unforgettable, wind-mill dunk before pulling on his warmups and sitting the first 4:45 of the fourth quarter.

But as Cleveland’s star was resting up for Game 3 on Friday night at The Palace in Auburn Hills, Mich., the Pistons, showing more fight than they had in two games, closed within 14 and forced Cavs coach Mike Brown to put James and Cleveland’s other starters back in.

Richard Hamilton scored 17 and Rodney Stuckey 14 for the Pistons, who are going home down 0-2 with their starters searching for positives.

“Nothing we’re doing now is working,” McDyess said. “We basically have to play a perfect game just to be on top.”

Despite the win, the Cavaliers, who enjoyed a 43-16 advantage on free-throw attempt, aren’t feeling so good. They got just one field goal from their bench and showed a late vulnerability.

“We’re getting out of here with a sour taste in our mouths,” Williams said.

Holding a steady 15-point lead in the third, the Cavs pushed it to 64-46 on a 3-pointer by Williams.

James, who scored 38 points in the opener, then got behind Detroit’s defense for a breakaway dunk. As he approached the basket, James rose in the lane and circled the ball in front of him before rocking it through the rim. He strutted back on defense as 20,562 fans began to celebrate what appeared to be another Quicken Loans Arena rout.

But the Pistons’ backups—Will Bynum, Arron Afflalo, Amir Johnson, Jason Maxiell and Kwame Brown—got Detroit back in it. They beat Cleveland’s bench players to loose balls, and before long, a seemingly insurmountable lead by the Cavaliers was gone.

“Our bench played well,” McDyess said. “As far as the starters, we didn’t come out and do the job we were assigned to do. It’s like they were doing anything they wanted on offense. We weren’t giving no resistance to stop them or making it tough on them.

“The positive thing is we try to build from what the bench did in that fourth quarter. We (starters) didn’t do anything.”

Detroit’s bench accounted for 30 of the team’s 32 points in the fourth.

After McDyess’ 19-foot jumper made it 84-77, James, West and Williams each made two free throws apiece to put Cleveland ahead 90-77.

James then grabbed a rebound, and in one motion fired a pass down the floor to Williams, whose layup officially ended the Pistons’ rally.

Detroit coach Michael Curry wanted his team to be more aggressive with James. The plan was to run defenders at him on the perimeter to keep Cleveland’s star from getting into the foul lane, where he destroyed Detroit in Game 1 with short jumpers, layups and easy baskets.

It worked, but only a little.

James took only two shots inside the paint in the first half, but he was able to draw fouls and finished with 16 points—6 on free throws—as the Cavs opened a 46-32 lead following a ragged 24 minutes, which included pushing, shoving and three technical fouls.

The Pistons double teamed James the moment he touched the ball as Hamilton and McDyess pinned him into the left corner. The Cavs built a 13-point lead in the second quarter with James on the bench when he and returned Detroit welcomed him back with a mugging in the lane as McDyess, Afflalo and Johnson all made contact with James, who took exception to Johnson raking him across the face.

Johnson was slapped with a technical, and as the first half closed Cleveland’s Darnell Jackson and Detroit’s Kwame Brown exchanged shoves and were assessed “Ts.”

Sticking to his routine before big games at home, James was the first player to arrive and was on the floor more than three hours before tip-off.

In front of only a few TV production crew members and a handful of arena workers, James worked with assistant coach Chris Jent and practiced an assortment of shots, moves and free throws he planned to use to counter whatever Detroit had in store.

“We were ready for anything,” Williams said. “We’ve seen it all.”

Now, they have.

--Lakers 119, Jazz 109—At Los Angeles, Kobe Bryant scored 26 points, Pau Gasol added 22 and Lamar Odom had 19 off the bench in a victory over the Jazz, giving Los Angeles a 2-0 lead in the best-of-7 first-round Western Conference playoff series.

The Lakers’ Phil Jackson notched his 195th career postseason victory, the most of any coach in NBA history.

Deron Williams scored a career playoff-high 35 points and Carlos Boozer had 20 points and 10 rebounds for the Jazz, who head home for Game 3 on Thursday. They again played without injured center Mehmet Okur.

Utah lost its 11th in a row at Staples Center, including playoff games.

-- Trail Blazers 107, Rockets 103—At Portland, Ore., Brandon Roy scored 42 points and the Trail Blazers beat the Rockets to even their playoff series at one game apiece.

Aaron Brooks led a late charge and finished with 23 points for Houston, which has not made it out of the first round since 1997. Von Wafer came off the bench to add 21.

LaMarcus Aldridge had 27 points and 12 rebounds for Trail Blazers, who had never dropped the first two games of a playoff series at home and played one of their most physical games of the season.

Greg Oden’s dunk pulled the Blazers into an 89-all tie with 4:45 left, before Steve Blake’s finger roll put them ahead.

Portland extended the lead to 96-90 after Travis Outlaw hit a jumper and Roy made a falling-down three-pointer.

The Rockets closed to 104-100 on Brooks’ 3-pointer with 6.3 seconds left. After Roy hit a free throw, Brooks made another 3 to make it 105-103 with 1.5 seconds to go.

Rudy Fernandez sealed the win hitting two free throws for Portland.

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