honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, May 6, 2009

SPORTS
James leads Cavaliers' charge

By TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Cleveland's LeBron James leaves Atlanta’s Zaza Pachulia flat-footed as he slams one.

MARK DUNCAN | Associated Press

spacer spacer

CLEVELAND — Alone under his basket, LeBron James braced himself for Atlanta's onslaught.

As two Hawks swooped down on a fast break, James held his ground, stepped in front of Joe Johnson and took the charge.

The only play. The smart play. A game-changing play.

MVP. Indeed.

James dunked the first time he touched the ball and scored 34 points — 22 in the first half — as the Cavaliers, who waited nine days between playoff games after a first-round sweep, shook off some early rust and pulled away for a 99-72 win over the Hawks in their Eastern Conference semifinal opener yesterday.

Showing why he was voted the league's best player in a landslide, James added 10 rebounds, three assists and four steals as the top-seeded Cavs won their fifth straight lopsided game in a postseason that has so far mirrored the best regular season in franchise history.

James stuffed the stat sheet again, but it was his defensive stop on Johnson in the third quarter that meant as much as anything.

"An MVP taking a charge on the break?" Cavs guard Mo Williams said. "That's amazing. You get that effort from him, how could I not take a charge? The whole night was about him and he came out and showed why he is the MVP — in the first quarter."

The Cavs weren't sure how the layoff would affect them.

"It was unbelievable how sharp we were," James said. "We just picked up where we left off."

Williams added 21 points for Cleveland, which became the first team since the 2004 Detroit Pistons to win each of its five playoff games by double figures.

Josh Smith scored 22 and Mike Bibby 19 for the Hawks, who are playing in the second round for the first time in 10 years.