Cavs manage to force Game 7

Cleveland gets 46 points from James, but loses Love

LeBron James finished with 46 points, 11 rebounds and 9 assists as the Cleveland Cavaleris defeated the Boston Celtics on Friday night in Game 6 of the NBA Eastern Conference finals. Game 7 is Sunday night in Boston.
LeBron James finished with 46 points, 11 rebounds and 9 assists as the Cleveland Cavaleris defeated the Boston Celtics on Friday night in Game 6 of the NBA Eastern Conference finals. Game 7 is Sunday night in Boston.

CLEVELAND — LeBron James chose Boston as the place he’ll play next.

Game 7 is on. And any talk about James’ future is on hold.

Delivering another performance for the ages, James scored 46 points and preserved his reign atop the NBA’s Eastern Conference for at least one more game as the Cleveland Cavaliers shook off losing All-Star Kevin Love with a head injury and beat the Celtics 109-99 on Friday night to force a decisive climax to this back-and-forth series.

James, playing in perhaps his final game for the Cavs in Cleveland, added 11 rebounds and nine assists while playing all but two minutes — to avoid elimination and delay any decisions about where he’ll continue his remarkable career next season.

“Greatness,” Cavs Coach Tyronn Lue said. “Gave it his all. We needed that, especially with Kevin going down. He delivered. He carried us home as usual.”

The king is not dead, and he still has a chance to make his eighth consecutie NBA Finals.

“It feels good just to be able to play for another game,” said James, who had his seventh 40-point game of these playoffs. “Like I’ve always said, Game 7 is the best two words in sports. … We should relish the opportunity and have fun with it.”

This series, in which home court has meant everything, will have a fitting conclusion Sunday at TD Center, where the Celtics are 10-0 this postseason.

“We have one game to be able to compete for a championship, and what more could you ask for?” James said. “If I’d have told you at the beginning of the season we only needed one game to make the NBA Finals, we’d take it.”

George Hill added 20 points, and Jeff Green 14 for the Cavs, who lost Love in the first quarter after he banged heads with Boston rookie Jayson Tatum.

Terry Rozier paced the Celtics — now 1-6 on the road — with 28 points, and Jaylen Brown had 27.

The Celtics were still within seven in the final three minutes before James made consecutive three-pointers, punctuating the second by pounding his chest with both fists and screaming along with 20,562 others.

Just for good measure, he added a three-point play and then was taken out of the game to a rousing ovation and chants of “Cavs in 7!”

“Just a lot of heart, a lot of grit, being resilient,” James said.

Boston’s improbable run through the postseason without injured stars Kyrie Irving and Gordon Hayward will now take the Celtics back home, where they play with more intensity, togetherness and before fans hungry to see an 18th title banner raised to their arena’s rafters.

“It’s not going to be pretty,” Celtics guard Marcus Smart said.

“We’ve got to come out ready to get our nose bloody and our mouth bloody. We’ve got to come out ready to fight. You’ve got to find a way, whatever it takes.”

Love went out with a head injury in the first quarter, forcing Lue to juggle his rotations and keep James on the floor longer than he wanted to. The three-time champion played the first 35 minutes without a break and then endured the final eight while nursing a sore lower leg.

Backed by a sea of towel-waving fans wearing white “Cleveland Whatever It Takes” T-shirts, James did just that to push the series to Boston, where he has had some of his biggest moments on the renowned parquet floor.

In 2012, he had 45 points, 15 rebounds and 5 assists in Game 6 for Miami, which went on to win Game 7 and the NBA title. He also scored 45 in a Game 7 loss for Cleveland in 2008, and now has a chance to boost his stunning resume further if he can get the Cavs to a fourth consecutive Finals.

James also has some bitter memories in Boston. He lost Game 6 in the East semifinals in 2010 to the Celtics and was soon on his way to joining the Heat.

The real possibility that James was playing his last game in Cleveland hung over the game — and this city — in the hours leading to tip-off. Everyone had an opinion on what James will do next and that discussion filled the sports talk radio airwaves, bars and barber shops.

The 33-year-old has said several times since coming home in 2014 that he wants to retire with the Cavaliers, but fans are uneasy because he can opt out of his $35.6 million contract this summer and test free agency.

And, of course, he left once before in 2010, bolting for Miami.

James has said he’ll sit down with his family after the season ends to plot his next move, and he’s already being courted in Philadelphia, Los Angeles and New York, who can only dream about adding him to their rosters.

For now, he’s only going to Boston.

photo

AP/RON SCHWANE

Kevin Love of the Cleveland Cavaliers holds his head after being injured during the fi rst half of Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals against the Boston Celtics on Friday in Cleveland. Love, who played just five minutes, was out for the rest of the game.

Sports on 05/26/2018

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