| February 28, 2008 Celtics beat Cavaliers, 92-87
|
BOSTON (AP) - LeBron James hit a milestone. The Boston Celtics
hit their shots. Advantage Celtics.
James returned from a first-half ankle injury to score 26 and
become the youngest player in NBA history to reach the 10,000
points, but Boston got 22 points from Ray Allen to beat the
Cleveland Cavaliers 92-87 on Wednesday night.
"When you have an off-shooting night like this, it's tough to
pull a game out," said James, whose 7-for-24 shooting sank the
Cavs to 38 percent from the floor. "Especially against the best
team in the league."
Kevin Garnett scored 18 points with 11 rebounds to help Boston
win its third straight and improve to 2-2 for the season against
the defending Eastern Conference champions. The Cavaliers were
playing their third game with four new players, including Ben
Wallace, acquired in an 11-player, three-team deal at the trading
deadline.
"They're so new, we really didn't see them," Celtics coach Doc
Rivers said. "They're going to be so much better because of that
trade."
Cavaliers coach Mike Brown was ejected with 42 seconds left in
the third quarter after he had to be restrained by his assistants
while arguing a foul call against James. His star took a shorter
break: He sprained his ankle and missed the last 4:24 of the first
half, but X-rays were negative and he was back for the start of the
second.
"I know my ankle, and tomorrow it's going to be a lot worse,"
James said, expressing the hope he would be ready for
Friday's game
against Minnesota.
"I've had my share of ankle injuries. The first thing I thought
was, 'Not again. Not another one to go down for our team.' We have
been hit with the injury bug, the cold bug, guys have been walking
around here sick and injured. I didn't want to go down."
James reached the 10,000-point milestone at 23 years and 59
days, more than a year younger than Kobe Bryant was when he hit the
milestone in 2003 (24 years, 193 days). It took James 368 games to
do it - the ninth-fastest in league history.
"It doesn't make me happy to do it in a losing effort," James
said. "To be in the record books is a tribute to my teammates,
myself and my family."
James hit the mark on a dunk that made it 63-54 with 4:54 left
in the third quarter. But Boston, which shot 52 percent, quickly
extended its lead back to double-digits; after hitting the first
two baskets of the fourth quarter to make it 75-66, the Cavs never
got closer than 10 points until the final minute.
Delonte West's meaningless 3-pointer for Cleveland at the buzzer
counted because of goaltending, making it appear closer than it
was.
"We had our hands full (with James), but I thought we did a
pretty good job," Allen said. "I think we gutted it out."
James was hurt after driving for a layup when he came down on
Paul Pierce's foot. He hobbled off toward the Cavaliers bench and
then dropped onto the court in front of the scorer's table with
4:24 left in the first half.
When the whistle blew, Brown and the training staff rushed over
to attend to James, while the crowd hushed and the players on both
benches looked over to see what was happening. After being looked
at on the floor for a few minutes, he limped off to the locker
room, favoring his right leg, getting a cheer from the Boston fans.
Boston led 25-16 after one quarter, with 12-5 rebounding edge,
then took a 33-18 lead early in the second.
Notes: Celtics guard Tony Allen sat out with a strained right
calf. ... Garnett missed the matchup with James on Feb. 5, and
James missed the game against Boston on Dec. 2. When both played on
Nov. 27, the Cavaliers beat the Celtics in Cleveland 109-104 in
overtime. ... The Cavs fell to 15-16 on the road this season, with
three wins in their last seven games. ... Rajon Rondo had eight
points and eight assists for Boston, which won its sixth straight
home game.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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