National Basketball Association
Bloodied and beaten, LeBron has off night in Game 4 loss
National Basketball Association

Bloodied and beaten, LeBron has off night in Game 4 loss

Published Jun. 12, 2015 2:17 a.m. ET

 

LeBron James was bloodied and later beaten.

When he pulled on his warmup jersey to signal the end of his night, there were still about three minutes remaining.

He had nothing going in the fourth quarter, anyway.

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James was shut out in the period and slowed for the first time in the NBA Finals, as Golden State beat the Cleveland Cavaliers 103-82 on Thursday to even the series 2-2.

''They're playing seven guys, sometimes eight, but the majority of the time they're playing seven guys, and LeBron is having to shoulder a lot of the load,'' Golden State's Draymond Green said.

''So you just want to continue to try to wear them down, wear them down, and we were able to do that tonight.''

James finished with 20 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists, good numbers but nowhere near the impact he had been making on the series. In fact, he finished with less than half the 41 points he was averaging in what had been one of the best finals performances in history.

But he couldn't keep it up while playing 41 minutes and looking tired. He shot 7 for 22 from the field and rested his hands on his hips multiple times in the fourth quarter, when he took only two shots.

''They doubled me a little bit more tonight,'' James said. ''They kind of made me give the ball up, seeing if some of my teammates can beat those guys.''

James was trying to catch a quick rest to start the fourth quarter and the game got away from the Cavs while he did. They made the first two baskets while he sat to push the lead back to double digits after Cleveland had been within three points in the final minute of the third, and it turned into a blowout shortly after he returned.

''I was hoping my team could just buy me a couple minutes,'' James said. "We weren't able to do that tonight in the fourth quarter and, I mean, it's difficult. You want to be out there, but also you don't want to be. You want to be effective while you're out there, too. So they made a huge run and we just couldn't regather after that.''

Coach David Blatt said he needed to be able to give James rest at some point.

''If I don't, I'm really going to put him under more duress than he already is,'' Blatt said. ''When he is out, everyone else has got to step up and give a little bit more.''

James had been hurt earlier when he was fouled along the baseline by Andrew Bogut. He tumbled out of bounds and he crashed into a photographer's camera, opening a cut in the back of his head. He remained down for a couple of minutes before getting up and holding a towel over the cut. He stayed in the game and made one of the free throws and said after the game he had gotten stitches.

''I was just trying to regain my composure and I was holding my head,'' James said. ''It was hurting. I was just hoping I wasn't bleeding. But obviously the camera cut me pretty bad. Our medical staff did a great job of stopping the bleeding.''

James wasn't the only one who looked weary. Matthew Dellavedova, who needed treatment at the hospital for dehydration after scoring a postseason career-high 20 in Game 3, had just 10 points on 3-of-14 shooting. He looked like he could have used his usual pregame coffee that he gave up Thursday to remain hydrated.

''He played his heart out, like he always does. He'll tell you differently,'' Blatt said. ''I don't think he was a hundred percent, but he gave us a hundred percent of what he had.''

The point guard went to the bench early in the second half to get his legs massaged and didn't do much from there as Stephen Curry scored 22 points.

The Cavs have lost home-court advantage but at least have two days to rest before Game 5 on Sunday at Oracle Arena.

Right now, rest looks like what James needs most.

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