LeBron, Cavs stun Kobe, Lakers in L.A.
The yellow foam hands came flying in from every corner of the lower
bowl, sailing onto the court in dozens of frisbee-style arches late
in the Cleveland Cavaliers' dominant victory.
LeBron James was more worried than amused by this unusual
display of frustration from the Los Angeles Lakers' fans - and he
got a bit more concerned when at least one water bottle followed
the foam.
Despite that bit of surreality in response to the officiating
of a physical game, the Cavaliers were hands-down better than the
defending NBA champions in a 102-87 victory on Friday night.
"The only thing that you hope doesn't happen is one of the
players getting hit or a referee getting hit, especially by a full
water bottle," James said. "When that came on the court, it was
coming pretty fast. You don't want that to happen because it could
definitely hurt somebody. Luckily no one got hurt, and that's a
good thing."
The fans were driven to throw up their hands - not the usual
foam No. 1 fingers, but a representation of two puppet hands making
the "LA" symbol in a tie-in to Nike's LeBron-and-Kobe Bryant
marketing campaign - by Lamar Odom's ejection with 4:04 to play.
After Bryant received the Lakers' fifth T with 3:45 left, more
hands took flight - along with that water bottle.
"I've never seen an L.A. crowd react like this before," said
coach Phil Jackson, whose bench drew a second T after Odom's
ejection for failing to produce a substitute quickly. "I like their
enthusiasm. I don't like their demonstrative manner. ... It wasn't
a well-refereed game, it wasn't a very well-played game, so I think
it was a reaction to that."
Mo Williams scored 28 points and James added 26, while
Shaquille O'Neal had five dunks among his 11 points in his latest
Los Angeles return. The Cavaliers dominated the Lakers with sharp
shooting and physical defense, prompting several technical fouls
and retaliation hits - and that was before the crowd lost its
holiday spirit by returning their pregame presents.
"If you want to throw something, at least throw something
that isn't going to hurt," Bryant said. "So I guess that (foam) was
the best situation."
Nineteen seconds after the first incident, a water bottle
skittered between players without hitting anyone. Cleveland coach
Mike Brown said he saw another bottle in flight.
"It'll be interesting to see what happens in the future with
the NBA, where that can't take place," Brown said. "I don't know
what the roles are. When water bottles start flying, does it mean
it's a tech, or what? But it's a scary thing when water bottles and
other objects start coming on the floor like they did today."
Bryant scored 35 points for the Lakers, who had won 16 of 17
before Cleveland's decisive victory behind Williams, James and the
Cavs' impressive interior play, which negated the Lakers' usual
advantages down low.
"We know that we can match up well with anybody," O'Neal
said. "I felt that it was going to be a good test for us. The
Lakers are the best team in the league, they have won it before,
and they have a lot of experience playing together. We're somewhat
a new group ... but today we came out and stepped up to the
challenge."
O'Neal's returns to Los Angeles, where he teamed with Bryant
to win three titles in Staples Center's first three seasons, no
longer include the obligatory questions about whether Kobe could
finally win a title without Shaq, who got boos and cheers during
pregame introductions.
"He definitely had a presence in the game," Jackson said. "I
do know it was a factor on Kobe. (Shaq) knocked him down about four
times without a call."
With Williams leading the way in his third straight
impressive road game, the Cavs forced Bryant and the Lakers into
their least impressive performance in six weeks. The loss dropped
the Lakers (23-5) back into a tie with Boston atop the overall NBA
standings.
If this was an NBA finals preview of the matchup that many
expected to materialize last summer before Orlando crashed the
party, the Lakers should be wary. Cleveland's big men - O'Neal,
Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Anderson Varejao - allowed them to
neutralize 7-foot starters Andrew Bynum, who managed just four
points, and Pau Gasol, who had 11.
Meanwhile, the Cavs are tough to guard when James' teammates
hit their outside shots with Williams' accuracy. James wasn't
omnipresent, but played well enough to force Ron Artest to foul out
with 5:01 to play.
The Cavaliers made certain nobody will forget about them in
the Eastern Conference race, where Boston and Orlando have
dominated the discussion leading up to the Celtics' win over the
Magic earlier Friday.
"It wasn't about sending a message to them," James said. "It
was about sending a message to ourselves and seeing how we match up
with the best team in the NBA at this point. It was a good road win
for us. I think it ranks up there, just because of the caliber of
the team and the caliber of the players they have."
Cleveland, which never trailed, streaked to a 20-point lead
in the second quarter during a run that included little help from
James, sitting out while Williams sparked the Cavs. James had just
two points and four assists in the quarter, which he ended with a
half-court shot just after the buzzer.
Los Angeles got within six points in the third before
Cleveland roared away again.
Notes: Cleveland had beaten the Lakers five
straight times before losing both matchups last season. ... Fans
included Sylvester Stallone, Anna Kournikova, Danny DeVito, Snoop
Dogg, Maroon 5 singer Adam Levine and game show host Alex Trebek.