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Cavs stay unbeaten in postseason, down Raptors

By AP - May 21,2016 - Last updated at May 21,2016

Kyle Lowry of the Toronto Raptors attempts to pass the ball against Iman Shumpert of the Cleveland Cavaliers and Channing Frye during their Game 2 of the Eastern Conference Finals during the 2016 NBA play-offs in Cleveland, Ohio, on Friday (AFP photo by Jamie Sabau)

CLEVELAND — Overshadowed as Golden State shot down history during the regular season, the Cavaliers are making this postseason their own.

Perfectly.

LeBron James recorded a triple-double and Cleveland improved to 10-0 in the play-offs with a 108-89 victory over the Toronto Raptors on Thursday night in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals.

James had 23 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists as the Cavs became the fourth team to start the postseason with 10 straight wins, joining the Los Angeles Lakers (1989, 2001) and San Antonio Spurs (2012). Playing at a different level than the rest of the field, the Cavs are now two wins from appearing in their second straight NBA Finals and trying to end Cleveland’s 52-year sports championship drought.

Kyrie Irving scored 26 and Kevin Love 19 for Cleveland, which swept Detroit and Atlanta and has beaten Toronto by a combined 50 points in two games.

“I don’t think it feels like a streak,” James said of the Cavs’ rampage through the play-offs. “It feels like we won one game, we won the next game. We’ve taken one step at a time. We’ve tried to take care of business.”

The Raptors managed to hang around longer than in Game 1, when they were blown out by 31. But Toronto lack the necessary firepower to stay with a Cleveland team playing their best basketball this season, one that James likened to a football team.

“We play offence, we play defence and we’re great at special teams as well,” he said.

Game 3 is Saturday in Toronto, where Raptors All-Star guard Kyle Lowry can only hope the rims at Air Canada Centre are kinder than the ones in Quicken Loans Arena.

Lowry scored 10 points and is shooting 8 of 28 from the field, including 1 of 15 on 3-pointers in the series. However, he isn’t hanging his head.

“I’m super confident,” he said. “I missed countless threes that I thought were good and that I made last series. That’s why I’m not down on myself. We’ve got a game on Saturday, and I know I’m going to be much more effective. Simple as that.

DeMar DeRozan scored 22 for the Raptors, who have had a disastrous debut in the conference finals to this point.

“We’re not quitting,” said coach Dwane Casey. “Everybody can bury us, but we’re not quitting. I refuse to believe that.”

James moved past Shaquille O’Neal into fourth place on the career postseason scoring list, with 5,255 points. Next on the list are Kobe Bryant (5,640), Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (5,762) and Michael Jordan (5,987).

It was James’ 15th play-off triple-double, secured when he ran down rebound No. 10 with 8:01 left. He scored on Cleveland’s next possession, and while sitting on the bench during a subsequent timeout, he saluted applauding Cavs fans by pressing his fingers to his lips and touching his heart.

By then, the Cavs, who closed the first half with a decisive 16-2 run, were up 20 and coasting to another easy win in their so-far-spotless spring.

Earlier in the day, James was asked if the Cavs might need a loss to get them ready for the finals.

“We don’t want to lose,” he said.

And the Cavs are playing like it under coach Tyronn Lue, also a perfect 10 in the play-offs.

“It’s not easy,” said Lue, who took over when the Cavs fired David Blatt in January.

The Cavaliers, though, are making it look easy — too easy — during their pristine postseason.

 

Cleveland’s Australian guard Matthew Dellavedova tweaked his ankle in the second half, but Lue said he should be OK.

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