LeBron James puts Raptors on brink of elimination with insane buzzer-beater
Cavs superstar sinks 1-handed floater off backboard for victory
For a brief moment Saturday night, thanks to a late three-pointer by rookie OG Anunoby, the Raptors got one hand out of the playoff hole they had dug themselves.
Then LeBron James buried them.
James, who had stepped up all evening, hit an off-balance buzzer-beater from 10 feet to give the Cleveland Cavaliers a nerve-jangling 105-103 win over Toronto, pushing the Raptors to the playoff precipice.
The Raptors were awful early but then fought back. But it wasn't enough.
"They laid their hearts out," coach Dwane Casey said of his team, which now trails 3-0 in the Eastern Conference semifinal. "That's all you ask — in a hostile situation, the other team playing really well, putting ourselves in a position to win."
But in a must-win game, the Raptors never led. Their season — and perhaps Casey's job — is on the line Monday in Game 4 at Quicken Loans Arena.
"We have one more game," said Casey, perhaps stating the inevitable. "Our pride is on the line. Basically our season's on the line."
James delivers dagger
James led the Cavaliers with 38 points while Kevin Love added 21. Kyle Lowry had 27 for the Raptors with DeMar DeRozan sitting out the fourth after contributing just eight points.
Cleveland, which led by as many as 17, found itself tied 103-103 with eight seconds remaining after the Anunoby three-pointer. Then James raced down the court and delivered the dagger.
Casey had wanted the Raptors to trap James in his own end. But, taking the inbound pass from Love, he had little in his way as he headed to the Raptors end and, with Anunoby desperately trying to get in his face, put up a floater that banked in off the glass.
"He split the trap and went 100 miles an hour down the floor and lost our guy," Casey lamented. "We just didn't execute."
James does that to you. At 33, he continues to dazzle with a seemingly endless arsenal.
"He's a great player," Casey said. "Great players make great plays."
What was the degree of difficulty of the shot, James was asked afterwards?
"The level of difficulty of that shot, it was very difficult," he said with a smile. "Don't try it at home."
'I live for those moments'
It was the fifth buzzer-beater of James' post-season career. He sank a three-pointer to beat the Pacers as time expired in Game 5 of Cleveland's first-round series.
"Tie game, down by one or whatever the case may be, I live for those moments," said James, who also practises for those moments.
In games and during practice, his teammates have seen the best of LeBron. But they are still left amazed.
"I ran out of words a while ago," said Kyle Korver.
James scored 16 of the Cavaliers' 26 points in the fourth quarter, refusing to let Toronto complete the comeback.
Physical affair
Toronto played a physical game, harassing and bumping James at every turn. And it showed real grit in mounting one comeback after another, only to have James and the Cavs push them back.
"Casey tried everything and put us in some dilemmas at times," said Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue.
Still on a night when Toronto need to have all guns firing, DeRozan wasn't a factor with a 3-of-12 shooting night. The Raptors also helped Cleveland's cause with 17 turnovers, which yielded 18 points.
Casey said his team played with "our pants on fire defensively," but struggled to take care of the ball on offence.
The Raptors trailed 79-65 going into the fourth but fought back to cut the lead to 97-95 with less than three minutes remaining and 102-100 with 15 seconds left.
After Jeff Green made just one free throw, Anunoby tied it up with his last-ditch shot.
The Cavaliers have won nine straight playoff games against the Raptors dating back to the 2016 conference final. They have also won 14 of their last 16 (regular season and post-season) against Toronto.
VanVleet in, Ibaka out
The Raptors went with a small lineup, giving Fred VanVleet his first career start in place of the slumping Serge Ibaka.
Toronto had a brutal opening, trailing by 12 in the first quarter before clawing its way back. But a string of errors and a poor start by DeRozan — who missed eight of nine shots with three turnovers in the first half — made the comeback heavy lifting.
"He wasn't the reason we lost. He had a tough night," said Casey.
After closing the gap to one point at 39-38 in the second quarter, Toronto missed five of its last six shots and went into halftime trailing by 15.
It was more of the same in the third. Toronto attempted to trim the lead only to have Cleveland beat it back to lead by 14 going into the final quarter.
Casey and team president Masai Ujiri both showed their displeasure at the officials during the game. Their ire was heightened when a potential three-point play — an Ibaka bucket and Cavs foul — was changed to no basket and a non-shooting foul after a loud protest by James.