CAVALIERS So far, so good: Cleveland wins first game with interim coach



LeBron James scored 29 points as the Cavs beat the Pistons 91-76.
CLEVELAND (AP) -- Interim coach Brendan Malone refused to take credit for this one.
A day after Paul Silas was fired, Malone led a Cleveland Cavaliers team in turmoil to a much needed 91-76 win over the Detroit Pistons on Tuesday night, ending a three-game losing streak.
"The players did it," Malone said. "It wasn't me. It was the players."
LeBron James scored 29 and finally got some help from the Cavaliers bench.
Malone gave more playing time to Anderson Varejao and other reserves and it paid off. Varejao scored 11 and played tough defense with two blocks that ignited Cleveland.
The Cavaliers scored 21 points off 15 turnovers and limited Detroit to just 29 points in the second half.
Nice win
"We played great tonight," Malone said. "Our defensive intensity was great against one of the best teams in the NBA."
Malone had his tie loosened from the opening tip and was often on his feet, fervently encouraging his players.
"I'm happy for Coach," James said. "The key was playing with a lot of energy and defensive focus. A lot has happened in the past couple days, but we've got to put it all behind us."
Rasheed Wallace scored 25 points and Tayshaun Prince had 22 for the Pistons. The loss snapped their five-game winning streak.
Detroit was without leading scorer Richard Hamilton, who was out with a sprained left ankle. Rookie guard Carlos Delfino made his first start in Hamilton's place and scored four points.
Chauncey Billups, averaging 25.5 over his last four games, scored six points and had eight turnovers.
"This is probably one of the worst games I've played as a Piston," Billups said. "It happens, but it wasn't anything [Cleveland] did."
Big lead
The Cavaliers opened up their biggest lead 77-66 with 5:37 remaining on James' fast-break feed to Varejao, who slammed it home.
"I just tried to bring some energy off the bench," Varejao said. "That's what my role is."
Varejao scored 10 of his 11 points in the fourth quarter. He played 25 minutes, a minute off his career high, after playing six minutes in Sunday's loss to Toronto.
"He came up big," Malone said. "We put him in for rebounds and defense and he came up with some big shots."
After trailing 47-45 at the half, Zydrunas Ilgauskas scored eight straight points early in the third quarter to give Cleveland a 56-51 lead. James added a free throw and a pair of jumpers for a 14-4 run and the Cavaliers didn't trail again.
Ilgauskas scored 13 points and Drew Gooden added 10.
The Cavaliers didn't disappoint majority owner Dan Gilbert, a former Pistons fan, whose Rock Financial and Quicken Loans is based in suburban Detroit. Gilbert had his own cheering section, bringing 700 of his employees to the game on 13 buses.
Bench help
James, who scored 56 points in Sunday's loss, kept the Cavaliers in the game early but the reserves stepped up, contributing 27 points to Detroit's 11. They were outscored 34-1 in Sunday's loss.
Eric Snow also seemed more in synch, scoring four points with 10 assists after going scoreless in 40 minutes Sunday.
"I'm impressed with what [Malone] did, with the new plays he put in and the defensive rotations," Gooden said.
The team seems to be rallying behind Malone after a freefall in which the Cavs lost nine of 12, barely hanging onto the fifth playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.
"LeBron and 'Z' came up to me in practice and said, 'We're with you,' " Malone said. "Other players came to me and said they told the owners they made a good choice. That meant a lot to me."