Cavs falter, series is tied



Gilbert Arenas sparked the Wizards to a 106-96 win over Cleveland.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Hold on, LeBron. Gilbert Arenas and the Washington Wizards aren't quite ready to pack it in.
With LeBron James suddenly, stunningly, quiet after a tremendous first half Sunday night, Arenas recovered from an awful start to lead Washington's comeback for a 106-96 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers, tying the first-round series at 2-2.
"Oh, man, that was night and day, wasn't it?" Arenas said after putting behind a six-point, 1-for-9 first half to finish with 34 points -- 20 in the fourth quarter.
Overshadowed
So much attention during this series has been focused on James' NBA postseason debut, leaving Arenas feeling a tad overshadowed. He is, after all, a two-time All-Star who finished fourth in the league in scoring this season.
"This is LeBron's show, you know. We're just all witnesses," Arenas said with a broad smile, mimicking a catch phrase used in James' shoe ads.
At halftime, everything looked quite good for James and Co. and rather bleak for the Wizards. James set franchise playoff records for points in a quarter (18) and half (25), Arenas was struggling, and Cleveland was up 57-46.
Another half anything close to that, and Cleveland would head home for Wednesday's Game 5 with a 3-1 edge.
But two key things happened in Washington's locker room.
First, the always-quirky Arenas changed his jersey, shorts, shoes and tights, saying what he was wearing had brought bad luck. Then -- and, quite likely, more importantly -- Wizards coach Eddie Jordan told his players he'd deviate from his highly regimented Princeton offense and wouldn't dictate plays.
"That's all we said: Just loosen up, got out and have some fun, I'm not going to call plays," Jordan said.
Second half rally
It worked, of course, but there was much more to it than that, as Washington outscored Cleveland 60-39 after the break. For one thing, James was nowhere to be found at times in the second half. He took only three shots in the third quarter, missed all, and wound up with 38 points.
James finished with six rebounds and five assists, but he also had seven turnovers, including four offensive fouls.
After one in the fourth quarter, he put his palms up and mouthed, "What did I do?" His coach, Mike Brown, crumpled a paper cup and threw it to the ground.
During Saturday's off-day, it was Jordan who spoke about the referees, saying he thought James was getting preferential treatment.
James passing off
Still, in crunch time, as Washington was padding its lead and using smaller, quicker players to guard James, the 21-year-old star wasn't taking Cleveland's shots. Nope, it was the likes of Donyell Marshall, Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Damon Jones who were getting touches. Flip Murray wound up scoring 19, and the only other Cavaliers player in double figures was Ilgauskas with 13.
Arenas got going a bit with eight points in the third quarter, as Washington whittled a 13-point deficit. He was fouled on a drive to the basket with 0.4 seconds left in that period, and with chants of "M-V-P! M-V-P!" ringing off the rafters, he made both free throws to tie the game at 72.
That figured to set up Bron-Bron vs. Gil, Part II, after their down-the-stretch duel in Game 3. In that one Friday, James hit the go-ahead shot with 5.7 seconds left in the game to finish off his 41-point performance, before Arenas -- who scored half of his 34 in the fourth quarter -- missed an open 3-pointer that would have won it.
On Sunday, James opened Sunday's fourth quarter with a 3-pointer, his sixth of the game, but Arenas answered from beyond the arc. Antawn Jamison tacked on another 3 for Washington, giving the hosts their first lead since early in the second quarter, and Arenas added a long jumper to make it 80-76.
Arenas had help
Just as in Washington's Game 2 victory, Arenas got plenty of help from his top sidekicks, Jamison and Caron Butler. Jamison had 22 points and 10 rebounds, and Butler added 21 points -- 14 in the second half -- and some tough defense on James.
James began 6-for-7 from the field -- 4-for-4 on 3s -- and scored 15 of the Cavaliers' 16 points in one first-half stretch.
That's when Jordan ripped up his script, in part because former Wizards guard Larry Hughes was telling his Cleveland teammates what plays were on the way.
"Coach said, 'Throw away the plays,' " Arenas said. " 'Throw away the plays?' All right. That's like playing outside."
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