James’ final basket gives Cavs 91-88 win


His twisting bank shot with 19.3 seconds remaining beat the 76ers.

CLEVELAND (AP) — The Philadelphia 76ers learned a painful lesson.

On the rare occasion when LeBron James has a poor game, the Cleveland Cavaliers’ next opponent is usually in trouble.

James made a twisting bank shot with 19.3 seconds left to put Cleveland ahead to stay and the Cavaliers defeated the 76ers 91-88.

James, who finished with 26 points, took the ball at the top of the key, drove through the lane and put Cleveland up 90-88. After a Philadelphia miss, Cleveland forward Joe Smith was fouled and made one free throw.

Andre Iguodala, who led the 76ers with 19 points, missed a 3-pointer at the buzzer.

James made 4-of-17 shots and scored 13 points in Saturday’s 85-71 loss to Detroit. The NBA’s leading scorer answered his poor game less than 24 hours later. James was 11-of-18 from the field with nine rebounds and nine assists.

James’ performance was no surprise to Philadelphia coach Maurice Cheeks.

“That’s what superstars do,” Cheeks said. “They rarely have two bad games in a row. He has a tough game in Detroit, came back and played the way he’s capable of playing. That’s why the superstars play.”

James patiently dribbled beyond the foul line before heading into the lane for his winning shot.

“The plan was to attack, but I didn’t think it was there in the beginning so I backed up,” he said. “I was able to get it off the backboard.”

James, with some help from Delonte West, also contested Iguodala’s attempt to tie the game.

“I thought LeBron did a heck of a job getting through the screen and contesting the shot without fouling,” Cavaliers coach Mike Brown said.

“I felt like I got a decent shot and I had a chance,” Iguodala said. “It just didn’t go down.”

The news wasn’t all good for the Cavaliers, whose grip on the fourth seed in the Eastern Conference has been slipping thanks to a three-game losing streak and seven losses in nine game going into Sunday.

The surging 76ers lost consecutive games for the first time since Feb. 1-4 and remained a half game behind Toronto for the sixth playoff spot in the East. Philadelphia has won seven of 10 and went 11-4 in March.

“It was a tough loss for us,” Cheeks said. “To play Cleveland like this, with LeBron, it’s like playoff basketball.”