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LeBron-less Cavaliers survive Mavericks’ comeback

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Irving scores 33, gets

critical steal in fourth

Associated Press

CLEVELAND

There was no LeBron James to save the Cleveland Cavaliers in crunch time. He was on the bench.

So Kyrie Irving stepped up.

Irving scored 33 points and made a key steal on Dirk Nowitzki in the closing seconds as Cleveland — playing without James — held on for a 99-98 win over the Dallas Mavericks on Wednesday night.

James got the night off as Cavs coach Tyronn Lue chose to rest his superstar as part of his plans to keep Cleveland’s starters fresh for the playoffs. The Cavs didn’t really miss James until the Mavericks stormed back from an 18-point deficit in the fourth quarter.

Then, Irving came through.

“Honestly, it was a personal challenge,” said Irving, who was aware the Cavs are just 4-12 in games without James the past two seasons. “We know what the record is. I know I took it personally and I have to lead the team whether he’s in or out.”

Dallas had several chances to take the lead in the final 2:30, but the Mavericks missed two open 3-pointers and had a costly turnover before Irving swiped a pass intended for Nowitzki with 2.9 seconds left.

Nowitzki felt Irving may have fouled him.

“Kyrie magically appeared with the ball,” Nowitzki said. “That’s really all that happened.”

Irving was fouled and made two free throws before Dallas’ Deron Williams hit a 3-pointer at the final horn to conclude a frenzied finish.

Although his team gave up two huge leads, Lue was thankful to escape with a win on a night he put long-term goals ahead of Cleveland’s record.

“I don’t feel lucky,” he said. “We were up 20 twice. They came back and made a game of it. Guys competed. We were able to keep fighting and fought through it and we were able to win the game.”

Kevin Love had 23 points and 18 rebounds for the Cavs, who improved to 19-2 at home against Western Conference teams dating to Jan. 21, 2015.

After an injury knocked him out of the playoffs last season, Love knows it’s important the team be able to cope when James sits.

“It’s a learning experience for us,” he said. “It’s a chance for us to grow. I think that teams look at when ‘Bron is out and think,’This is a game we can grab.’ Or, ‘We hit them in the head and they’ll lay down.’ Tonight we didn’t do that. We came out aggressive.”

Nowitzki and David Lee scored 20 apiece for the Mavericks, losers of six of seven. Dallas came in tied with Houston for the seventh playoff spot in the Western Conference. J.J. Barea scored 17 points and fueled the Mavericks’ comeback in the fourth.

“We had enough chances,” Nowitzki said. “I think we turned the ball over two or three times in the last 2 minutes. We gave ourselves a chance. I had a 3 that went out to go up one and Devin (Harris) had one to go up again. We had a horrible first quarter and third quarter. We had to keep fighting back.”

The Cavs used a pit stop at home to give James a break. Cleveland just returned from a four-game trip out West and the Cavs will hit the road again later this week to play Orlando and Miami