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Just to comment on the last few remarks...
I don't think there's a place in this series for Perk unless Golden State starts playing really dirty, which yes there have been a few pretty hard fouls, but Perk should sit.
He will clog up the paint, and when GS goes small, which I expect we will see quite a bit more of that, he doesn't really have a point in being out there, unless it's to give Timo or Tristan a rest.
Marion, on the other hand, I think has value playing in this series. GS going small, you can actually play him big.
We've just got to do a better job on defense. I think the Cavs will play much better tomorrow. I expect a repeat of the first two games where it was tight.
What really hurts is seeing the impact Kevin Love would have in this series. He would be abusing Draymond Green and Andrew Bogut on the floor. Not just with points, but with passing.
I think the other thing we can hang our hat on is getting the ball to Mozgov down low. Much like the Lebron iso-clock-draining-ball, you can have 3 guys ready to move back to kill any transition, while Mozgov works. It allows Lebron to take an offensive possession off here and there.
This Cavs team is much too close to give up now, we will see a much better effort Sunday.
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A lot of Lebron's misses were short... That screams fatigue. I know JR is taking a ton of heat, but I don't think it's entirely his fault. The looks he's getting just aren't good looks. We saw GS start to double Lebron a few times last game, if they start sending an extra guy, maybe JR can see a good shot. JR is a catch and shoot in rhythm shooter. Right now he's not catching and shooting, and therefore, there is no rhythm. They've got to figure out a way for him to get looks. More screens and probably Lebron getting down low with the ball again. Love the spark that Delly gave us coming out of the half. Seems like whenever he gets going and gets a few baskets, the whole team gets energy.
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According to Smith, contested shots are easier anyway.
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This is a decent--and somewhat humorous--article that examines how public opinion has been so fickle during this series: By Matt Zemek It could be that the volatile nature of both public and media opinion on the 2015 NBA Finals is a product of modernity and, more specifically, of the relentless nature of the sports-media news cycle. Each new year, it seems that the pressure to say something strong — and preferably before anyone else says it — intensifies to a considerable extent. Yet, it seems that opinions have enjoyed a very short shelf life in these Finals, more than in previous editions of the NBA’s championship series. Before these Finals began, the majority opinion was that Golden State was in an entirely different league compared to Cleveland. Warriors in six games represented a majority opinion of national writers and pundits, taking into account any seven-game series predictions or any “Cavs in 6″ picks as well. Following Game 1, a tidal wave of opinion flooded the Internet and the broadcast airwaves, saying that without Kyrie Irving, Cleveland had little to no chance despite controlling most of Game 1 and playing it on its preferred terms. Then Game 2 happened, and suddenly, Dellavedova was thrust squarely into the center of the national sports spotlight. “The series could be, should be, 2-0 Cleveland,” said a noticeable number of people in social media forums. That’s what dictating the tempo of two straight road games in Oakland will do for a narrative after a victory. Had Cleveland thrown away Game 2 — it came perilously close to doing so, thanks to J.R. Smith — we wouldn’t be sitting here with a best-of-three series that has proved to be supremely fascinating, though not elegantly played. As well as Delly played in Game 2, though, he went one step better in Game 3, making a difference with his offense as well as his defense and his knack for chasing down the 50-50 ball. A 20-point outing capped by a pivotal three-point play with 2:27 left pushed Cleveland into the series lead at 2-1. “Steve Kerr is getting outcoached! He needs to figure something out for Game 4!” When the flow of a series isn’t going well for a team expected by most to win, the coach becomes a convenient target, even though the NBA is widely acknowledged as a player’s league and a make-or-miss league. Golden State wasn’t hitting enough uncontested jumpers, and the combination of Draymond Green and Harrison Barnes was neither engaged in the Warriors’ halfcourt offense nor decisive in looking for opportunities to score. Then Game 4 happened, and what do you hear now — perhaps not exclusively, but enough to saturate the airwaves? “Series over! Golden State has figured things out. The Cavs are spent. Dellavedova’s overrated, as we all knew he was. Cleveland’s just not that good. This is where the Cavs need Kyrie. Oh, and David Blatt needs to use his bench.” Is anyone else suffering from a case of whiplash? I’m trying to massage my neck and upper back right now, just thinking about all these abrupt swerves and turns in the realm of public opinion. Everyone has an opinion and a right to one, but it’s worth noting the following point about opinions: They’re generally better when expressed in measured tones with sensible parameters. They are easier to accept when leavened by tempering statements and qualifiers. The wild shifts in opinion we’ve seen over the past week are rooted in the initial expectations established for this series. Golden State was placed as such a clear favorite despite the fact that not one Warrior player had ever competed in the Finals before. Golden State had played ample amounts of nerve-addled basketball in previous playoff rounds and moved through without need of a Game 7 because of opponents’ injuries (Memphis) or key breaks (James Harden’s turnover at the end of Game 2 in the West Finals versus Houston). It’s not as though Draymond Green had shot three-pointers with great confidence or accuracy against Memphis and Houston. It’s not as though Golden State was thriving as a jump-shooting team against the Rockets (at least in contests other than Game 3). Yet, the Warriors were given the clear benefit of the doubt in the Finals, with the underlying suggestion being that a Cleveland win would be wildly improbable. That might feel like an overstatement to some, and if you picked a seven-game series either way, or Cavs in six, you would have every right to feel justified in contesting that claim. Precisely because of the pre-series expectations for Cavs-Warriors, the tenor of opinion surrounding the series shifted as soon as the Cavs established an ability to consistently control the tempo and style of play. There was such profound cognitive dissonance between what most pundits thought would happen and what actually happened in Oakland. The Delly-in, Kyrie-out scenario most commentators thought was such a fatal blow to the Cavs instead turned out to be the very thing that enabled Cleveland to rest its hopes on its defense. The Cavs used their defense to thoroughly flummox Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Harrison Barnes for several quarters in a row. The decisiveness with which Cleveland kept Golden State under wraps created a sense of panic about the Warriors’ situation and their next move before Game 4. The confounding of expectations at every turn — we’ve seen it from game to game in this series — has been conducive to wild swings in opinion. After all, this is a series in which Dellavedova and David Lee have made huge contributions to their teams, and both Timofey Mozgov and Andre Iguodala are one of the two best players on the floor for their respective sides (Iguodala being the best player so far for the Warriors). Full disclosure here: While I thought that Delly would make the Cavs a better defensive team, I did not expect Cleveland to be at 2-2 through four games without one vintage J.R. Smith 30-point game on seven three-point shots. While I thought Game 1 was likely to be the most important game of the series (and Golden State’s ability to steal it could still wind up being decisive in the end), I also thought Game 3 was the Cleveland game Golden State needed to win, since LeBron had just played 50 minutes in the 53-minute second game of the series. Game 4 blew that inclination out of the water. I’ve been right about a few things in this series and wrong about a lot more things. That’s the reality of opinion-giving — you’re going to be wrong a lot, and putting forth opinions is just an accepted part of a very imperfect science. However, as often as opinions will be wrong, I’d like to think that in a 2-2 series with more plot twists than an Agatha Christie whodunit, we can refrain from being overly certain about how this series is going to end. It’s OK to have an opinion, a set of inclinations and a prediction that flows from both. What needs to decrease in these hours before Game 5 is an insistence on the outcome, a fixed idea of what’s about to happen. This series has defied the conventional wisdom far too frequently for this final week — and these final three games (perhaps only two) — to be shoehorned into the realm of certainty. Let’s also ease up on players when they show us that they are (surprise!) mortal and imperfect. LeBron James can’t be Superman every night (not with the minutes he’s played, at any rate). Delly can’t be the Heroic Role Player every night. Stephen Curry, as great as he is, can’t win this series alone. Expectations for these players have to be restrained and kept within reasonable limits. Perhaps most important of all, don’t expect two teams that are largely new to the NBA Finals to handle this series the way the 2014 Spurs or the 2013 Heat managed to do. That’s probably the biggest epiphany to emerge from these pendulum swings of public commentary on the 2015 NBA Finals. Tim Duncan, D-Wade, Manu, Bosh, Parker, Ray Allen — we grew comfortable seeing these players in June and had a history with them. We don’t have well-developed histories with the 2015 Warriors and the 2015 Cavaliers (other than LeBron) in the month of June. Therefore, it seems as though wishes and hopes are more urgently being projected on each player. Game 5 of a 2-2 NBA Finals awaits. We’ll see if opinions can be held in check this time … but don’t count on it. http://www.foxsports.com/nba/story/the-2015-nba-finals-and-the-roller-coaster-of-opinion-061315
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Nice Article.. thanks for posting.
Nice to read something that isn't snarky and negative at every turn
#gmstrong
A smart person knows what to say.
A wise person knows whether or not to say it.
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Pumped for the game tomorrow. Hopefully LeBron is fully rested.
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me too.
Been watching last two games in Mexico... will be nice to hear one in Englsih
#gmstrong
A smart person knows what to say.
A wise person knows whether or not to say it.
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The worst part about listening to the game at work..
Is its not even a radio broadcast.. they put the TV broadcast over the speakers.. half the time I dont even know what the score is..
Hopefully they can pull tomorrow night out.. because I'll be home for Game 6.. and I havent watched them lose a game yet this postseason..
The Cleveland Sports Fan part of my brain expects GS to blow the doors off of them though.. sigh..
Am I the only one that pronounces hyperbole "Hyper-bowl" instead of "hy-per-bo-le"?
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[quote]The Cleveland Sports Fan part of my brain expects GS to blow the doors off of them though.. sigh../quote]
You'll learn to suppress that as time goes on…(not saying it totally goes away though).
But on a serious note, I think the extra day of rest will do them good. They truly did just look tired to me.
WE DON'T NEED A QB BEFORE WE GET A LINE THAT CAN PROTECT HIM my two cents...
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The swing of public opinion is funny. But the criticism about the bench is still valid. The series doesn't hinge on Mike Miller or Shawn Marion. They (or the lack of them) are factors, though. I've been calling for that since game one. If we're really going to defend at the intensity level we have been and score just enough, we need more energy. I have a good feeling about game five, really. But I just think- almost no matter what the detriment- you have to give guys more breathers with Miller and Marion (particularly with GS going small, I bite that bullet and bet it's not as bad as thought to be).
Politicians are puppets, y'all. Let's get Geppetto!
Formerly 4yikes2yoshi0
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Yes, we know you think that. LOL Most of us understood that a long time ago, probably around the 20th time you said it.  Anyway.......about Game 5. I really have no idea what to expect. I won't be surprised if they blow us out. I won't be surprised if we regroup and squeak one out. It's been a really entertaining series and I suspect that neutral fans are loving the ups, downs, and the drama of it all. I think it comes down to JR, Schump, JJ, and Delly being able to hit a good percentage of their outside shots. That might force GS to stop doubling LeBron and it will certainly provide more offensive rebound opportunities for TT and Moz when we do happen to miss. Right now, JR and Shump are question marks in my mind. I hope the moment isn't too big for them.
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exactly, last game they forced a double on lebron and let our shooters get wide open looks.
if they do that again, lets hope Delly and Co can exactly hit them this time.
“To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.”
- Theodore Roosevelt
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I AM ALWAYS RIGHT... except when I am wrong.
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LETS GO CAVS
Worked out
Cleaned my car
Made dinner
Ate dinner
Had some beers
Played with cats
Had some more beers
... and it's still freaking not even close to game time. I hate these late night games. I really do, and I don't care "they" are on the west coast. I don't care at all.
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Let's go, Cavs!
I am convinced every clock in my house is broken. Still almost three hours to the game.
More running and getting back on defense could help us a bunch. Fewer threes, more paint.
"Every responsibility implies opportunity, and every opportunity implies responsibility." Otis Allen Glazebrook, 1880
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I posted in the other NBA Finals thread that the NHL results are eerily similar to the Finals outcomes, but in reverse: NHL: Game 1: Road Team won Game 2: Home Team won Game 3: Road Team won Game 4: Home Team won Game 5: Road Team won NBA: Game 1: Home Team won Game 2: Road Team won Game 3: Home Team won Game 4: Road Team won Game 5: ???? Team won It can't happen for the 5th game in a row, right?
“...Iguodala to Curry, back to Iguodala, up for the layup! Oh! Blocked by James! LeBron James with the rejection!”
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I posted in the other NBA Finals thread that the NHL results are eerily similar to the Finals outcomes, but in reverse: NHL: Game 1: Road Team won Game 2: Home Team won Game 3: Road Team won Game 4: Home Team won Game 5: Road Team won NBA: Game 1: Home Team won Game 2: Road Team won Game 3: Home Team won Game 4: Road Team won Game 5: ???? Team won It can't happen for the 5th game in a row, right? If the Warriors win tonight, and the Cavs and Lightning both win their next games, I'm rooting against the Blackhawks on Wednesday and I don't even care. I might even burn my jersey.
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Come join the darkside and become a Blue Jackets fan 
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Tonight all hinges on the energy level of us. We win this if our defense is back to game 2 and 3 standards.
I won't ever bet against LeBron James.
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Not giving up hope yet. Knew we'd get a monster punch from the Warriors. Just need to keep our composure and energy level high.
I think JR FINALLY hits some 3's tonight.
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I think JR FINALLY hits some 3's tonight. Every game I expect him to explode, but then he doesn't. It's been brewing for a long time, it's bound to happen sooner or later right?
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Hoping for a good one tonight.
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I think JR FINALLY hits some 3's tonight. Every game I expect him to explode, but then he doesn't. It's been brewing for a long time, it's bound to happen sooner or later right? Let's just hope that either sooner or later still happens in this series and not next season.
WE DON'T NEED A QB BEFORE WE GET A LINE THAT CAN PROTECT HIM my two cents...
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I ordered some more Cavs gear today!
Feeling it! Gotta make the shots they give us and when they give too much attention to LBJ.
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man our guards can't possibly have a worse night than game 4. no where to go but up!!
come Smith and shump hit those shots!!!
“To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.”
- Theodore Roosevelt
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Remember guys, we only have to win 2 more games.
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I liked Santanas instrument version of the anthem more.
Last edited by Dawg_LB; 06/14/15 08:02 PM.
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Iguadola can't possibly shoot as well as he did last game.
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Iguadola can't possibly shoot as well as he did last game. No way...
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Iguadola can't possibly shoot as well as he did last game. But Curry can shoot much better. He hasn't had a big game yet.
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WE DON'T NEED A QB BEFORE WE GET A LINE THAT CAN PROTECT HIM my two cents...
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“To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.”
- Theodore Roosevelt
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Hey Dave, how 'bout a time out to adjust?
WE DON'T NEED A QB BEFORE WE GET A LINE THAT CAN PROTECT HIM my two cents...
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Double Bron and Moz. There has to be an opening somewhere.
We need to attack the basket. We're too timid!
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TO's don't help. we trying to make these cute passes. just stop it. get back to cavs basketball.
“To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.”
- Theodore Roosevelt
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Yeah...congrats GS on the championship.. See you next year healthy and with upgrades. Delly sucks..he's playing exactly like all year. He cannot run an offense. Blatt better expand his rotation to more than 7 guys or this will be over by half. You need to find a spark.. you're not getting that from TT and stone hands mosgov, and shump is a no show in the finals. This is why you signed these geriatrics..because they have finals experience.
Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It's perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands. It hopes we've learned something from yesterday. -John Wayne
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WE DON'T NEED A QB BEFORE WE GET A LINE THAT CAN PROTECT HIM my two cents...
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