James goes West for win Crown off, but title closer

4/28/2008
ASSOCIATED PRESS
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  • Delonte West gets a high fi ve from LeBron James after his 3-pointer with 5.4 seconds left.
    Delonte West gets a high fi ve from LeBron James after his 3-pointer with 5.4 seconds left.

    WASHINGTON - King James lost his crown.

    All right, so it was his burgundy headband that went flying when LeBron James took a shot to the noggin from DeShawn Stevenson, their simmering feud nearly boiling over. James kept his cool, allowing the flagrant foul to spark him and his Cleveland Cavaliers.

    At game's end, James was just as collected, drawing waves of Washington Wizards defenders before dishing to Delonte West for a tiebreaking 3-pointer with 5.4 seconds left. That shot, along with James' 34 points and 12 rebounds, led the Cavaliers to a 100-97 victory yesterday and a 3-1 lead in their best-of-seven Eastern Conference playoff series.

    "There's been some extracurricular activities going on outside and inside this series," James said, "but I've been able to stay focused."

    The Wizards were ahead by a point with 3 1/2 minutes left in the first half when James drove to the basket, and Stevenson came from behind and swiped a hand out, clipping the Cavs' star with what appeared to be a closed fist before tumbling to the court. James kept his balance and stepped toward Stevenson, who got up and stepped toward James.

    They exchanged words, but that was it, before teammates stepped in between.


    "If we was on the park, something definitely would have escalated," James said. "But, you know, I guess that's what they want to do. They want to hurt LeBron James this series. It ain't working."

    Stevenson's take?

    "That's how it goes," he said. "It was a big game for us."

    Now the Cavaliers, who eliminated the Wizards in each of the previous two postseasons, have control, with Game 5 on Wednesday at Cleveland.

    James got help yesterday from more than just West, whose career playoff-high 21 points included five 3-pointers. Daniel Gibson made four 3s, and Ben Wallace had 12 rebounds - part of a remarkable 51-31 edge on the boards for Cleveland.

    One small sequence that epitomized things: At the end of the third quarter, Joe Smith's three-point play followed two offensive rebounds and gave the Cavaliers an 80-73 edge.

    Wizards coach Eddie Jordan was succinct: "We didn't rebound."

    Antawn Jamison led Washington with 23 points and 11 rebounds. Caron Butler added 19 points. But it was Stevenson who was at the center of the key play.

    LeBron vs. DeShawn had been mainly an off-court rivalry, prompted in part by Stevenson calling James overrated, and extending to involve rap megastar Jay-Z and one-hit wonder Soulja Boy. James' pal Jay-Z created a song dissing Stevenson that was played at a D.C. club this weekend.

    "He's worth $500 million, and he's writing songs about me," Stevenson said before tipoff. "What does that say about DeShawn Stevenson? Ballin'!"

    But besides getting outscored by 21 points by James, Stevenson appeared to give him some motivation.

    "Was it a flagrant foul? I really don't know," said Wizards center Brendan Haywood, ejected from Game 2 after shoving James. "All I know is we weren't trying to give up a layup."

    James went 1-for-2 at the line after the foul, then made a 3 on the ensuing possession, all part of a 13-0 Cavaliers spurt.

    "That," Gilbert Arenas said, "got him mad."

    Thanks to Arenas, Washington had a chance to win what turned out to be a gem of a game, a nice change after Cleveland's 30-point victory in Game 2, and Washington's 36-point margin in Game 3.

    Arenas made two free throws with 57 seconds left to get Washington within two points. After James missed a jumper, part of an 0-for-3 fourth quarter, Arenas' eight-foot fadeaway with 28 seconds left made it 97-all.

    And from there, as West put it: "I'm pretty sure everybody in the gym, including their defense, thought [James] was going to take the last shot. And I think sometimes we forget this guy has great court vision. He made the right play."

    Which was dishing to an open West, who went to high school in nearby Maryland.

    It was strikingly similar to what happened in the first-round series between these teams in 2006. That time, the Cavaliers eliminated the Wizards in Game 6 when James found Damon Jones open for a go-ahead baseline jumper in the closing seconds of overtime.

    "Washington definitely probably had a flashback," James said.