Cleveland---Weary and sore, the Cleveland Cavaliers are fighting injury and exhaustion in the NBA Finals while trying to outlast the Golden State Warriors and end their city's half-century sports title drought.
The Cavaliers, ahead 2-1 in the best-of-seven series, received good news Wednesday when doctors said guards Matthew Dellavedova and Iman Shumpert would be ready for game four Thursday.
Australian standout Dellavedova was hospitalized with severe cramping after scoring 20 points in Tuesday's 96-91 Cleveland victory, needing intravenous fluids following the effort.
"I've pushed the limit a few times, but that's probably the tightest I've been," Dellavedova said. "I'm feeling good now though. I'll be ready to go."
Shumpert suffered a bruised left shoulder in the first quarter after running into a screen set by Golden State's Draymond Green.
"I'm sore but it'll be all right," said Shumpert. "You have to play hard as you can until you are in a state of complete exhaustion. We can be tired after the season. We refuse to let somebody play harder."
That attitude starts with LeBron James, who is averaging an NBA Finals record 41 points, 12 rebounds and 8.3 assists as he tries to bring his hometown its first champion since the 1964 NFL Browns.
"You just try to give everything you have," James said. "After the game I'm able to decompress. I'm not getting much sleep but I'm OK... it's taxing, but I accept the challenge."
But does Cleveland have the energy to keep silencing the NBA's most prolific scoring attack?
"I definitely think this team has more than enough in the tank," Shumpert said. "Toughness is just knowing in your mind you're going to take a lot: exhaustion, injury, fatigue, teams making a run at you. We find a way to pull it out and keep the train on the tracks."
The Warriors have not led at the end of any quarter except after over-time in game one, the period in which the Cavaliers lost Kyrie Irving to a fractured left kneecap. Since then, Dellavedova has shined despite the toll it took Tuesday.
"We're doing a lot of things," said Dellavedova. "Right now it's just getting as much fluids in as you can and just trying to eat a lot."
AFP