Games

Recap
 
Butler, Wizards stun Cavs, stay in series
WASHINGTON 88, CLEVELAND 87
 

By Jeff Brewer
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

CLEVELAND (Ticker) -- Caron Butler hit a driving layup with
3.9 seconds left as the Washington Wizards stayed alive with an
88-87 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game Five of their
Eastern Conference first-round series on Wednesday.

The Cavaliers lead the series 3-2 with Game Six in Washington on
Friday.

LeBron James had an opportunity to trump Butler's score and win
the series, but Cleveland's superstar drove into a clogged lane
and his shot rolled off the rim as the horn sounded.

"I was able to get to the rim, but I just missed the layup,"
James said.

But when asked point blank if he thought he was fouled on the
drive, "The King" replied, "Yes."

Butler's reaction to the victory was delayed.

"When I saw the ball that (James) shot rolling on the rim, I
thought, 'This is our season right here,'" Butler said. "Then
everyone started jumping around and celebrating, but I didn't
celebrate yet because of what happened in the Philadelphia game.

"I thought they might have blown a whistle and wanted to review
it, but once I saw everyone going to the locker room, I started
celebrating."

In the process, the Wizards picked up their first win in
Cleveland since 2006 despite playing without superstar guard
Gilbert Arenas, who will miss the remainder of the postseason to
nurse his surgically repaired left knee.

Butler struck for a career playoff high of 32 points and added
nine rebounds and five assists.

"Caron is strong enough and skilled enough to beat good defense
and he's smart enough and veteran enough to know when to make a
play," Washington coach Eddie Jordan said.

"(Butler) made a tough shot," James said. "He played a
phenomenal game tonight. He put them on his back."

James, after shooting 2-of-8 in the first half, finished with 34
points, 10 rebounds, and seven assists and scored 13
fourth-quarter points. But it was not enough.

"We put the ball in our best player's hands and we told him to
go make a play, like he has for us many times before," Cleveland
coach Mike Brown said when asked about his team's final
possession.

A three-point play by Delonte West gave the Cavaliers an 87-82
lead with 1:47 to play, but the Wizards scored the final six
points of the game to seal the win. The Cavaliers missed their
final five field-goal attempts and shot 36 percent for the game.

"I know I took one bad (3-point attempt with 1:17 to play),"
James said. "I can't take a shot like that late in the game."

Butler had nine fourth-quarter points, including a critical
putback at 1:05.

"Gilbert's a great player, he's our closer, he's a franchise
guy," Butler said. "But during the course of the season, we
learned to play without him."

A loose-ball foul on Cleveland's Joe Smith put Antonio Daniels
on the line with 43 seconds left, and Daniels sank two throws to
make it 87-86 and set up Butler's heroics.

After Zydrunas Ilgauskas blocked Darius Songaila, Daniel Gibson
fed James for a two-handed jam, giving Cleveland a 74-73 lead
with 7:38 to play.

Washington outscored Cleveland, 16-6, to end the third quarter
and led 69-65 heading to the fourth. Six second-chance points
were big for the Wizards in the third quarter.

The Cavaliers used an 11-0 run midway through the third to go on
top 59-53 at 5:15. James was instrumental, scoring seven and
assisting Ilgauskas on a layup.

Despite 13 turnovers, Washington led 45-43 at halftime thanks to
poor shooting by Cleveland, which shot 5-of-16 in the first
quarter.

"We missed 15 to 20 layups," James said.

At 3:20 of the first quarter, James and Songaila became tangled
up on the baseline and, as Songaila pulled his arm loose, he
clipped James in the face with the back of his hand.

The Wizards' forward was tagged with a personal and a technical
foul, starting a war of words. Cleveland's Anderson Varejao and
Washington's DeShawn Stevenson were assessed technical fouls
with coaches and officials needed to separate the teams.

Washington had one turnover and sank 13-of-16 free throws in the
second half. The Wizards also had seven offensive rebounds.


 
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