Despite James' 51, Warriors take NBA Finals opener in OT

LeBron James was a one-man team at times in Thursday's opening game in the best of seven NBA Finals. Golden State were a team throughout. And that could be the difference in this year's finals, unless Cleveland find a more balanced game.

Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) handles the ball against Golden State Warriors forward Kevin Durant (35) and guard Stephen Curry (30) during overtime in game one of the 2018 NBA Finals, Oakland, USA, May 31, 2018.

Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) handles the ball against Golden State Warriors forward Kevin Durant (35) and guard Stephen Curry (30) during overtime in game one of the 2018 NBA Finals, Oakland, USA, May 31, 2018.

When all was said and done Thursday night, Cleveland Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue wishes the NBA could have reviewed the review.

"For our team to come out and play their hearts out and compete the way we did, man, I mean, it's bad," he said moments after the Cavaliers took a controversial, 124-114 overtime defeat against the Golden State Warriors in Game 1 of the NBA Finals.

Klay Thompson hit a 3-pointer in overtime (OT) and Shaun Livingston followed with consecutive hoops, including a backbreaking dunk, as Golden State survived a postseason-career-best, 51-point explosion from LeBron James and a scare late in regulation.

Game 2 will be held Sunday night, also on the Warriors' home court, where they have won 38 of their 44 playoff games in the Steve Kerr coaching era.

Lue left the arena believing James' first career 50-point playoff game should have been enough to give the Cavaliers, not the Warriors, the early edge in the series.

"It was epic, and he did enough to carry this team to a victory," the coach said. "This is LeBron James. That's who he is. That's why he's the best player in the world.

"To do what he did tonight and come out robbed, it's just not right."

Controversial call

The final minute of regulation featured a controversial video-review reversal after it appeared the Cavaliers had taken control of the game.

Following a three-point play by James that rallied Cleveland into a 106-104 lead with 50.8 seconds to go, Durant crashed into the Cavaliers star en route to the hoop and was called for an offensive foul with 36.4 seconds remaining.

However, instead of Cleveland getting the ball with a chance to put the game away on its next possession, the referees went to the replay monitor and changed the call to a block on James, giving Durant an opportunity to tie the game with two free throws. He did.

"It's never been done, ever, in the history of the game," Lue said of the reversal. "And then tonight, in the Finals, on the biggest stage, when our team played well, played out (butts) off, man, it ain't right. It ain't right."

Durant saw it a different way.

"Last year in the regular season, same play happened to me," he said. "I knew once it was 30 seconds to go that they could review that situation.

"I knew I had my man beat and he came over late. So when they called the charge, I was surprised, but I'm glad they reviewed it."

Referee Ken Mauer said of the call reversal, "The reason for the trigger is that we had doubt as to whether or not James was in the restricted area. When over at the table, we then are allowed to determine whether or not he was in a legal guarding position. It was determined he was out of the restricted area, but he was not in a legal guarding position prior to Durant's separate shooting motion. So we had to change it to a blocking foul."

James countered immediately with another driving hoop, but this time Stephen Curry responded for the Warriors with a three-point play, putting Golden State on top 107-106 with 23.5 seconds remaining.

Cavaliers in with a chance

George Hill then had a chance to be a hero for the Cavaliers, but he missed the second of two free throws with 4.7 seconds left after having tied the score.

JR Smith grabbed the rebound of the second foul shot and dribbled the ball out to midcourt instead of going for a potential game-winning shot. The clock expired and the game went into overtime.

"He thought we were up one," Lue said.

James hit 19 of his 32 shots en route to his 27th postseason contest of 40 or more points. It also his 109th with 30 or more, tying Michael Jordan for the most in NBA history.

However, James went 0-for-4 in overtime, and his teammates made just two hoops in the five minutes, allowing the game to get away,

While the Cavaliers missed their first five shots of overtime, the Warriors ran off nine consecutive points. Two free throws by Durant began the run.

Final word to the warriors

The outcome was never in doubt after Draymond Green bombed in a 3-pointer for a 119-109 lead with 1:36 remaining, but that didn't prevent tempers from flaring with 2.6 seconds remaining. Tristan Thompson was ejected at that point in an incident during which he pushed the basketball in Green's face.

Kerr insisted he wasn't surprised to see the Cavaliers, a distinct underdog in the series, put up such a tough fight.

"It's not going to be easy," he said. "We're playing a great team. They've been to the Finals four years in a row, just like we have, for a reason. They have a guy who is playing basketball at a level that I'm not sure anybody's ever seen before, so it's going to be a tough series."

After using their patented third-quarter spurt to go in front by as many as seven points, the Warriors found themselves in a 94-all tie before Green and Curry hit consecutive 3-pointers to create a six-point lead with 4:39 to go in regulation.

The Cavaliers rallied, though, eventually taking 104-102 lead on James' final-minute three-point play.

Curry finished with 29 points, Durant 26 and Thompson 24 for the Warriors, who have now beaten the Cavaliers in Game 1 four straight years in their historic stretch of consecutive duels in Finals.

Green just missed a triple-double with 13 points, 11 rebounds and nine assists for Golden State, which is attempting to repeat as champions.

Kevin Love had a 21-point, 13-rebound double-double for the Cavaliers, who beat Golden State 4-3 in the 2016 Finals, sandwiching Warriors titles. James also found time for eight rebounds and a team-high eight assists.

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