NBA: Lakers and Cavaliers Clash (8:00 PM ET, TNT)
In a possible NBA finals preview Thursday night, Cleveland will host the Los Angeles Lakers, who have a score to settle after being embarrassed 102-87 by the Cavs on Christmas Day. It was a lump-of-coal-in-the-stocking-loss that ended with irate Lakers fa
2010-01-21
In a possible NBA finals preview Thursday night, Cleveland will host the Los Angeles Lakers, who have a score to settle after being embarrassed 102-87 by the Cavs on Christmas Day. It was a lump-of-coal-in-the-stocking-loss that ended with irate Lakers fans tossing foam fingers—and a few filled water bottles— onto the Staples Center court in anger. In tonight’s rematch, the host Cavaliers are 3.5-point favorites at Sportsbook.com, but the majority of bettors, 83%, are looking for the Lakers to keep ti close or pull the upset.
In December, with Mo Williams scoring 28 points, James adding 26 and Shaquille O’Neal acting as their enforcer, the Cavaliers bullied the defending NBA champions, whose frustration level led to them retaliating with some cheap shots and being slapped with several technical fouls.
“We didn’t like that Christmas game,” Lakers center Pau Gasol said. “It was very disappointing on our part. We’ve got to try to get that ballgame when we play them again. We need to do that. You never want a team to get the confidence they can beat you, especially when it’s somebody you might see down the road in the playoffs.” The Lakers are 33-20 ATS versus teams outscoring their opponents by three or points game over the last two seasons.
The stop in Cleveland begins a demanding, eight-game road trip for the Lakers (32-9, 18-22-1 ATS), who have the league’s best record in part because of a favorable schedule. They’ve played just 15 road games—compared to 25 for the Cavs—and the imbalance has helped Los Angeles open a five-game lead over Dallas in the Western Conference. L.A. is 9-6 on the road, but just 5-10 ATS.
That could change depending on how the Lakers handle a stretch of eight games in 13 days, including three sets of back-to-backs. Last season, Los Angeles went 6-0 on a similar Eastern trip that helped propel the Lakers to a title.
First, though, they want to erase the memories of an unhappy holiday that was particularly hazardous for forward Ron Artest.
“That Christmas game was tough, and then that whole day wasn’t too good for me, anyway,” said Artest, who suffered a concussion in a fall at home hours after the loss to Cleveland. “We feel like we’re a better team now than when we played them before.”
The Cavaliers believe they are better, too.
At 32-11 (20-22-1 ATS), Cleveland has the best record in the East, and with 23 of their final 39 games at home, the Cavs have a chance to run away from Boston, Orlando and Atlanta, their closest competitors in the conference. They just returned from a West Coast trip, where they displayed some bad habits—a tendency to rely too heavily on James—and also some new offensive wrinkles with O’Neal on the floor. They are on a run of 15-6 ATS at home vs. teams with a winning road record.
Seconds after LeBron James and his Cavaliers teammates dismissed the Toronto Raptors on Tuesday, one excited Cleveland fan began a solitary chant.
“Beat L.A., Beat L.A.,” he screamed.
Dude, chill. It’s January. But maybe not too early to dream about June.
After all, Kobe Bryant and the Lakers are coming.
Lakers coach Phil Jackson doesn’t want his team to get too caught up in Thursday’s matchup or the Lakers’ upcoming trip, which will take the club to New York on Friday and won’t conclude until Feb. 1 in Memphis.
“Last year’s road trip jump-started our season,” he said. “I’m setting a low bar for this team, though. We don’t need to put too much emphasis on the entire trip as a whole. We just need to play good, solid games and avoid injuries, starting in Cleveland. We don’t assign a whole lot extra importance to that game, even though it is an interesting game.”
Cleveland is a 3.5-point favorite with total of 194.5 at Sportsbook.com and has covered seven straight as home favorite of 4.5 or less points. The one potential downfall for the Cavs is they have not covered the number in their last seven games (0-6-1 ATS) off a win and is 27-12 UNDER in home games after failing to cover two of their last three against the spread.
The Lakers are 29-14 ATS as an underdog over the last three seasons and will want to get that bad taste out of their mouths from Christmas Day. Los Angeles has covered their last four Thursday assignments and is 18-6 UNDER when playing with two days rest since last season.
This is the 8:05 Eastern matchup on TNT and the underdog is 5-1 ATS in the head-to-head series with the UNDER 5-0 in Cleveland.
The StatFox Power Line shows Cleveland by 5, and getting a chance to back the Cavs as this small of a home favorite is a rarity.
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