- Associated Press - Monday, June 15, 2015

CLEVELAND — Wearing a leather Cleveland Cavaliers cap and a steely look, LeBron James used his postgame platform to proclaim that he’s “the best player in the world.”

It’s not as if his greatness was in dispute after five dominant games of these NBA Finals. James has shown no one challenges his on-court supremacy. However, while his game and confidence soar, James knows he must do even more, if possible, to stop Cleveland’s inspiring postseason from crashing.

“I’ve got to be better,” James said.

Even that might not be enough.

Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors are one win from a golden trophy.

Holding a 3-2 advantage in a scintillating series loaded with subplots and strategy, the Warriors can win their first title since 1975 on Tuesday night with a victory in Game 6. James didn’t blink after Game 5 when he declared he was not only the top player on seven continents, but prepared to raise his game.
“We’ve got enough to win it,” he said. “I feel confident.”


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But so are the Warriors, and James’ bravado — and his preposterous postseason statistics — won’t matter if Curry, who found his stroke a few games back in Quicken Loans Arena, shoots the way he did in Sunday night’s 104-91 win.

Curry scored 17 of his 37 points in the fourth quarter, answering every one of James’ big baskets with stunners of his own as the game’s two biggest stars played “H-O-R-S-E” to the delight of a sonic crowd inside Oracle Arena.

Curry showed why he was the league’s MVP this season, setting the Warriors up to take home the shimmering Larry O’Brien Trophy. Treated for dehydration after Game 5, Curry is expected to have fully recovered as the Warriors try to finish the Cavaliers.

“We fought hard all year and put ourselves in good position now to go to Cleveland and hopefully close it out,” Curry said. “We’re confident.”

James stands in Golden State’s way, and clearly intends to do everything in his power to force Game 7. It’s unfathomable to think James can give any more than he already has, but he has no choice.

“I don’t put a ceiling on what I’m capable of doing,” he said. “I know I’m shouldering a lot of the burden, but it is what it is.”

After a 40-point, 14-rebound, 11-assist performance, he’s averaging 36.6 points, 12.5 rebounds and 8.8 assists — a mind-boggling statistical line never before seen in Finals history. James is doing it all with all-stars Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love recovering from postseason surgeries, sparking debate about whether he deserves to be the Finals MVP, win or lose. Jerry West is the only player to win MVP honors for a losing team when he did so in 1969.

Cleveland’s supporting cast isn’t pulling its weight. The Cavaliers got early baskets from J.R. Smith in Game 5, but the streaky shooter didn’t score in the last 33 minutes. Guards Iman Shumpert and Matthew Dellavedova went a combined 5-for-18 and were tentative with the ball.

Cavaliers coach David Blatt matched Golden State coach Steve Kerr’s smaller starting lineup in Game 5, electing to play center Timofey Mozgov for just nine minutes after the 7-footer scored 28 points with 10 rebounds in Game 4. Blatt was defensive about his decision, snapping that he did what he felt necessary.

“Did I make a mistake?” asked Blatt, who had James at center for long stretches and didn’t indicate he’ll change for Game 6. “I felt that the best chance for us to stay in the game and to have a chance to win was to play it the way that we played it.”

The Cavaliers didn’t expect to be in this position after losing Love in the first round, and not once Irving broke his kneecap in Game 1.

They’ve been discarded before, so this latest adversity is nothing new to James and his teammates.

When he led the Cavaliers to his first Finals in 2007, James watched as San Antonio finished off a sweep in Cleveland, Tim Duncan and the Spurs reveling in their championship under a shower of confetti. Now in his fifth consecutive Finals, James doesn’t want this storybook postseason to end.

Judging by his demeanor after Game 5, that’s the plan.

“We’ve got enough to win it,” he said. “I feel confident.”

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