Drew Gooden scored 21 points, LeBron James
nearly had a triple-double in 30 minutes and the Cleveland Cavaliers
pulled away late in the first half for a 93-67 exhibition win over
Maccabi Tel Aviv on Tuesday night.
Gooden, who missed the two previous games with a strained leg
muscle, finished 9-of-11 from the field as the Cavaliers had an easy
time with one of Europe's top hoop squads. Gooden is 17-of-21 in the
two games he has played in the pre-season.
James had 13 points, eight rebounds and eight assists, Donyell
Marshall had 19 points and Larry Hughes 12 for Cleveland, which
outscored Maccabi 29-18 in the second quarter and held the reigning
Israeli champions to just nine points in the third.
Hughes played in only 36 games last season because of an injured
middle finger on his right hand, which required two surgeries and
caused him to miss routine layups and short jumpers. The finger
still isn't fully healed, and when training camp opened, Hughes
revealed it may never be 100 per cent.
But it's getting better, and so is Hughes' touch. So far, he has
shown signs of becoming the kind of dependable scorer the Cavaliers
had hoped when they invested US$60 million in him as a free agent in
the summer of 2005.
Tied at 32, Hughes drained a three-pointer and the Cavaliers went
on a 23-8 spurt over the final 8:18 of the second quarter to open a
55-40 halftime lead. Hughes hit another 3-pointer in the third to
put the Cavaliers up 69-47.
James, whose minutes are being closely monitored by coach Mike
Brown, added three blocks before sitting the entire fourth quarter.
Maccabi dropped to 0-4 in its pre-season with three of the losses
against San Antonio, Phoenix and Cleveland. Last year, Maccabi
defeated Toronto 105-103 at the Air Canada Centre, only the second
loss by an NBA team since the league sanctioned competition against
international teams in 1987.
Rodney Buford, who played at Creighton, led Maccabi with 19
points and former Georgia Tech guard Will Bynum had 13.
© The Canadian Press, 2007