{{pageModel.leagueAbbr}} {{pageModel.subtitle}} | Las Vegas Review-Journal
National Basketball Association
BOXSCORE | RECAP
Cleveland 94, Atlanta 82
When: 8:30 PM ET, Friday, May 22, 2015
Where: Philips Arena, Atlanta, Georgia
Officials: #22 Bill Spooner, #24 Mike Callahan, #17 Joe Crawford
Attendance: 18670

ATLANTA -- No Kevin Love. No Kyrie Irving. No problem.

LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers are rolling in the Eastern Conference Finals.

James scored 30 points to fuel a 94-82 rout of the crumbling Atlanta Hawks on Friday night in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals at Philips Arena.

Cleveland heads home with a commanding 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series. Game 3 is Sunday in Quicken Loans Arena.

Atlanta forward DeMarre Carroll, who suffered a scary knee injury late in the fourth quarter of Game 1, started and played 34 minutes. That was the only good news for the Hawks, who saw both forward Al Horford and guard Kyle Korver go down with injuries in the second half.

Horford was able to return, but Korver was not with a sprained ankle. Atlanta coach Mike Budenholzer was confident Horford would be fine, but said Korver would need to be revaluated Saturday.

Cleveland has had its share of injuries, as well. They lost Love, their versatile forward, for the season to a shoulder injury in the first round of the playoffs. Irving has been battling knee and ankle injuries and was held out after visiting Dr. James Andrews. Coach David Blatt expects to know more about Irving's status Saturday.

The Cavs haven't missed a beat against the Hawks, though.

Guard Iman Shumpert scored 16 points, including four 3-pointers. James, who is looking for his fifth straight trip to the Finals, dished out 11 assists and grabbed nine rebounds to go along with his game-high 30 points.

"I've got a good vocabulary, but I'm running out of superlatives for that guy," Blatt said of James. "He's a great basketball player."

Forced to double-team James, the Hawks surrendered an abundance of open 3-point looks. The Cavs capitalized, connecting on 12 of 29 3-pointers. Shumpert followed a Matthew Delladova 3-pointer with consecutive triples to push the Cavs lead to 65-54 early in the third quarter. The lead ballooned to 19 on a James spinning layup that was part of an 18-4 Cleveland run. Atlanta had no answer and trailed 84-66 at the end of the third quarter.

"I've seen every coverage that a defense can offer me," James said. "I always try to be a triple threat on the floor, be able to score, rebound, pass."

The Cavaliers controlled the first half and took a 54-49 lead into halftime. It felt like it could have been much more. Every time the Hawks made a run, the Cavs answered. Forward James Jones came off the bench to hit three 3-pointers in the first half and Shumpert made run-killing triples in the first half. Cleveland hit 7 of 11 3-point attempts in the first half and shot 53 percent from the floor overall.

"We're the big one, one team," Blatt added. "You've got to be one team. To miss a guy like Kyrie, to miss a guy like Kevin, to miss them both together, the other guys have to raise their level and have to be committed to competing and to believing in themselves as a team. That's exactly what they're doing."

Without a superstar capable of taking over, the Hawks need contributions from all their key players. That hasn't happened in Games 1 or 2. All-Star forward Paul Millsap has struggled to make an impact, and with Carroll ailing, the Atlanta offense hasn't clicked. Millsap led the team in scoring and rebounding in the regular season but was limited to four points.

"There's a few different areas that we need to improve in," Budenholzer said. "That will be important for us between now and Game 3 to get better offensively. We still have to be good on the other end, too."

While Cleveland stayed hot from the 3-point line, Atlanta struggled for the second straight game. After going 4 of 23 on 3s in Game 1, the Hawks made just 6 of 26 3-pointers in Game 2.

Backup point guard Dennis Schroder led the Hawks with 13 points. Horford, Korver and point guard Jeff Teague each finished with 12.

Carroll said he wasn't 100 percent, but wasn't going to miss a chance to play in the Eastern Conference Finals. Carroll finished with six points.

"We still feel confident," Carroll said. "We feel that we can go to Cleveland and win."

NOTES: Cavs PG Kyrie Irving was ruled out roughly 90 minutes before the game due to tendinitis in his left knee. Irving had his left knee checked out by Dr. James Andrews, the team announced Friday. Irving is listed as questionable for Game 3 on Sunday in Cleveland. Backup PG Matthew Dellavedova replaced Irving in the starting lineup. ... The Hawks waited until just minutes before the game to announce F DeMarre Carroll (knee sprain) would start. Carroll injured his left knee late in the fourth quarter of Game 1 and had to be helped off the floor. An MRI on Thursday revealed no structural damage, and the unrestricted free agent-to-be gave it a go. ... NBA Commissioner Adam Silver was in attendance at Philips Arena. ... Referees were Joe Crawford, Mike Callahan and Bill Spooner.
Top Game Performances
 
Cleveland   Atlanta
LeBron James 30 Scoring Dennis Schroder 13
LeBron James 11 Assists Jeff Teague 6
Tristan Thompson 16 Rebounds Mike Scott 7
LeBron James 8 Free Throws Made DeMarre Carroll 2
James Jones 2 Steals Paul Millsap 2
Tristan Thompson 2 Blocks Jeff Teague 2
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Points FG% 3PM-3PA FTM-FTA Assists Rebounds Blocks Steals Turnovers
Cleveland 94 43.4 12-30 16-26 17 47 4 6 13
Atlanta 82 41.8 6-26 10-13 15 39 3 7 11
Upcoming Games
  • Atlanta will play their next game on the road against Cleveland. The Hawks have a W/L % of .754 after a win and .667 after a loss.
  • Cleveland will play their next game at home against Atlanta. The Cavaliers have a W/L % of .731 after a win and .500 after a loss.