ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) – Dwight Howard dominated the  overtime period to lift the Orlando Magic to a 116-114 victory  over the Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday, putting the home team  on the verge of a trip to the NBA finals.  

Howard’s two free throws with 21 seconds remaining capped a  10-point effort in the extra session as the centre nicknamed  ‘Superman’ finished with 27 points and 14 rebounds to help the  Magic leave LeBron James’s Cavs facing a stunning series  defeat.  

“Now it’s time to close it out,” Howard told reporters  after guiding his team to a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven  series.  
“We have to have the killer instinct. If we want to win a  championship this is what it takes.” 
 
League MVP James recorded 44 points to reach the 40-point  barrier for the third time in the series, but all those games  have ended in losses for the top seeded Cavs.  
James made two free throws with less than a second  remaining in regulation to send the game into the extra  session, but his three-point attempt to win the contest at the  overtime buzzer hit the rim of the basket before bouncing away.  

Owners of the best record during the regular season,  Cleveland won their first eight games in the playoffs, but have  struggled to match up against the Magic, while dominant  displays from James have not been emulated by team mates. 
 
Cavaliers guard Mo Williams had 18 points, but shot just  5-for-15 from the field, while Delonte West added 17.  
Orlando made 17 three-pointers, a postseason  franchise-record, with six from point guard Rafer Alston who  netted 26 points.  
The Magic led by eight points midway through the fourth  quarter, but Cleveland clawed back to lead 98-97 with 1:05 left  in regulation.  
Rashard Lewis, who made a game-winning three-point bucket  in Game One, drilled a baseline three to put Orlando up 100-98  with four seconds left, but James drew a foul and made his free  throws to take the game into overtime.  

Howard scored the first six points in overtime to put the  Magic a step closer to their first NBA Finals since 1995.  Orlando can close out the series in Game Five on Thursday in  Cleveland. 
 
“It gets harder and harder,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy  said. “When you’ve got a guy as great as (James) on the other  side, you’re a long way from being done.”  
James, averaging 42.2 points per game during the conference  finals, may need more heroics to help the Cavaliers become just  the ninth team in NBA history to overcome a 3-1 series deficit.  

“I have to figure out a way not to have eight (turnovers),”  said James, who also added 12 rebounds and seven assists.  
“That’s unacceptable to me.”

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