James scores 38 in homecoming as Heat rout the Cavs

CLEVELAND, (Reuters) – It was not a warm homecoming  but it was a spectacular one as LeBron James scored a  season-high 38 points to lead the Miami Heat to a convincing  118-90 triumph over the Cleveland Cavaliers on Thursday.

Returning to Cleveland for the first time since moving to  Miami to form a super team with Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade,  James received the hostile reception he expected from jilted  fans who booed him relentlessly from the moment he skipped onto  the court until the final buzzer.

“We came here with one goal and that was to win a  basketball game,” James said. “We did that. This was the most  complete game that we had all year from start to finish.”

For seven seasons and 619 games, James had been lavished  with love by Cleveland but on Thursday the Quicken Loans Arena  shook with boos each time he touched the ball.

The heckling reached a crescendo just before the opening  tipoff when James stepped over to the scorer’s table, poured  powder onto his hands and tossed it into the air —  repeating a ritual that had become his signature during his  time in Cleveland.
While the Cavaliers say they have moved on, their fans have  had a much tougher time letting go, having watched the local  boy grow from a high school phenomenon into a two-time league  most valuable player and a once-in-a-generation talent.

But the game provided some closure for a jilted city and a  chance to vent their anger that had been building ever since  James went on national television in July and said he was,  “taking my talents to South Beach.”

The game was played under heightened security but could not  stop a hostile crowd from sending James a clear message.
Sprinkled throughout the arena were hundreds of signs  mocking James, while in one section eight fans stood up, each  wearing a white t-shirt with one bold black letter spelling  out, ‘BETRAYED’.

Cleveland sport and entertainment celebrities, including  members of the NFL’s Browns and Major League Baseball’s  Indians, rallied around the home side, donning Cavaliers wine  and gold jerseys.

Also sitting courtside was Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert, who  in the aftermath of James’s decision to leave the team blasted  the six-time All-Star as a narcissist and deserter, saying  Cleveland would win an NBA championship before “the self-titled  former ‘king’ wins one.”

The game attracted massive interest with even U.S.  President Barack Obama offering up a thought on James’s  homecoming, saying: “It’s going to be brutal.”

If the angry welcome affected James it did not show in his  play, particularly in the opening quarter when the jeering was  its most ferocious.

James scored 10 points in the first quarter to help stake  the Heat to a 31-23 advantage. Miami cruised to a 59-40 lead at  the half that appeared to take some of the energy and venom out  of the crowd.

James looked right at home in the third quarter as he  scored 24 points to put contest out of reach and send dejected  Cavs supporters trickling out of the arena.

Wade contributed 22 points to the Miami effort while Bosh  chipped in with 15 as the surging Heat notched their third  straight win.