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Sports

James, Cavs give 76ers rude East awakening

Aaron Bracy - Associated Press
James, Cavs give 76ers rude East awakening
Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James, left, dribbles past Philadelphia 76ers' Robert Covington during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Monday, Nov. 27, 2017, in Philadelphia. | AP Photo/Matt Slocum

PHILADELPHIA — LeBron James showed the up-and-coming Philadelphia 76ers just how high the bar is to compete with the Eastern Conference's best.

James had 30 points, 13 rebounds and six assists to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers over the 76ers 113-91 on Monday night (Tuesday Manila time).

The three-time defending conference champions won their eighth straight game. Dwyane Wade scored 15 points, and Jeff Green had 14 points and 10 rebounds.

"These guys are starting to turn the corner here," James said. "They have some great wins this year. We had to come in with the mindset that this isn't the Sixers of three years ago, four years ago. They're starting to turn the corner and you have to be locked in from the onset."

James sure was.

He scored the first nine points on his way to 22 in the first half, helping Cleveland to a 53-45 lead by draining a 3 in front of Cleveland's bench at the first-half buzzer.

"He got us off to a good start, making the shots, being aggressive, attacking the basket and everyone kind of followed," Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue said. "We knew they were a good team, they've been playing well, playing hard. We knew it was going to be a tough place to play. I didn't expect this outcome, but we played well tonight."

Lue tried to downplay any significance of Cleveland beating a team on the rise.

"We're just trying to get better each day, each game," he said. "We're finally figuring out who we are. We're getting better defensively, and offensively we're sharing the ball. We want to keep getting better."

Joel Embiid had 30 points and 11 rebounds to pace the 76ers, who had won three straight and five of six.

"We didn't make shots, we weren't aggressive defensively, and they got what they wanted," Embiid said. "I hate losing, but I think that's actually good we got our (butt) kicked, so we can go back, learn and know that we can't take any days off."

The four-time MVP James had four points, including an emphatic dunk, and J.R. Smith hit three 3-pointers early in the third as the Cavaliers took a 14-point lead. Philadelphia got within five in the period, but the Cavaliers stretched the advantage to 86-73 entering the fourth.

Kyle Korver's 3-pointer with 9:13 to play gave Cleveland a 94-77 lead.

"We will learn from this game," Philadelphia coach Brett Brown said. "We need to pressure. We need to be more active and disruptive, and they need to feel us. And they didn't."

Simmon’s struggles

Philadelphia's Ben Simmons entered leading all rookies in scoring (18.5 points), rebounding (9.1) and assists (7.7), but he was hounded all game by Jae Crowder and managed just 10 points before exiting in the fourth quarter with a right ankle sprain. Simmons, who has turned to James for career and life advice, missed all of last season with a broken right foot.

Brown provided no update on Simmons' health, and Simmons wasn't available to the media.

Crowder tried a different approach in guarding Simmons, crowding him on the perimeter and not giving him room.

"I wanted to guard him a little differently than how I've been watching other teams guard so far off him and let him get a head of steam and go downhill," he said. "I feel pretty good. It was a good challenge."

Shooting blanks

The 76ers were 3 for 28 from 3-point range, including 0 for 11 in the opening half.

Tip-ins

Cavaliers: Iman Shumpert returned after missing the last three games due to left knee soreness. Shumpert was scoreless in seven minutes.

76ers: Eagles players LeGarrette Blount, Malcolm Jenkins and Brandon Graham were seated courtside, and several other players watched from a box.

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