Former Cleveland Cavaliers general manager David Griffin said Cavs superstar LeBron James was telling Toronto Raptors players how to run their own plays during the team's second-round sweep in the 2017 NBA playoffs.
On Thursday, William Lou of The Score passed along comments Griffin made about the situation during an appearance on The Bill Simmons Podcast.
"I was in the gym when I watched him on the floor against Toronto tell Patrick Patterson where he was supposed to go on the play they had called out of a timeout late in the fourth quarter," Griffin said. "He was like 'no Pat, you're supposed to stand over there and set a pin down for DeMar (DeRozan) over here.'"
Cleveland won those four games over the Raptors by an average of 15.25 points.
The Cavaliers' dominance over Toronto continued in this year's playoffs with their second straight sweep of DeRozan, Kyle Lowry and Co. The easy second-round triumph came after the Cavs barely escaped Round 1, edging the Indiana Pacers in a tight Game 7.
James' squad has knocked the Raptors out of the postseason each of the last three years.
On Thursday, William Lou of The Score passed along comments Griffin made about the situation during an appearance on The Bill Simmons Podcast.
"I was in the gym when I watched him on the floor against Toronto tell Patrick Patterson where he was supposed to go on the play they had called out of a timeout late in the fourth quarter," Griffin said. "He was like 'no Pat, you're supposed to stand over there and set a pin down for DeMar (DeRozan) over here.'"
Cleveland won those four games over the Raptors by an average of 15.25 points.
The Cavaliers' dominance over Toronto continued in this year's playoffs with their second straight sweep of DeRozan, Kyle Lowry and Co. The easy second-round triumph came after the Cavs barely escaped Round 1, edging the Indiana Pacers in a tight Game 7.
James' squad has knocked the Raptors out of the postseason each of the last three years.
I’ve had rookie clients that were completely surprised when they played LeBron for the first time and LeBron knew their entire scheme and all of their plays. It’s like this for every single team. Basketball genius. https://t.co/JbucB6Jgy5
— Nate Jones (@JonesOnTheNBA) May 10, 2018
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