Home Sports Australia Cavaliers hold off Hornets for seventh straight win

Cavaliers hold off Hornets for seventh straight win

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Source :- PERTH NOW NEWS

Donovan Mitchell’s 32 points and Jarrett Allen’s 26 points carried the Cleveland Cavaliers as they extended their season-best winning streak to seven games by beating the host Charlotte Hornets 118-113.

James Harden had a strong second half and finished with 18 points and eight assists while Sam Merrill provided 10 points for the Cavaliers. Allen grabbed 14 rebounds and shot 11-for-15 from the floor.

The Cavaliers made enough plays down the stretch and benefitted from 26-for-28 free-throw shooting to win for the 12th time in 13 games. Mitchell went 12 of 13 from the foul line.

Kon Knueppel made seven three-point shots on the way to 33 points for the Hornets, who took their third loss in four games following a nine-game winning streak. LaMelo Ball and Brandon Miller both finished with 18 points, Ryan Kalkbrenner had 12 points and 13 rebounds, and Josh Green added 11 points.

Charlotte trailed 114-108 with less than 40 seconds to play, but Miller’s three-pointer trimmed the spread to 116-113 with 16.7 seconds remaining before Mitchell sank two free throws.

The Cavaliers ended up 10-for-21 (47.6 per cent) on three-point attempts.

The Hornets, who tried to rely on perimeter shooting by going 20-for-56 (35.7 per cent) from beyond the arc, lost for the second night in a row.

Charlotte’s comeback from an early deficit resulted in a 64-62 lead early in the third quarter before the Cavaliers regained momentum.

Cleveland was up 30-20 after one quarter and led by 15 in the second.

Seven of Charlotte’s first 10 field goals were three-pointers, but the Hornets still faced a double-digit deficit because the Cavaliers held a 13-4 edge in scoring from the free-throw line.

The Hornets made a push late in the first half, and they were within 59-53 at the break despite committing 10 turnovers. Cleveland shot 52.6 per cent from the field in the opening half and ended the night at 53.2 per cent.