Shaq: Cavs need better Irving, 'punked' Love in NBA Finals

NEW YORK (AP) Shaquille O'Neal played on the last team to overcome a 2-0 deficit in the NBA Finals, so he knows what it takes. For Cleveland, he thinks it

NEW YORK (AP) Shaquille O'Neal played on the last team to overcome a 2-0 deficit in the NBA Finals, so he knows what it takes.

For Cleveland, he thinks it starts with better play from Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love, who he said is being ''punked'' by Draymond Green.

''Because remember last year, the story line was, `OK, Golden State, you won a championship, but that's because Kyrie and Kevin Love weren't playing.' Now they're playing, now you've got to play like you know how to play,'' O'Neal said Monday night.

Irving averaged 18 points but shot just 33 percent in the first two games. Love was just 9 for 24 from the floor in Oakland, California, and his status for Game 3 in Cleveland on Wednesday is unknown because of a concussion.

He's been no match for Green, who scored 28 points in the Warriors' 110-77 Game 2 stomping.

''Kevin Love's getting punked by Draymond, he really is,'' O'Neal said during an interview with The Associated Press. ''I hate to be the one to say it, but he has to step up. You can't let a guy do the muscle thing in your face and you don't respond.''

O'Neal said his Miami Heat never lost their belief in the 2006 finals, when they dropped the first two games in Dallas and were in deep trouble in Game 3 before storming back to win four straight. ''We didn't feel like we were down and we knew we were better than that team,'' he said. ''Our whole message was just one game at a time because they're up, the pressure's not on them. Once you start to squeeze, the pressure starts to be on them.''

He thinks the Cavaliers can still get back into this series, though he's not sure if they can join the three teams to come back from 2-0 down in the Finals .

O'Neal, who provided analysis for NBA TV in Games 1 and 2, was in New York to take part in an event for American Express card members with his former Los Angeles Lakers coach, Phil Jackson.

Jackson's Chicago Bulls overcame a 2-0 deficit against the Knicks in the 1993 Eastern Conference finals en route to one of his NBA-record 11 championships as a coach. He recalls that series swinging when Michael Jordan became enraged after press accounts of his trip to Atlantic City following practice between Games 1 and 2 and ''played like a man possessed.''

''Sometimes it takes something like that,'' Jackson said, adding that LeBron James might need to find something that gets him to play with equal passion.

The Warriors' 73 victories broke the Bulls' 1996 record, but O'Neal said his 2001 Lakers would have beaten them. That team set an NBA record by going 15-1 in the postseason for the second of three straight championships under Jackson, back when O'Neal could be an even bigger physical force before rules changes loosened the game for free-flowing offenses like Golden State's to thrive.

''If you're using those rules, we'd win. Now we use these rules these days, we'd still win, because you wouldn't be allowed to touch me, you wouldn't be allowed to touch Kobe,'' O'Neal said. ''So yeah, that's how I always look at it.''

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