Agony in the last second <div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post"> LeBron James was well aware of the even tual out come moments before Jalen Rose released the final shot of the game. "I knew it was going in," said James, about Rose's 3-pointer with six-tenths of a second left. "It was a wide-open shot. He's made so many clutch shots in his life. I wanted the shot to go out, but I knew it was cash." The Cavaliers spoiled the return of Jeff McInnis and just about ended their hopes for the postseason in an 87-86 loss to the Toronto Raptors Tuesday night at Gund Arena</div> Full Story <div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Bitter ending for Cavaliers <font size="1">Postseason hopes sink even more, as Raptors' Rose sinks 3-pointer with less than second to play for win</font> Indeed, Cavaliers history has seen shots with swifter and more bitter finality, but this dagger cut just as deep. Another Cavaliers season ended at the hands of a Bull, or at least an ex-Bull, Tuesday. Jalen Rose buried a 3-pointer with just 0.6 seconds showing on the clock to break the Cavaliers 87-86. It stung on several fronts. First, it dropped the Cavaliers back to 10th in the Eastern Conference standings, three games back of the playoffs, which might as well be a mosquito on the horizon at this lowly juncture. It also turned back a full-throttled effort to win, complete with Jeff McInnis' stellar return to the lineup, the man the Cavaliers (32-45) insisted was their missing piece. Finally, it came against a declawed Raptor team, one that had lost seven consecutive games and 20 of their last 25 when they reported for duty.</div> Full Story
Cavs lose on a buzzer beater, then Indians lose in the bottom of the 15th, I had 3 hours of accounting homework to do, and I lose a poker game with a full house. Unbelievable. Today can't possibly be any worse than last night.