So I'm looking up at the TV a few skinny minutes before 9 o'clock last night, and, oh, look, it's the Cleveland Cavaliers and New York Knicks in Game 1 of the NBA Eastern Conference finals, and, wow, the Cavs are up 15 with three minutes to play in the third quarter, and this is HUGE, because they're playing in Madison Square Garden and the Knicks have just been rolling through the playoffs so far ...
I'm sorry, what?
Will this sentence eventually have a period in it?
OK, fine. Here's your period. Three of them, in fact.
Now where was I?
Oh, yeah, right: The Cavs. Rolling themselves. Moving the basketball like a metronome. About to erase homecourt advantage for the previously indomitable Knickerbockers.
And then ...
If you live in Cleveland, you might want to stop reading now.
That's because the Cavaliers' lead was up to 22 points with 8:19 to play in the fourth quarter, and now it was not just a win but a certified freaking blowout. Except ...
Except over on the Knicks' bench, head coach Mike Brown and his assistants noticed something.
What they noticed was James Harden was bouncing the ball an awful lot for the Cavs, as he tends to do. They also noticed his age (36). And they also noticed the age of their own bucket-filler, 29-year-old Jalen Brunson.
That's seven years of fresher legs, if you're keeping score at home.
And so, right about then, the Knicks told Brunson to start attacking Harden offensively. And suddenly the 22-point deficit began to melt like an ice cube on an August sidewalk. And before long the Knicks had outscored Harden and the Cavs 44-11 -- 44-11! -- the rest of the fourth quarter and overtime, and Cleveland's blowout became a shocking 115-109 win for New York.
In that same span, the Cavs shot 29.4 percent, missing six of their seven shots in overtime.
Harden was 1-for-6.
And Brunson?
Scored 16 of his game-high 38 in the fourth quarter and OT.
You could call that a choke job of epic proportions by the Cavaliers. Or, you could be nice and call it an equally epic comeback by the Knicks.
Me?
I prefer to call it a horrendous pun, as is my wont.
To Cav ... and then, to Cav not.
I'll be here all week, folks.