
Paul Pierce scored 23 points, Ray Allen 16 and Kevin Garnett 13 in his first regular-season game since last March as the Celtics, overlooked by some this preseason, ended an 11-game losing streak in Cleveland and snapped a 16-game skid by visiting teams in games between the Eastern powers who figure to meet again sometime in May or June.
"It was a good Day One," Pierce said. "Psychologically, you want to go into a team's building and win, especially in a place where we haven't won in a few years. It's great to come here and get a win. We know when we come here next time that we can do it again."
Pierce made two crucial jumpers and two free throws in the final 1:03 to pace the Celtics, whose drive to a second straight title was derailed when Garnett injured his knee late last season. Rasheed Wallace, added as a free agent during the offseason, had 12 points.
James scored 38 and O'Neal added 10 points - just two after halftime - and 10 rebounds for the Cavaliers, who won their first 23 home games last season but are already 0-1 on their floor.
Cleveland's offense never found a rhythm as the Cavs tried to figure out how to best use the 7-foot-1, 325-pound O'Neal.
"We'd like to start off 1-0, but there are 100 games left," said O'Neal, who was just 1 of 5 from the floor in the second half and missed his only two free throws. "We'll be fine. I've been on teams that started 0-1, 0-5, 5-0, 10-0. Nothing matters unless you win the whole thing."
Each of the NBA's four best teams last season (Lakers, Cavs, Celtics, Magic) appear to be even better, meaning one of them is likely to capture the title next June. Charley Rosen looks at how those teams match up with each other and whether anyone in the West can challenge the champs.Lakers vs. West contendersCavs vs. Celtics vs. MagicLakers vs. Magic matchupLakers vs. Celtics matchupLakers vs. Cavs matchup