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Ouch! Lebron did say karma was a “B”….

The Cleveland Cavaliers lost their way into the NBA record book in fitting fashion – not with a blowout, but with the kind of head-slapping plays typical of a team that can’t do anything right. The Cavs seem destined to join this club of truly awful NBA teams.

Like a 7-foot center losing a jump ball to a 6-foot-2 guard. And a decent outside shooter deciding to pass as time expired instead of putting up a potential tying 3-pointer.

The miscues doomed the Cavs to a 99-96 loss to the Dallas Mavericks on Monday night, making it 25 straight losses, the most in league history no matter how it’s counted. Cleveland set the single-season futility record a few days ago, but the league also keeps an overall losing streak record that takes into account skids stretched over two seasons. This topped that one, too, making the first year of the post-LeBron James era even more forgettable for the Cavaliers. The previous mark also was set by the Cavs, spanning the end of the 1981-82 season and the start of 1982-83.

“We’re in the record books, we all know that, something we don’t want to be a part of, but you can’t go back and turn back the hands of time,” forward Antawn Jamison said. “We’ve got to worry about moving forward. The most important thing is getting a win.”

They had a chance to get this one, even against a team that came in with the NBA’s longest active winning streak. The Cavs led by seven in the first quarter, got down by 15, but kept clawing back. They tied it early in the fourth quarter, then were down only 80-79 when center Ryan Hollins lined up for a jump ball against Dallas guard Jason Terry.

It was an odd scene. Terry crouched a bit to get more leverage into his jump and his head was around the logo on Hollins’ jersey. Yet the little guy got to the ball first, timing his jump so that he popped it to a teammate before it got up to Hollins. Terry actually hit it before the toss reached its peak, which is known as “stealing” a jump ball.

“Steal it? Well, I got two steals and I only remember getting one, so they must have given me one for that one,” Terry said, laughing. “I don’t know how I outjumped Hollins.”

The Mavs stretched the lead back to 10 points, but the Cavs fought back again. A turnover by Dirk Nowitzki with about 10 seconds left gave Cleveland the ball with a chance to tie. Anthony Parker had a good look at the basket from a few steps behind the top of the key and put up a shot that danced around the rim but refused to fall.

“It was right on the money, right on line when I let it go,” Parker said. “I got my feet into it, my legs into it, had a good look, thought it was going down. Even when it hit the front end of the rim, I still thought it would hit the backboard and trickle in, but it didn’t happen.”

Jamison got the rebound with about 2 seconds left and passed to Jamario Moon for another 3-pointer. But Moon wanted Jamison to take it, so he passed the ball back.

Oops! “Unfortunately, we didn’t recognize the time situation. We weren’t aggressive enough,” Jamison said. “It’s another way to come out on the other end of the stick.” Jamison and Moon put their hands on their heads, elbows out, in shame and disbelief. Hollins walked off with a towel stretched across the top of his head and the same pained look. It was Cleveland’s fourth straight loss by seven points or less.

“Once you are in a funk – I was in it my first two years – it almost seems like you find a way to lose,” Mavs star Dirk Nowitzki said. “That last possession was a perfect example.” Terry scored 11 of his 23 points in the fourth quarter to make sure Dallas won its ninth straight and avoided the embarrassment of being Cleveland’s streak-buster.

How fawking embarrassing…

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