INDEPENDENCE, Ohio – Unable to corral Rajon Rondo so far in the NBA playoffs, the Cleveland Cavaliers may resort to Plan LeB.

LeBron James, it’s your turn.

With Rondo coming off an historic 29-point, 18-rebound, 13-assist performance in Game 4, Cavaliers Coach Mike Brown said Monday he plans to use an assortment of players to try to slow the seemingly unstoppable Celtics point guard and one of them could be James, the league’s two-time MVP and a first-team all-defense selection.

“We’re going to give ‘Bron an opportunity,” Brown said.

Rondo’s not scared.

“I don’t really care who’s guarding me,” he said.

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That’s been apparent through the first four games of this ping-ponging series, tied 2-2 going into tonight’s pivotal Game 5 at Quicken Loans Arena. Rondo, no longer viewed as the fourth Celtic behind Boston’s Big Three of Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen and Paul Pierce, has been destroying the Cavs — particularly Mo Williams and Anthony Parker — with his dribble penetration and playmaking.

Rondo is averaging 21.8 points, 13 assists and 8.3 rebounds, eye-popping, LeBron-like numbers that have forced the Cavs into rethinking, and, perhaps, redesigning their defensive strategy. One obvious option is the switch to James, who has shut down Pierce so far and said Sunday he would be willing to check Rondo.

Brown worries that if James is taken off Pierce, Boston’s streaky forward may find his touch after averaging just 11.8 points and shooting only 32 percent through four games.

“You put LeBron on Rondo when he’s doing a nice job of making Paul work and you have to put a smaller guy on Paul and we all know what Paul is capable of doing,” Brown said. “You do that for long stretches and it can open up a can of worms, and it puts some pressure on LeBron to work defensively throughout the entire game. We’ll pick and choose our spots when to put LeBron on him.”

If James indeed gets assigned to Rondo, he’ll join fellow superstars Kobe Bryant and Dwyane Wade, who both have had to check Rondo.

Rondo isn’t dreading a one-on-one confrontation with James.

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“It’s happened before,” he said. “LeBron is going to be LeBron. He’s a great help defender so he’s definitely going to be helping. He’s a good defender.

“They did that a couple of years ago when Kobe was checking me in the finals. So, I’m used to bigger guys guarding my shot and challenging me late because of their wingspan.

“I really don’t care. If he checks me, he checks me. It’s not going to change the way we run our offense.”

The Cavaliers did little more than some light shooting and conditioning after returning home following their 97-87 loss on Sunday.

The primary objective was to break down tape of Game 4, when Rondo joined Oscar Robertson (1963) and Wilt Chamberlain (1967) as the third player in playoff history to have at least 29 points, 18 rebounds and 13 assists.

“We watched, basically, the tape on him,” said Cavaliers center Zydrunas Ilgauskas, who has dropped out of Brown’s postseason rotation. “It’s hard for one guy to stop him because he is that good. It’s going to take all five.

“We always knew that he was a hell of a player.

“Maybe we were so worried about The Big Three that in some degree we’re underestimating him and that was our biggest mistake.”

 


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