NEW ORLEANS — LeBron James refused let his sore left knee sideline him more than one game and returned to the starting lineup Friday night against the Pelicans.
Stressing that he passed all the "necessary tests" during pregame warm-ups, James added, "I don't like to miss any games. ... but more than anything I hate not being out there for my teammates."
Kyrie Irving also was in the lineup in New Orleans despite injuring his left knee a night earlier in Oklahoma City. With James sitting out the entire game against the Thunder and Irving out for part of it, Cleveland had its eight-game winning streak snapped in a 103-94 loss.
James said his knee began hurting in the second half of Cleveland's victory over Toronto on Tuesday night, but he could not recall if the injury occurred on a specific play, even after reviewing game video.
Cavaliers coach David Blatt said the fact that James could not figure out when the injury occurred left the club "pretty confident it's not an injury of a serious nature."
James said the swelling worsened before he decided to sit out Thursday night's game in Oklahoma City.
"I didn't feel like I could give my game to my teammates like I'm capable of doing," James said. "If I'm out, there's a real reason why I'm out."
James, who turns 30 on Dec. 30, said he isn't terribly interested in reducing his minutes or sitting out periodically simply for purposes of rest as long as he still feels capable of playing through pain,