LeBron James rejoined the Cavaliers and brought a lot of excitement with him.

Just not quite enough for a Cleveland victory.

James scored 33 points in his return from a two-week layoff but couldn't prevent the Cavaliers from going down to their sixth straight loss, 107-100 to the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday night.

James displayed his array of booming dunks, acrobatic drives and 3-point shots.

"I couldn't make those moves two weeks ago," he said. "For me to come back and feel like myself again is pretty cool."

Markieff Morris scored a career-high 35 points on 15-of-21 shooting for the Suns, who outscored the Cavs 11-3 over the last 3:31.

Morris refused to talk to reporters afterward, walking away from them in the locker room.

The Cavaliers rallied from a 19-point, third-quarter deficit to go ahead in the fourth, the first of eight lead changes down the stretch.

J.R. Smith, who joined the Cavaliers during James' absence, scored 29, going 8 of 14 on 3-pointers.

James, who took time off to rest his sore left foot and lower back, made 11 of 18 shots, 6 of 8 in the second half.

"I thought he was terrific," Cleveland coach David Blatt said. "It is not new for anybody. I just thought he laid it out there. That wasn't an easy thing because he hasn't played a competitive game in eight games."

The Cavaliers were 1-7 in James' absence and have lost nine of 10 overall to fall below .500 at 19-20.

But at least they have their superstar back.

" I thought I was going to run out of gas," James said. "Yesterday at practice my lungs were burning. I was able to get my second wind today. `'

The Suns, opening an eight-game homestand, have won 11 of 15.

Kyrie Irving, who averages 21 points, scored nine of 4-of-14 shooting for the Cavs.

Cleveland was down 80-61 with 3:26 to play in the third quarter, then finished the period with an 18-5 flourish.

In the final seconds of the quarter, James made a thunderous dunk, then Smith stole the ball in backcourt and sank a 3-pointer at the buzzer to cut the Suns' lead to 85-79 entering the fourth.

The Cavaliers took their first lead since the opening minutes when Tristan Thompson dunked off a pass from James to make it 90-88 with 7:31 to play.

James gave Cleveland its last lead, 97-96, with a driving layup 3:52 from the finish. The Suns made nine of 11 free throws from there, the last four by P.J. Tucker in the final 18.1 seconds. Phoenix's lone field goal in the final run was Alex Len's tip-in.

With Morris not talking, it was left to his teammate to others to talk about his performance.

"Superstar, All-Star, everything," Goran Dragic said. "He played unbelievable. He was our force tonight."

Suns coach Jeff Hornacek said Morris "was awesome, especially in that fourth quarter."

"We had a stretch where we had a lot of bad things going on," Hornacek said. "We just pounded it into Markieff and he came through, play after play."

James had not played since Dec. 28 to rest his injuries.

He practiced for the first time since then on Monday, then flew to Texas to cheer on Ohio State in the national college football championship game. He said he got back at 12:30 a.m.

The Cavaliers survived a big scare in the first half.

With 9:12 left in the second quarter, James took an elbow to the head from Tucker and fell to the floor. He stayed there for a moment, surrounded by all his teammates, before slowly getting up. He stayed in the game, though.

James' first basket was a powerful reverse dunk from the baseline, then he ended the half with an equally impressive stuff, but the Suns led 59-51 at the break.

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Here's the video of James pushing Blatt:

 

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