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NBA-LeBron and champion Cavs get hero's welcome in Cleveland

By Frank Pingue June 20 (Reuters) - A beaming LeBron James returned home to wild celebration on Monday when he stepped off the Cleveland Cavaliers' team plane carrying the long-coveted NBA title he promised to deliver for the city's long-suffering fans. The mere sight of James set off loud cheers from adoring fans who showed up to thank the greatest basketball player on the planet for leading Cleveland past the Golden State Warriors in a decisive seventh game of the NBA Finals on Sunday. The players did not address the crowd but James appeared to take a shot at the Warriors as he disembarked the plane wearing a blue 'Ultimate Warrior' T-Shirt while holding the glittering NBA championship trophy high above his head. The Cavaliers plane touched down at around 12:30 p.m. ET (1630 GMT) and was given a water salute that saw giant arches of spray shoot over the aircraft. The plane then pulled up along a chain-link fence where thousands of fans on the other side, eager for a glimpse of James and his teammates, held up their mobile phones to capture a moment for which many had waited a lifetime. When the door to the plane opened and players started filing out, British rock band Queen's iconic anthem "We Are the Champions" blared through the speakers. Many of the Cavaliers, who made a stop in Las Vegas after winning the title in Oakland, California, hung out on top of the staircase so they could capture overhead video of the crowd before descending the steps to the tarmac. The loudest cheer was reserved for James, who carried the Cavs all season and spearheaded the greatest Finals comeback in NBA history as Cleveland became the first team to rally from a 3-1 series deficit and win the title. In each of the 32 prior instances, the team facing such a deficit had lost the Finals and only two forced a Game Seven. But the Cavaliers kept Golden State's high-powered offense from finding their groove and a dominant James became the first player in NBA history to lead the Finals in points, rebounds, assists, steals and blocks. He was unanimously voted the Most Valuable Player of the Finals after the game. It marked the first NBA title for a long-struggling Cavs franchise and the city of Cleveland's first professional sports championship since the 1964 Cleveland Browns of the National Football League. As James walked down the steps of the plane, the crowd showered him with shouts of "M-V-P, M-V-P" before breaking into a "Let's Go Cavs" chant. Traffic was so bad near the airport that many Cavs fans reportedly abandoned their cars in bumper-to-bumper traffic and walked a mile to the hangar. There was also a throng of fans on the street leading up to James's home in Akron, Ohio, many holding "Dreams Come True" signs while passing cars honked their horns. It was reminiscent of the scene two years ago when James announced he was returning to the Cavaliers four years after he left the team to play for the Miami Heat, where he won the first two titles of his storied career. "BELIEVE IT!" screamed the front-page headline of The Plain Dealer newspaper in Cleveland on Monday above a full-page photo of a teary-eyed James holding the NBA's championship trophy. Fans will get another chance to salute their Cavaliers as the team will have their championship parade and rally in downtown Cleveland on Wednesday. "Oh, my goodness. It's going to be probably one of the biggest parties -- I'm sorry, one of? It's going to be the biggest party that Cleveland has ever seen ever," James told reporters after Sunday's game. "So if you guys still have a little money left over in your budget, you guys better make a trip to Cleveland and get a little piece of it." (Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Mark Lamport-Stokes)