After Monday's embarrassing home loss to the Golden State Warriors, LeBron James made it clear that he wasn't going to panic , that his Cleveland Cavaliers weren't going to self-destruct, and that the No. 1 team in the Eastern Conference was going to work on getting back to the business of beating up on the competition. So far, so good. [ Follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr: The best slams from all of basketball] On Wednesday, the Cavs drubbed the woeful Brooklyn Nets. On Thursday, they returned home to Quicken Loans Arena to face a higher class of competition in the red-hot Los Angeles Clippers, who entered the Q as winners of 11 of their last 12 despite losing Blake Griffin to injury nearly one month ago ... and Cleveland drubbed them, too. The Cavs withstood a strong opening quarter from the visitors, used a 12-2 mid-second-quarter spurt to take control and kept L.A. at bay the rest of the way to score a 115-102 win in the opening half of TNT's weekly Thursday night doubleheader. James led the way with 22 points on 9-for-17 shooting, 12 assists and five rebounds without a turnover in 35 minutes, spearheading a ball-movement-heavy Cleveland attack that produced 29 assists on 42...