Magic win fourth straight, 93-87 over slumping Cavaliers

 The Orlando Magic spent last season climbing back to relevance. They're at it again.

 Terrence Ross scored 21 points, Evan Fournier added 18 and Aaron Gordon had a big dunk in the final 20 seconds to lead the Magic to their fourth straight win, 93-87 Friday night over the slumping Cleveland Cavaliers, who have dropped four in a row and 11 of 12.

   Orlando opened the season 2-6, but in winning five of six, the Magic, who had a 17-game improvement in 2018 after winning just 25 games the previous year, reached .500 for the first time.
   "It's good we've gotten back there after the way we started, but time will tell how good we are," said Ross, who made two 3-pointers early in the fourth. "We've got three tough games coming up that will test us."
 

  The Magic face a brutal stretch over the next week, playing at Milwaukee and home against the Los Angeles Lakers and Houston.
 

   Collin Sexton scored 19 points and Cedi Osman 14 for Cleveland, which pulled within 90-87 on rookie Darius Garland's jumper with 42.5 seconds left.
 

   The Cavs needed a defensive stop on Orlando's next trip, but instead they gave up a dunk on a baseline out of bounds play with just three seconds left on the 24-second shot clock to Gordon, who managed to get free in the lane and scored over Tristan Thompson.
   On Cleveland's next possession, Larry Nance Jr. threw away the ball trying to hit Sexton on the opposite wing, ending the Cavs' last chance at a comeback.
 

   Orlando's surge has come without center Nikola Vucevic, who missed his eighth straight game with a sprained right ankle.
 

   "Once the big guy comes back, we'll be even more dangerous," Fournier said. "We need to keep the same intensity and focus we're playing with now."
 

   Despite another loss, first-year coach John Beilein saw enough positives to feel good about his young squad, which is going through some expected growing pains that are hurting more than expected.
 

   "It reminded me a lot of what we were playing like at the beginning of the year," Beilein said. "We were gritty. We were tough. Just played really hard, something the coaching staff has been working with them on the last couple of weeks."
 

   Cleveland was without star forward Kevin Love, who has been battling a flu bug the past few days and stayed home to rest. The Cavs are hoping Love will be available Saturday in Philadelphia. Love recently missed three games with a bruised back and his name is already surfacing in trade rumors.