CLEVELAND -- There are two seasons for the Cleveland Cavaliers: drama and playoffs. They're equally adept, it seems, in both.

Yet another season was riddled with potholes and puddles, some particularly deep ones this time. But it'll be yet another Eastern Conference finals for LeBron James and the "other" Cavaliers, as "Saturday Night Live" dubbed them, after they completed a bludgeoning sweep of the Toronto Raptors with a 128-93 victory on Monday.

First, three stats that are worthy of their own moment:

Next week, James will take part in his 10th conference finals in the past 12 years. He has been part of a series sweep in six consecutive seasons, which is an NBA record. The Raptors take an uncomfortable footnote in that book after again being swept by James' team on the same day on the calendar: May 7.

LeBron James gets some rest for real now after sweeping Toronto and watching Philadelphia extend its series against Boston. Jason Miller/Getty

The last item is going to be jagged for Raptors fans. The Cavs have beaten the Raptors in 10 consecutive playoff games dating back to 2016. That's the longest streak of its kind in league history. It might be enough for the Toronto front office to execute a coaching change with Dwane Casey, who finished the regular season as a legitimate Coach of the Year candidate.

That's what being unlucky enough to be in the same conference as James this decade will do to you. James has broken up many teams, and there might be another notch in his belt coming.

"You're looking at probably one of the guys that's going to go down as one of the greatest ever, and it's a matchup nightmare for anybody," Casey said. "We've seen it with Michael [Jordan], we've seen it with Kobe [Bryant], we've seen it with a lot of great players ... for whatever reason, we got the unlucky draw every year, going against him."

Bron's Plan The only players in NBA history to be part of a sweep in a best-of-seven series in more than two consecutive seasons are LeBron James and teammates of LeBron James. Most consecutive postseasons with best-of-seven sweep LeBron James 6 2013-18 Kevin Love 4 2015-18 Tristan Thompson 4 2015-18 J.R. Smith 4 2015-18 Kyrie Irving 3 2015-17 Iman Shumpert 3 2015-17 >>Source: Elias Sports Bureau

Looking broadly, the Cavs essentially strengthened as a group as the series went on. Shaking off the grip that the more physical Indiana Pacers put on them in a brutal seven-gamer, the Cavs were much more comfortable with the matchups against the Raptors. That manifested itself offensively, as the Cavs rediscovered the potency they showed during the season and got more comfortable with each game.

By Monday, the Cavs' starters were moving around like it was an open gym, getting wherever they wanted on the floor and picking at Toronto's weaknesses. JR Smith got hot, Kevin Love and Kyle Korver stayed hot, and George Hill, well, he had two dunks in the first quarter after having five the entire regular season.

By the end of the third quarter, Cleveland's starters were a combined 25-of-40 shooting, and all of them were in double figures to combine for 91 points. For a team that was wheezing offensively and on the precipice of falling behind the Pacers 3-1 as James' supporting cast wilted, it was a stunning turnaround -- even by Cavs standards.

No one's pivot was stronger than that of Love, who scored 23 points in Game 4 to finish a strong three-game stretch in which he averaged 25 points and 11 rebounds. In the previous five games, he averaged 8.8 points and shot 26 percent.

"As everyone was burying my teammates alive throughout that first-round series, I was just telling them, 'Listen, we can't win without each and every one doing their job and being as great as they can be,'" James said. "I continue to preach that. It's impossible for me to lose confidence in our ballclub, no matter what the stakes are or what we're down."