I'm sure the Cavs are hoping that'll be the case.
Definitely, I'd say that most (if not all) comebacks from being down 1-3 would automatically qualify as choking on the part of the team that was up. Even in the case of the eighth seeded Magic who gave up a 3-1 lead to the top seeded Pistons in 2003, you've obviously played well enough to build a commanding lead, then failed to close out the series three times in a row. Seattle blowing the 2-0 series lead to Denver in 1994 would also be up there. The 1969 Lakers, 1994 Knicks, and 2010 Celtics were all up 3-2 in the NBA Finals, dropping the final two games to let the championship slip. The 2008 Lakers squandered a 24 point lead at home in Game 4 that resulted in them going down 1-3, and though they won Game 5, they were subsequently blown out by the second largest margin of victory in a Finals game in Game 6, and the largest margin of victory in a Finals-clinching game
In some cases, there's probably a fine line between a choke and an upset, and they kind of go hand in hand too. To that end, it sort of depends on how you look at it; that is, whether you want to credit the winners, or blame the losers. If I had to define it, I'd say that a choke would involve:
- Giving up a significant lead, especially in a key/pivotal game, leading to a loss.
- Performing badly in clutch situations - "cracking under the pressure" - resulting in a loss.
- Being unable to take advantage of a favourable situation (eg blowing a 3-1 lead, losing the last two games at home, losing a series to an inferior team despite home court advantage, and so on)
- Failing to perform to capability and expectation overall (eg a 60+ win team is manhandled and eliminated by a team that barely scraped into the Playoffs, playing terribly in Game 7 of an otherwise competitive series, etc).
- In the most egregious cases, a combination of some or all of the above.
With the way the Warriors have been playing this season, if they do fall short of the championship, then I think it's fair to say that some choking was involved. That lessens as they progress through to the Conference Finals (assuming they face the Spurs there), and then increases as they face whoever comes out of the East. In all fairness, how much of a choke it is would come down to who they lost to, and how they lost, but nevertheless I'd say that becoming the first team to lose less than ten games in the regular season, dominating the competition, and then not winning the championship, has to be considered a choke, at least on some level.
That's how I see it, anyway. What's your definition of a choke? And if choke is the wrong vernacular to use here, would you instead say that the Warriors failing to capture the title after winning 73 games would be the most disappointing overall result that a team has ever suffered, given their capabilities and the logical expectations? I mean, whatever terminology we run with, a team setting so many records and looking so unbeatable throughout the regular season, only to fall short of the championship, is significant for all the wrong reasons.