James dominates as Warriors fall apart
CLEVELAND (AP) — From the edge of elimination to the brink of history.
LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers have pushed the NBA Finals to their limit. Game seven is necessary.
James scored 41 points, delivering another magnificent performance with no margin for error, Kyrie Irving added 23 and the Cavaliers sent the finals packing for California by beating the rattled Golden State Warriors 115-101 last night to even this unpredictable series and force a decisive finale.
Cleveland saved their season for the second time in four days and will head back to Oakland’s Oracle Arena for Sunday’s climactic game with a chance to become the first team to overcome a 3-1 deficit in the NBA Finals, and give this title-starved city its first major sports championship since December 27, 1964.
“One more game left,” James said, “and we’re going to give it all we got and live with the results. I’ll play it anywhere.”
James added 11 assists, eight rebounds and again outplayed two-time MVP Stephen Curry, who fouled out and was ejected in the fourth quarter.
The Warriors never imagined being in this spot. The defending champions, who powered their way to a record 73 wins in the regular season, won the first two games by 48 combined points. But Curry and Co. have lost their touch, their poise and are in danger of seeing their historic season, and a second title, vanish.
Curry got tossed with 4:22 left after he was called for his sixth personal foul, cursed several times at an official and fired his mouthpiece into the front row, striking a fan. Curry finished with 30 points, Klay Thompson had 25 and Draymond Green, back from a one-game suspension, had ten rebounds.
Steve Kerr, the Warriors coach, felt the officiating was biased against Curry, who had never been tossed before.
“He gets six fouls called on him, three of them were absolutely ridiculous,” Kerr said. “As the MVP of the league, we’re talking about these touch fouls in the NBA Finals. I’m happy he threw his mouthpiece.”
Curry walked off the floor smiling before making the long walk to the locker room.
“I didn’t think I fouled either Kyrie or LeBron,” said Curry, recounting fouls five and six. “It was obviously frustrating fouling out in the fourth quarter of a clinching game and not being out there with my team-mates. So it got the best of me, but I’ll be all right for the next game. I had some stuff I wanted to get off my chest tonight after the way the game went.”
On Wednesday, James called game seven, “the two best words ever.”
He’ll live them once more, thanks to a spell-binding effort — the two-time champion had a hand in 27 consecutive points and 35 of 36 during a stretch in the second half — and put away the Warriors after they trimmed a 24-point deficit to seven in the final period.
James scored 14 in the fourth before checking out to a thunderous ovation in the final minutes.
“He [LeBron] is one of the greatest of all-time,” Tyronn Lue, the Cavaliers coach, said. “Our back was against the wall and he took it upon himself, him and Kyrie, they put us on their backs. They’ve got us to where we wanted to be.”
In typical Cleveland fashion, there were some heart palpitations in the fourth. The Cavaliers were up 70-46 in the third, and when J.R. Smith blindly dropped a lob pass to a trailing James for a dunk, Quicken Loans shook with noise and thousands of fans packing a plaza outside the building began thinking about where they might spend Father’s Day.
The Warriors, though, weren’t done. On the same floor where they won their title exactly one year ago, Thompson made a pair of three-pointers as Golden State, playing without Andrew Bogut, their injured centre, used a 25-10 run to pull within 80-71 entering the final 12 minutes.
But James, as he did while winning two titles in Miami, made sure those belonged to him and extended Cleveland’s dream season.
For the Warriors, a golden year is suddenly stained.
“It hasn’t gone our way the last two,” Curry said. “But I like our chances in game seven.”