Lip-smacking Curry spices up Warriors win vs insipid Nuggets
LOS ANGELES: The defending champion Milwaukee Bucks and resurgent Golden State Warriors completed 4-1 series victories to advance to the second round of the NBA playoffs on Wednesday.
In Milwaukee, Giannis Antetokounmpo scored 33 points as the Bucks brushed aside the Chicago Bulls 116-100 to clinch a comfortable series win and advance to an Eastern Conference showdown with the Boston Celtics.
In San Francisco, Golden State relied on 30 points from Stephen Curry and a crucial late 15-point cameo from Gary Payton II to seal a pulsating 10298 victory over reigning MVP Nikola Jokic and the Denver Nuggets. The Warriors will now face either the Memphis Grizzlies or Minnesota Timberwolves in the Western Conference semi-finals.
The Warriors, who had led the series 3-0 before dropping game four in Colorado on Sunday, dug deep in the fourth quarter to clinch victory at the Chase Center.
The Nuggets, buoyed by a towering 30-point display from Jokic, had led by eight points at the end of the third period.
But Golden State outscored the visitors 32-20 in the fourth quarter -- with Payton contributing 10 points -- to claim a dramatic win.
The victory was Golden State’s first playoff series win since 2019 ater two consecutive seasons where they missed the postseason.
“I think you could see those first three quarters we’d forgoten what it felt like to try and close out a game,” Curry said.
“The nerves, the energy, the pressure in the building. It’s been a long time since we’ve felt this. We still know how to do it but we had to grind it out. It’s a good feeling to go through and get the win.”
While Curry led the Warriors scoring, Draymond Green delivered another huge shit marshalling the defense against the threat of Jokic.
“What Draymond does is hard to quantify because the stats never do him justice,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said.
“I just feel like he’s built for the playoffs. This is what he’s all about. Regular season is hard for him because the games aren’t as meaningful and he’s at his best when the games are most important.”
In Milwaukee, Antetokounmpo was in dominant form, shooting 11-of-15 from the field and finishing with nine rebounds as the defending NBA champion Bucks romped to victory at the Fiserv Forum.
“I just wanted to set the tone, come out and play hard,” Antetokounmpo said. “Sometimes when you’re up 15 or 20 points you start being sloppy with the ball or not playing as hard.
“I think our team kept their composure, kept playing hard, kept making shots.”