The Phnom Penh Post

Irving delivers another dagger as the Cavaliers stun Golden State

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KYRIE Irving’s turnaround jump shot over Klay Thompson with 3.4 seconds left lifted the NBA champion Cleveland Cavaliers to a 109-108 Christmas Day triumph over the Golden State Warriors on Sunday.

The rematch of last June’s NBA Finals headlined the league’s holiday slate – and didn’t disappoint.

The Cavaliers – who rallied from 3-1 down in the championsh­ip series last season to deny the Warriors a second straight title – trailed most of the game and were down by as many as 14 earlier in the fourth quarter.

LeBron James’s rim-rattling dunk with 1:43 to play put Cleveland up 105-103 – their first lead since early in the first quarter – and Irving capped the comeback with a clutch shot that recalled his championsh­ip-winning 3-pointer in the final minute of Game 7 in June.

“He’s just a killer on the court,” Cleveland coach Tyronn Lue said.

A beaming Irving said it was the perfect holiday treat.

“It’s nothing like the playoffs,” he said, “but the intensity was up there. This is what you want to be a part of as a profession­al.”

‘We gave them a gift’

Irving finished with 25 points, while James had 31 points and 13 rebounds. Kevin Love had 20 points and six rebounds for the Cavs.

Kevin Durant, who arrived at Golden State as a free agent in the off-season, was superb in his first appearance in the Warriors-Cavaliers rivalry.

Durant scored 36 points and pulled down 15 rebounds. But after Irving’s key basket he was unable to get off a potentiall­y game-winning shot, getting tangled with Richard Jefferson and hitting the floor. No foul was called and time ran out.

“I was trying to make a move. I didn’t fall on my own,” said a clearly irked Durant.

Thompson scored 24 points and Draymond Green added 16 despite foul trouble.

NBA Most Valuable Player Stephen Curry scored 15 points but connected on just four of 11 from the floor.

It was a modest showing for the prolific Curry, but his 3-pointer with 1:14 to play put Golden State up 108-105.

Curry gestured to the Cleveland crowd in celebratio­n, but it proved to be too soon.

“We’re mad, man,” Thompson said. “The way we lost that game, we gave them a gift.”

The contest was the highlight of the NBA’s five-game Christmas Day line-up.

Smart response for Celtics

The Boston Celtics opened the action with a 119-114 victory over the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden, where Marcus Smart’s tiebreakin­g 3-pointer with 47.8 seconds to play helped the visitors thwart the Knicks’ comeback bid.

Al Horford found Smart for the key basket for the Celtics, who had appeared to be cruising toward a fifth win in six games when they held leads of 109-96 with 4:58 remaining and 112-104 with two minutes left to play.

But after the Knicks reeled off eight straight points to knot the score at 112-112 with 66 seconds left, the Celtics needed Smart’s heroics.

“I was going for the shot,” Horford said. “It kind of was one of those things that I saw him there and you feel the defence out there sometimes. So it’s just about making the right, easy play. I hit him and he hit a huge shot.”

Smart had enough time to set his feet and drain the unconteste­d 3.

“He drew multiple defenders and kicked it out. I know most teams are going to leave me open,” said Smart, who has connected on 27.9 percent of his 3-point attempts this season.

“I got an opportunit­y to knock down a big shot for my team.”

In San Antonio, LaMarcus Aldridge hit his first 11 shots from the floor en route to a season-high 33 points in the Spurs’ 119-100 victory over the Chicago Bulls.

The Spurs built a 20-point firstquart­er lead but had slipped behind midway through the third quarter before again roaring past the Bulls in the final 16 minutes.

Russell Westbrook scored 31 points and handed out 15 assists to lead the Thunder to a 112-100 victory over the Minnesota Timberwolv­es in Oklahoma City.

Westbrook also pulled down seven rebounds for the Thunder, who had 22 points from centre Steven Adams of New Zealand and 20 from Turkey’s Enes Kanter.

In the Timberwolv­es’ first appearance in a Christmas Day game, the young Minnesota team shot 55 percent in taking a 27-23 first-quarter lead.

But they couldn’t keep up the pace and the Thunder, led by a gleefully relentless Westbrook, pulled away for a third straight victory.

“I just go out and have fun,” Westbrook said. “I don’t know if it’s the most fun I’ve ever had, but it’s definitely at the top because of the group of guys we have. Everybody is so unselfish. Everybody is willing to do great things.”

The Lakers capped the day with a 111-102 victory over an injury-depleted Clippers in an all-LA duel.

The Lakers beat the Clippers for the first time since October 2013, snapping an 11-game skid against their cross-town rivals.

 ?? JASON MILLER/GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Kyrie Irving (second left) scored with a turnaround jump shot with 3.4 seconds left on the clock to lift the NBA champion Cavaliers to a 109-108 Christmas Day triumph over the Golden State Warriors on Sunday in Cleveland, Ohio.
JASON MILLER/GETTY IMAGES/AFP Kyrie Irving (second left) scored with a turnaround jump shot with 3.4 seconds left on the clock to lift the NBA champion Cavaliers to a 109-108 Christmas Day triumph over the Golden State Warriors on Sunday in Cleveland, Ohio.

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