The Phnom Penh Post

Curry and Durant spark Warriors over Rockets to reach NBA finals

-

STEPHEN Curry inspired a second-half fightback as the reigning champion Golden State Warriors booked their fourth consecutiv­e NBA finals appearance with a 101-92 victory over the Houston Rockets on Monday.

Curry scored 27 points, with Kevin Durant adding 34 as the Warriors advanced to an unpreceden­ted fourth NBA finals meeting in a row against superstar LeBron James and his Cleveland Cavaliers.

The Warriors’ Western Conference finals Game 7 victory in Houston handed them a 4-3 series win, and came after the Rockets had led by as many as 15 points in the first half.

The Warriors had looked vulnerable after a sluggish first-half performanc­e that saw them trail 54-43 at half-time.

But just as they have done throughout the playoffs, the Warriors found an extra gear in the third period, with Curry and Durant suddenly finding their range from 3-point distance to come roaring back into the contest.

“Basketball is a 48-minute game, and no matter how badly we played, how many shots we missed, there’s always time to turn it around,” Curry said. “The second half was unbelievab­le. Happy to be back in the finals.”

The Warriors outscored the Rockets by 33-15 in the third quarter, surging into a double-digit lead that they never looked like surrenderi­ng.

‘Extremely frustratin­g’

Rockets coach Mike D’Antoni, meanwhile, attempted to put a brave face on a loss which came after his team had battled into a 3-2 lead earlier in the series.

“I couldn’t be prouder of our team,” D’Antoni said. “There’s no quit in them. We saw where the bar was this year, but we just couldn’t quite get there.

“We’ll take our summer off and then we’ll try it again next season.”

Rockets ace James Harden, who finished with 32 points, said his team’s second-half performanc­es in games six and seven had decided the fate of the series.

“One half of basketball. Two games, six and seven. We just didn’t have the same energy that we had in the first half, the pace,” Harden said. “It’s extremely frustratin­g.”

Earlier it looked as if Houston were ready to snap the Golden State-Cleveland monopoly, shrugging off the injury absence of Chris Paul to make a fast start.

The Rockets swarmed over the vaunted Warriors offence to keep the visitors firmly on the back foot.

The Warriors looked nervous from the outset, with a string of early mistakes that included two turnovers.

Durant missed three free throws in a row early on as Houston gradually pulled into a 24-19 first quarter lead.

A disgusted Kerr told a courtside television interviewe­r it was the “one of the worst quarters of basketball we’ve ever played”.

The pressure continued in the second, with Clint Capela outstandin­g on defence for Houston with a string of rebounds.

The Rockets pulled away in the second, with Harden to the fore as the hosts moved 15 points clear, with both Durant and Curry struggling from 3-point range.

A miserable first half for Golden State saw Eric Gordon make it 54-43 on the stroke of half-time with an aggressive driving layup. Yet Golden State flicked the switch after the break, and Curry and Durant soon began raining down buckets from distance.

A Durant 3-pointer tied it at 61-61 and Curry then struck with a three of his own to give Warriors a 64-61 lead, the first time they had led since a fleeting 9-7 advantage early in the first.

Two more quick threes from Curry gave the Warriors a nine-point advantage at 72-63, and from there the NBA champions were too strong as an increasing­ly desperate Houston chased the game.

Kerr later said there had been no hint of panic at half-time as the Warriors trailed. “I just tried to remind them that at half-time it was an 11-point game, and that’s two minutes. If we get a couple of stops and a few threes we’re back in it,” Kerr said.

 ?? AFP ?? The Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant (right) hug in Game 7 of the Western Conference finals against the Houston Rockets in the 2018 NBA Playoffs on Monday at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas.
AFP The Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant (right) hug in Game 7 of the Western Conference finals against the Houston Rockets in the 2018 NBA Playoffs on Monday at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia