Ottawa Citizen

WARRIORS WANT TO GET PHYSICAL

Game 4 win gives Cavs some much-needed momentum heading into Oakland tonight

- MIKE GANTER mike.ganter@sunmedia.ca

It sounds more like a prize fight than a basketball game, but the first punch is going to be huge in Game 5.

The team that sets the tone physically has won every game in this year’s NBA Finals, with perhaps the exception of Game 3.

That was the most evenly contested of the games and neither the Golden State Warriors or the Cleveland Cavaliers seemed able to physically distance themselves from the other. The Warriors’ win resulted from the fourthquar­ter heroics of Kevin Durant.

But in Friday’s Game 4, which the Cavaliers won handily 137116 at home, it wasn’t even close. Cleveland, now trailing 3-1 in the Finals, outmuscled and outplayed the Warriors on just about every possession in avoiding the humiliatio­n of a series sweep.

The team that is the aggressor normally gets the benefit of the whistle and that was readily apparent in Game 4 when the Cavs extended the series.

Cleveland shot 22 free throws in the first quarter compared to just 14 for the Warriors.

The Cavs weren’t particular­ly good from the line but the 14 they did make was a big part of their record-breaking 49 points in that opening quarter.

“We just didn’t play well at all,” Warriors’ guard Steph Curry said when asked about losing the physical battle in Game 4. “We didn’t give any kind of resistance in that first — I’ll call it first three minutes where they just got real comfortabl­e on our miscommuni­cation — and we got separated from bodies a little too much and let them toe up on the threepoint line.

“And in that building especially, if you allow them to get that three-point game going early, they feed off of that energy,’’ Curry said. “So that wasn’t a good recipe for us to try to get a win and we know they’re going to try that same game plan in (Monday’s) Game 5. We just got to play with more force, energy, and just lock in defensivel­y. We scored enough points to win, just didn’t get many stops.”

Heading home to Oakland, the Warriors sounded supremely confident that they can shake off the Game 4 lapse and end the series in front of their home fans.

The question for the Warriors is can they make the proper adjustment­s to avoid the Game 4 scenario from breaking out?

“You can tweak some things, but are we going to play hard,’’ said Warriors head coach Steve Kerr said when asked about possible changes. “Are we going to get after it and compete? Or are we going to do what we did the other night, which is allow three-point shooters to get open, get broken down at the point of attack, and give up offensive boards. That’s up to us. That’s nothing strategic, that’s more competitiv­e-wise.”

Kerr was blunt in his assessment of the lack of passion he saw in his team in Game 4 saying it was apparent to him from the very first play of the game.

Draymond Green, one of the tone setters in the Warriors lineup in terms of setting the physicalit­y standard, said he got exactly what he was expecting from the Cavs in Game 4 and doesn’t see that changing in Game 5.

Back home, Green expects the Warriors to surpass the compete level that he’s expecting of the Warriors for Game 5.

“Definitely,” Green said. “We’re competitor­s. We’re a championsh­ip team. So definitely.”

If there is going to be a telltale statement early on, it might be who wins the battles under the basket, or at least certainly in the paint, where Cleveland’s Tristan Thompson squares up against Warriors’ big man Zaza Pachulia.

“It’s a big part of it,” Kerr said. “Just boxing out. We didn’t do as good a job boxing out Thompson last game, and he played a really good game, made a big impact. So it’s one of the reasons we love Zaza. He’s a very physical player, not afraid to mix it up. And it’s going to be an important component (Monday), that is, getting a body on Thompson early.”

The Warriors aren’t accustomed to being pushed around in any arena, and certainly not their home arena, and how much they push back on Monday figures to go a long way to determinin­g whether this series ends in five games or heads back to Cleveland for a Game 6 on Thursday night.

We just got to play with more force, energy, and just lock in defensivel­y. We scored enough points to win, just didn’t get many stops.

 ?? RON SCHWANE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Draymond Green, right, tries to outmuscle LeBron James to the basket during Game 4 of the NBA Finals.
RON SCHWANE/GETTY IMAGES Draymond Green, right, tries to outmuscle LeBron James to the basket during Game 4 of the NBA Finals.
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