The Province

The Christmas matchup might have been a dud, but more Warriors-Cavs, please ... OKC has figured it out ... NBA ratings way up ... Towns, Kuzma now household names

- Ryan Wolstat has the latest news from the NBA rwolstat@postmedia.com Twitter: @wolstatsun

Golden State-Cleveland was no Christmas classic, but still, give us more!

This remains one of the NBA’s great rivalries and even though James

Harden is a deserving MVP frontrunne­r at this point, LeBron James and Kevin Durant are the league’s premier talents.

This corner doesn’t see any team beating a healthy Warriors squad, but like when Michael Jordan played, anything is possible when a team has someone as good as James. Whether you rank James second-best ever, first, fifth ... nobody can debate his place in the Top 10 and we’re not sure how you don’t place him in the Top 5.

His teams will always have a chance and they gave a Warriors team that is nearly unbeatable in Oakland a game on Christmas Day, leading after the first quarter and never down more than nine points, even though the franchise has only had one worse shooting night from two-point range and despite the fact that James didn’t play well (but he definitely was fouled at the end by Durant). Yes, the Warriors didn’t have

Stephen Curry, but the Cavs played

without Isaiah Thomas, Iman

Shumpert and Derrick Rose and the bench shot just 6-for-26.

The teams will meet again on Jan. 15 in Ohio and there’s a decent chance both squads will finally be fully healthy for that battle.

With Boston fading, Toronto likely overachiev­ing and Washington lacking depth, Warriors-Cavaliers IV remains the most likely June outcome.

MELO-DRAMA ON HOLD

Oklahoma City looked like the biggest disappoint­ment of the season early on, but has rallied nicely, with

Carmelo Anthony finally settling into the complement­ary role he is more suited for at this stage of his career.

Even when the Thunder struggled, the analytics indicated this was a solid squad, just one that played horribly in the biggest moments. OKC lost its first five games decided by six points or fewer, but has responded with wins in 9-of-10 close games since, including the Christmas Day upset of Houston.

As a result, Russell Westbrook’s crew is now only a couple of games back of Minnesota for the West’s final homecourt playoff spot in the first round.

Why is that particular­ly important? The Thunder is 13-4 at home, a dismal 6-11 away.

RATINGS BONANZA

The NFL might be bleeding viewers, but the NBA freight train keeps on gaining steam.

ESPN and ABC said Christmas viewership was up 39% over last year and Philadelph­ia-New York drew the most viewers for a Noon ET game since 2012.

OKC-Houston pulled in the best numbers for a Prime Time game on the 25th since 2003.

While the NFL still pulls in a lot more eyeballs in the United States, that league’s popularity is sagging at a time when basketball continues to get bigger.

The Washington Post reported earlier this week that NBA ratings are up 20% overall from 2016-17 and are the best since the Miami Heat superteam captured the public’s attention in 2010-11.

WHO DA MAN?

Breakout star of the Christmas slate of games?

Kyle Kuzma scored 31 points, becoming the first rookie to notch at least 30 on Christmas since LeBron in 2003. Kuzma also did something Kobe Bryant never accomplish­ed: Score 30 three times as a rookie for the Lakers

(Magic Johnson did it four times). Kuzma’s now averaging better than 21 points over his past 10 games. Not bad for the 27th pick of the 2017 draft (acquired with for D’Angelo Russell Brook Lopez in a shrewd bit of work by Los Angeles).

Boston’s Jayson Tatum scored 20 and only missed two shots. He’s second in the entire league in threepoint percentage (50%, behind only George Hill).

Both of the rookies have been solid all year and now a lot more people know about them because so many people watched them play on Christmas.

Joel Embiid was great in Philadelph­ia’s win over New York, however, Embiid is a flamboyant personalit­y and everybody knows who he is at this point, so, we’ll go with Karl-Anthony Towns as the holiday breakout star. Towns (with a big assist from

Jimmy Butler) has Minnesota sitting fourth in the West (despite a rough season from Andrew Wiggins).

Towns is rightly known for possessing one of the most complete offensive games in basketball – he can drain threes like a shooting guard, or dominate inside – but he stood out on Monday at the other end of the floor, recording two crucial blocks to snuff out any final Los Angeles thoughts of stealing a victory. Towns finished with four rejections, hauled in a game-best 10 rebounds and was +18, also the best mark on either team.

Towns will be one of the faces of the NBA for years to come.

AROUND THE RIM

Speaking of awful road records, injury-ravaged Utah was just 3-13 away (all records and stats prior to Tuesday’s games), one of the worst marks in the NBA, yet remained in the race for the West’s final playoff spot, just behind Portland and New Orleans. The Jazz also just unveiled perhaps the most distinctiv­e uniforms in the NBA, bright gold and deep burgundy creations that will certainly stand out … Milwaukee enquired about centres JaVale McGee and Zaza Pachulia. Golden State has moved rookie Jordan Bell into the starting spot and the Bucks lost Greg Monroe in the Eric Bledsoe deal, so the idea makes some sense, though John Henson is playing well … Golden State is 20-0 when quasi-centre Draymond Green records a triple-double. Per ESPN, Magic Johnson (24) and Wilt Chamberlai­n (21) are the only players to record longer tripledoub­le win streaks. Green became only the sixth player to turn the trick on Christmas Day and only the third since 1971.

 ?? AP ?? Golden State Warriors forward Kevin Durant celebrates after blocking a shot by LeBron James on Christmas Day.
AP Golden State Warriors forward Kevin Durant celebrates after blocking a shot by LeBron James on Christmas Day.
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