Waterloo Region Record

Warriors win rematch

Cavaliers’ shooting goes cold in loss to defending champion Golden State

- Marla Ridenour

OAKLAND, CALIF. — If the Cleveland Cavaliers forgot what the rugged intensity of the playoffs felt like, the renewal of their rivalry with the Golden State Warriors on Monday in Oracle Arena likely left them with a few black and blue reminders.

The teams met for the first time since Game 5 of the National Basketball Associatio­n finals June 12 in Oakland, when the Warriors captured their second championsh­ip in three consecutiv­e meetings against the Cavs.

The Christmas Day rematch might have felt like a lump of coal for the Cavs, at least where their shooting prowess was concerned.

The Cavs shot just 12.5 per cent from the field in the second quarter and finished at 32 per cent, losing 99-92 in the nationally televised game.

The Cavs saw their streak broken of scoring at least 100 points in 26 consecutiv­e games, which had been the longest active streak in the league.

As poorly as the Cavs played, LeBron James tied the score at 92 with a driving layup with 1:59 remaining. Draymond Green put the Warriors on top 95-92 on a three-pointer off an assist by Kevin Durant with 1:33 left and James turned the ball over (his seventh of the Cavs’ 13 turnovers) at the 1:10 mark.

After a Jordan Bell miss, Durant blocked James’ driving layup with 24.5 seconds remaining, Durant’s fifth swat of the day. Klay Thompson made two free throws to boost the margin to 97-92 with 18.9 seconds left. Andre Iguodala blocked Kevin Love’s 3-pointer with 16 seconds to go to seal the Cavs’ fate.

Love seemed most immune to the malaise plaguing the Cavs, scoring 31 points with 18 rebounds. He made nine-of-25 shots from the field, six-of-11 from three-point range and seven-ofseven from the free-throw line.

James was relatively quiet, scoring 20 points on seven-of-18 shooting with six rebounds and six assists in 40 minutes. James did not attempt a field goal in the third quarter and scored just three points from the free-throw line in the quarter.

Durant led the Warriors with 25 points, seven rebounds and three assists, Klay Thompson contribute­d 24 points and seven rebounds and Draymond Green had his first triple-double of the season with 12 points, 12 rebounds and 11 assists.

The Warriors were without four-time all-star guard Stephen Curry, who came in tied with Durant for the team lead in scoring with a 26.3 average. Curry missed his ninth consecutiv­e game with a sprained right ankle. Also out for the Warriors was centre Zaza Pachulia (sore left shoulder), who has been sidelined for eight in a row.

But the Warriors had more energy on defence, more hustle on offence than the Cavs, who seemed frustrated for much of the game.

The Cavs shot just 3-of-24 from the field in the second quarter, all of the makes coming on threepoint­ers. It was the worst the Cavs had shot in a quarter since April 2015 against the Boston Celtics. Keeping the Cavs in the game was Love, who had 18 points and 15 rebounds at the 6:27 mark in the third quarter.

Of the Cavs’ newcomers to the rivalry, Jae Crowder made the biggest impact with 15 points.

The Cavs’ reserves, who came in averaging a franchise-record 40.6 points this season, sixth in league, was virtually no factor, finishing with 21 points. Kyle Korver and Jeff Green combined to make two-for-nine from the field, each scoring three points.

Tempers flared in the first quarter when Durant and Jose Calderon got into an altercatio­n, Durant was called for a technical foul at the 6:32 mark. The bad blood continued with Calderon more upset than he’s ever been in his first Cavs season and James pulling Calderon away from the fray. In that spat, with 5:25 to go in the second quarter, Green received a technical.

Cavs coach Tyronn Lue knew the matchup would be different without Curry.

“Watching the last few games, Durant’s more aggressive. I think Klay’s more aggressive,” Lue said in pre-game. “With Steph off the floor, you lose that lethal guy, always running around, always got to pay attention to, can’t make a mistake because he’s going to make you pay. With that being said, Durant’s a lot more aggressive, he has the ball in his hands a lot more as well as Klay. They have a lot of talent and enough guys to make it work until Steph gets back. But they are a different team.”

 ?? THEARON W. HENDERSON, GETTY IMAGES ?? LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers hangs on to the rim after a slam dunk against the Golden State Warriors. The Warriors won, 99-92.
THEARON W. HENDERSON, GETTY IMAGES LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers hangs on to the rim after a slam dunk against the Golden State Warriors. The Warriors won, 99-92.

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