China Daily (Hong Kong)

Deadly Durant keeps Warriors rolling

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SALT LAKE CITY — The Golden State Warriors gave another big example why they signed Kevin Durant during the offseason, and why others around the NBA were dismayed with the addition.

Durant had 38 points and 13 rebounds and the Warriors beat the Utah Jazz 102-91 on Saturday night to take a 3-0 lead in the Western Conference semifinal series.

The Jazz played their best game of the series and kept three All-Stars in relative check, but the former MVP put on a show.

“That’s one of the reasons why we welcomed him here,” Warriors acting coach Mike Brown said. “It’s tough to try to control a guy who’s 7 feet that can play out on the perimeter and have the ball. Especially when he’s as good as he is

Scoreboard

in the pick-and-roll game.”

Warriors coach Steve Kerr did not travel with the team as he continues to deal with back issues. He was at Duke University on Friday seeing a specialist and owner Joe Lacob told Bloomberg Radio that Kerr had a “spinal cord leak” procedure on his back.

Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson were a combined 7 for 29 from the field and 3 for 15 from 3-point range, leaving Durant to lead the Warriors.

The Jazz led 75-74 early in the fourth quarter, but the Warriors went on a 10-4 run and never trailed again. Curry and Durant hit back to back 3s to give Golden State a 92-84 lead with 3:04 left.

“I’m going to try to say this as humble as I can, but I’ve been doing this for so long,” Durant said, “and every time I get out the bed and we have a game that day, I feel like I can go out there and score. It’s the other things that I try to do — defensivel­y, helping my teammates, get them open shots, moving, setting screens.

“Scoring and stuff is not easy, but it’s what I do the best. When I try to do the other things ... I feel like it opens up my scoring a little bit more.”

Curry finished with 23 points on 6-for-20 shooting.

Gordon Hayward led Utah with 29 points. Rudy Gobert added 21 points and 15 rebounds.

Game 4 is on Monday night in Utah.

“Myself and the other 19,000 people in the arena and everybody watching on TV saw the same thing I saw,” Curry said.

“It’s an easy decision to make at that moment (to defer to Durant late). Try to set a screen for him and get him to the right spot and, obviously, he does the rest.

“We’re smart enough to know what’s going on at that moment and try to make the right decision and let a talented scorer like he is ... let him do what he does.”

The Warriors got out to a quick start, again, and led by 10 after the first quarter.

Utah survived the first-half onslaught by Durant, who had 22 points and six rebounds at the break.

There wasn’t much the Jazz could do to contend a flurry of turnaround fadeaways, drives to the basket and a pair of 3s. Golden State, however, didn’t get much help otherwise and Draymond Green dealt with foul trouble.

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