Daily Dispatch

Warriors soar to the summit of NBA glory

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KEVIN Durant became a champion and lifted Golden State to near-perfection as the Warriors celebrated their fifth NBA title Monday, defeating Cleveland 129120 to win their second NBA Finals in three seasons.

Sparked by 39 points from Durant, who left Oklahoma City last July in quest of his first crown, the Warriors took the best-of-seven series 4-1, reclaiming the throne they lost to the Cavaliers a year ago.

Golden State completed a 16-1 playoff run, the best post-season win percentage in NBA history, and added to titles won in 2015 and 1975 plus those from 1947 and 1956 when the team was based in Philadelph­ia.

“There are a lot of superteams that haven’t worked,” said Durant. “But we come together and we’re the champions now.”

“We were able to get them last year and they went out and got one of the best players this league has ever seen,” Cavaliers star LeBron James said. “Obviously it paid dividends.”

Durant, who was named the NBA Finals Most Valuable Player, became the first player with five consecutiv­e 30-point performanc­es in the NBA Finals since Shaquille O’Neal in 2000.

“I couldn’t sleep for two days,” Durant admitted. “I was anxious. I was jittery. I just wanted to put it all out there.

“We battled. But we did it. We’re champions. And we’re celebratin­g on our home court.” James scored 41 points to lead Cleveland.

He also had 13 rebounds and eight assists, giving him a triple-double average for the finals, an unpreceden­ted feat. But James, in his seventh consecutiv­e playoff series and eighth overall, fell to 3-5 in the championsh­ip round.

“Emotions are all over the place right now,” said James. “I left everything on the floor every game. So for me personally I have no reason to put my head down. It’s just not my time.”

Stephen Curry added 34 points and 10 assists while Andre Iguodala came off the bench to score 20 points. Kyrie Irving added 26 points and JR Smith 25 in a losing cause.

“We’ve learned from everything we’ve been through to bring [the trophy] back home,” said Curry. “I’m just proud to be part of something special and I just want to do it again.” After dropping last year’s title, when Cleveland made the greatest comeback in NBA Finals history from a 3-1 deficit, the Warriors vowed not to stumble again.

“We were heartbroke­n last year, but this year was our turn and we’re obviously quite happy,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “These guys are so gifted and committed to each other and so unselfish. It’s a combinatio­n of talent and an unselfish nature.”

Kerr found himself watching a combined seven All-Stars on both clubs and marvelling at the showcase of talent on display.

“It was a hell of a series. Five games didn’t do it justice, just for how competitiv­e it was,” said Kerr. “There were times where I was just stunned looking at the talent on the floor. Incredible high-level basketball out there.”

James hit a layup to open the fourth quarter and pull Cleveland within 9895, as close as the Cavs had been in the second half after trailing by 17 in the first half.

Golden State responded with a 10-3 run, Durant scoring five as the Warriors stretched their margin back to 108-98.

Kyle Korver’s three-pointer pulled the Cavaliers within 108-102 but dunks by Durant and Andre Iguodala boosted Golden State’s lead to 112-102, and the Warriors kept Cleveland at bay, a Durant driving layup stretching Golden State’s edge to 118-106 with five minutes remaining.

From there, the Warriors defence stiffened and the Cavaliers congratula­ted the Warriors as the finals seconds ticked off the clock and the crowd went wild.

At the end, the gutted Cavaliers gathered in the locker room and emotions took over. “We had a moment,” Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue said. “I broke down so I couldn’t really finish my speech. A lot of guys cried because they wanted it bad. And that’s all you can ask.”

James made a fast-break slam dunk over Durant for a 41-33 Cleveland lead.

But Golden State answered with a game-turning 27-4 run, slam dunks by Iguodala and Draymond Green and three Durant three-pointers spicing the spurt that produced a 60-45 Warriors lead. “Couple turnovers, couple bad shots and that led to them getting out on the break and getting out in transition,” said Lue. — AFP

 ?? Picture: TPX IMAGES ?? BASKET FULL OF TRICKS: Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James shoots against Golden State Warriors forward Kevin Durant (35) during the first quarter in game five of the 2017 NBA Finals at Oracle Arena. Warriors have taken an unassailab­le 4-1 lead in...
Picture: TPX IMAGES BASKET FULL OF TRICKS: Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James shoots against Golden State Warriors forward Kevin Durant (35) during the first quarter in game five of the 2017 NBA Finals at Oracle Arena. Warriors have taken an unassailab­le 4-1 lead in...
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