Albany Times Union

Curry top priority for Celtics

Golden State star’s 43-point masterpiec­e leaves series tied at 2

- Janie Mccauley

As the Boston Celtics search for answers in an effort to stop Stephen Curry in these NBA Finals, they know even their best defense won’t always be good enough.

“Steph Curry is pretty good, if you guys haven’t noticed. He can shoot the ball unbelievab­ly,” Boston guard Jaylen Brown said Sunday. “Even watching it, playing against it and even in the finals, I feel like he’s taking it up a notch a little bit. He had a hell of a performanc­e in Game 4, and we have to respond to that.”

Whether the Celtics can do a better job containing the twotime MVP will be a major key as the best-of-seven series resumes at Chase Center on Monday night with the teams tied 2-2.

Coach Ime Udoka is calling for the Celtics to mix things up and be more physical on the heels of Curry’s 43-point masterpiec­e in the Warriors’ 107-97 victory Friday in Boston.

Udoka will allow his guards some leeway in deciding exactly where to begin pressuring Golden State’s superstar — often starting well beyond the 3-point arc with the big men staying at the ready to assist.

Curry went 14 for 26 with seven 3-pointers and also grabbed 10 rebounds. Once he finds a rhythm, he can hit from anywhere, even with a defender’s hand in his face. But Udoka realizes how the career 3-point leader can quickly become just as dangerous a playmaker, too.

“Obviously, the range extends the floor some. Some of the shots that he’s hitting are only shots that he can hit and have been highly contested,“Udoka said. “He’s hit a few of those.”

The 34-year-old Curry recorded the second-best scoring performanc­e of his career on the finals stage — second only to the 47 points he put up in Game 3 of 2019 against eventual champion Toronto — and joined Michael Jordan and Lebron James as the only players age 34 or older with at least 40 points in a finals game. So, was watching the film session from Friday’s game almost as fun for Curry as what he did during it?

“Whether you play well individual­ly or not, you always know what happens at the end. It’s like watching the end of a movie. It’s always nice to know that the movie turns out great at the end,” he said.

“But I think it’s more so just the balance of watching what worked and trying to understand those patterns so that you can repeat that for the next

game. Maybe anticipate some adjustment­s that might happen. Try to slow it down and try to be one step ahead of that. In the meantime, also watching a lot of different reactions in the crowd and on the bench and stuff like that, too. That’s always some good entertainm­ent.”

Meanwhile Curry’s Splash Brother Klay Thompson scored 18 points on 7-for-17 shooting in

Game 4. Thompson’s 35.8 percent shooting is the lowest for any NBA Finals he has played, and he is making just 34.2 percent from deep — down from 58 percent on 3s in the 2019 finals.

Monday will mark the threeyear anniversar­y of when he got injured in those finals, during the Warriors’ decisive Game 6 loss to Toronto that clinched the Raptors’ first title.

 ?? Karl Mondon / TNS ?? Stephen Curry’s 43 points in Game 4 in Boston helped the Warriors even the series with the Celtics at 2 with Game 5 on Monday in San Francisco.
Karl Mondon / TNS Stephen Curry’s 43 points in Game 4 in Boston helped the Warriors even the series with the Celtics at 2 with Game 5 on Monday in San Francisco.

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