The Commercial Appeal

Grizzlies season ends with Game 6 loss at Warriors

- Damichael Cole

SAN FRANCISCO — Memphis Grizzlies players were communicat­ing at a high level. They were talking and running full sprints on defense to stay in front of Golden State’s lethal shooters.

The high level of defense forced missed shots in a must-win game, but the rebounds often found the hands of Kevon Looney. When Looney passed it back out, the Warriors made the Grizzlies pay.

The Grizzlies’ biggest strength this season was a weakness on Friday night as their season ended in a 110-96 loss in Game 6 of the Western Conference semifinals at the Chase Center.

Dillon Brooks finished with 30 points and Desmond Bane added 25, but it wasn’t enough to force a Game 7.

Klay Thompson led the Warriors with 30 points and Stephen Curry added 29. Ultimately, Looney’s 11 offensive rebounds were more than any Grizzlies player had combined. That led to Golden State’s 21 second-chance points, and 13 of those came in the fourth quarter.

Here some observatio­ns from Game 6:

Warriors’ new lineup changes rebounding

Golden State played a bigger lineup for the first time this series. Looney started at center, which moved Draymond Green to power forward. This impacted the Grizzlies because Green started the game on Jaren Jackson Jr., who looked unstoppabl­e in Game 5. The Grizzlies called the first play of the game for Jackson, and Green was right on him, bulldozing through a couple of screens to get back in front of Jackson and contest the shot. Jackson shot 3for-11 in the first half.

The big lineup meant that Golden State’s offense was losing another weapon, but Looney’s presence shifted the rebounding advantage back in Golden State’s direction. The Grizzlies outrebound­ed Golden State for the first time in Game 5 55-37, but the Warriors re-gained the advantage on Friday and won the game due to the opportunit­ies off offensive rebounds. The Warriors finished with a 70-44 rebounding advantage.

Game 6 Klay Thompson

Klay Thompson has a history of showing up big in Game 6s, to the point he has earned the nickname “Game 6 Klay.”

Thompson came out hot by making his first four 3-pointers. He continued his hot play well into the third quarter, when the Grizzlies put Brooks on Thompson. Earlier in the series, Brooks said Curry was his top priority even if another Warriors player got hot.

Brooks’ impact was immediatel­y felt as he prioritize­d taking away Thompson’s space and forced him into a turnover. Thompson made eight 3-pointers, and his fourth quarter 3-pointer with 2:58 remaining to give the Warriors a 13-point lead felt like the dagger.

Dillon Brooks makes an impact

With Green limiting Jackson’s scoring, the Grizzlies needed other scorers to step up. Brooks took on the challenge by surpassing his shot total from Game 5 in the first half of Game 6. Brooks carried the Grizzlies offense in stretches with his ability to create shots. Brooks got help from Bane, but Jackson was limited to 12 points on 5 of 19 shooting and no other Grizzlies player scored in double figures

Along with Thompson’s hot shooting, Warriors forward Andrew Wiggins scored 10 points in the fourth after scoring just eight in the first three quarters. His baskets often came after the Grizzlies executed great defense for 20 seconds, only for him to knock down long twos or 3-pointers.

Contact Damichael Cole at damichael.cole@ commercial­appeal.com and on Twitter @damichaelc

 ?? CARY EDMONDSON/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Grizzlies’ Brandon Clarke goes for a rebound during Game 6 of the second round of the NBA playoffs.
CARY EDMONDSON/USA TODAY SPORTS Grizzlies’ Brandon Clarke goes for a rebound during Game 6 of the second round of the NBA playoffs.

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