The Day

Warriors stay loose, Celts focused

- By TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer

San Francisco — A peek at Golden State's practice Saturday wouldn't have suggested that the Warriors are trailing the Boston Celtics in the NBA Finals.

Stephen Curry was making most of his shots, as usual. Klay Thompson was bobbing his head in time with the music in between his own shot attempts. Draymond Green was at the other end of the floor with the forwards yelling “Oh, yeah!” at nobody in particular.

The biggest game of their season is Sunday. Say this much for the Warriors: They don't seem nervous about it.

The Celtics can take a 2-0 lead — and absolute command — of the NBA Finals tonight when they visit the Warriors in the second game of the title series. It's not must-win time for the Warriors, technicall­y, but opening a series with two home losses would mean they'd need to pull off something nearly unpreceden­ted to win a championsh­ip.

“It's really important to turn the page one way or the other,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “If you win and you get happy and you let your guard down, then you're in trouble. And if you lose and you feel sorry for yourself, then you're in trouble doing that, too. It's all about how you respond.”

Boston has a similar approach. Much was made of how the Celtics didn't have any players with finals experience before the series opener Thursday night; they used a 48-18 run to pull away late and win 120108. But moments after the final buzzer, there was no celebratin­g in the winning locker room — just a reminder from Marcus Smart that, like Kerr said, the page needed to turn quickly to Sunday.

“I know it may sound arrogant, but when you play for the Celtics, the expectatio­n is to win a championsh­ip,” said Boston's Al Horford, who led the Celtics 26 points in Game 1 on Thursday night and turned 36 on Friday. “Even when I got here in '16, that was the expectatio­n even then. That's what it is in the organizati­on. We don't have to talk about it. We don't even talk about it at this point. We're just taking it a game at a time.”

The Celtics ended Golden State's 13-game winning streak in Game 1's at home, and that means the Warriors are trailing 1-0 in these playoffs for the first time.

The Warriors led by 15 points late in the third quarter of Game 1, then trailed by 15 points in the final moments. It was only the second finals game in the last 25 years where both teams held leads of at least 15 points — the other being Game 5 of the 2014 finals between San Antonio and Miami.

“It's the first time we've been down 0-1. It's the first time for a lot of things with this particular group,” said Curry, who had a gamehigh 34 points in the opener. “We are here in the finals for a reason, because we figured it out along the way. If we're going to get back in this series, we've got to figure it out again.”

Up 1-0

Winning Game 1 of the NBA Finals almost always leads to a championsh­ip for the Celtics.

Thursday's victory in the series opener was the 15th time Boston has taken a 1-0 lead in the finals. In 13 of the previous 14 instances the Celtics have gone on to claim the title — the exception being 1985, when the Los Angeles Lakers lost Game 1 148-114 but won four of the next five games to clinch the championsh­ip.

 ?? STRAZZANTE/SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE/AP PHOTO ?? Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum drives toward the basket as Golden State Warriors guard Jordan Poole defends during the fourth quarter in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Thursday in San Francisco.
STRAZZANTE/SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE/AP PHOTO Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum drives toward the basket as Golden State Warriors guard Jordan Poole defends during the fourth quarter in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Thursday in San Francisco.

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