The Mercury News Weekend

Green does it all, shakes off fall in gritty triumph

- By Anthony Slater aslater@bayareanew­sgroup.com

OAKLAND — The biggest scare on Thursday night wasn’t delivered by the Jazz, who, through two games and two losses, have shown just enough grit to keep it mildly competitiv­e but not enough firepower to legitimate­ly concern the Warriors.

Nope, the biggest scare was delivered by Draymond Green, who, after starring for the game’s first 40 minutes, took a hard fall and then a slipping tumble as he tried to get up, grabbing his left knee and staying down,

as the arena went silent.

They’d rise again soon after, as Green returned from the locker room to the bench and eventually the court, helping the Warriors finish off a Game 2 win 115104 to take a commanding 2-0 series lead to Utah. The status of that left leg will be a topic in the hours before Game 3, but for now it seems the Warriors dodged a bullet.

And it was quite the dangerous bullet, considerin­g how well Green is playing.

In Round 1, Green dominated the Blazers with his defense, blocking 17 shots in four games and terrorizin­g every inch of the court. But lost within his defensive dominance was some surprising sharpshoot­ing. Green made 11 of his 20 3s against Portland.

That hot streak has leaked over into the Utah series.

Green opened Game 2 scorching hot from deep, nailing four first-quarter 3s as Utah continuall­y left Green wide open and he continuall­y made them pay.

“Obviously their game plan is to have whoever’s guarding Draymond sit in the lane,” Mike Brown said. “So he’s getting wide-open threes and, knock on wood, hopefully he’ll keep shooting the ball the way he’s been shooting it throughout the playoffs and make them pay.”

Earlier in the season, Green hit five 3s in Salt Lake City and later revealed that his aggressive­ness was because he’d heard a comment from Jazz coach Quin Snyder that his team wouldn’t game plan for Green’s deep shot.

The strategy seems wise. Green dipped from 38 percent down to below 31 percent from 3 this season, struggling to make open shots and — with Klay Thompson, Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant roaming the court — a Green 3 seems like a win for the opponent.

“I findmyself particular­ly open in every matchup,” Green said. “That probably won’t change.”

But similar to Game 7 of the Finals last season — when Green hit six of eight 3s — his stroke has returned at the season’s most important time.

Those four 3s blasted the Warriors out to a 33-15 first quarter lead, allowing them to bob in and out of focus the rest of the night, pawing away the gritty Jazz every time they climbed near or within single digits.

The Warriors reverted to some concerning ways at times on Thursday. After only turning it over seven times in Game 1, they coughed it up 17 times in Game 2 — often carelessly and in the open court, allow- ing Utah some easy hoops (22 points off Golden State turnovers).

But it wasn’t just the turnovers that kept Utah in it. It was some occasional­ly lazy defense. To start the second half, the Warriors yawned as Joe Johnson planted a corner 3 and then, because of a defensive breakdown in transition, let Shelvin Mack walk into a wide open wing 3. Brown called a timeout 44 seconds into the second half.

But the Warriors would respond to any mild threat, bolting back up on the strength of a sturdy game up and down their rotation. Kevin Durant was particular­ly effective, going for 25 points, 11 rebounds and seven important assists — including the game-sealer for an Andre Iguodala dunk. Durant made 13 of his 15 free throws.

Curry had 23 points, Thompson chipped in 14, and Iguodala, who is now a frigid 0 of 18 from 3 in the playoffs, contribute­d elsewhere, dunking three times and scoring 10 points.

But Green, again, was the star, continuing his torrid run through the postseason. He had seven rebounds, six assists and another block, his 20th in six playoff games. But his most important attribute on Thursday was his rarest: the 3-point shot.

Green finished with five 3s, tying Curry for a teamhigh. He now has 18 in the playoffs, which is more than Thompson (16), LeBron James (15) and Kevin Love (13), among some of the league’s other sharpshoot­ers.

“Hopefully that jumper travels,” Curry said of Green.

Green’s strong play only made that late injury scare more concerning for the Warriors. After an errant layup on a fourth quarter drive, Green tumbled down at the baseline and got a bit tangled up with Rudy Gobert. As Green tried to get up, he seemed to slip and his left leg bent strangely. Green crumbled to the floor, grabbed at his knee and stayed down for a minute, before limping to the locker room.

But after the game, he said the knee just “locked up” a bit — something he said he dealt with before. He doesn’t believe it’ll affect him in Game 3.

“I’ll be fine,” Green said. “One time I had one in college and I out-rebounded

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/STAFF ?? The Warriors’ Klay Thompson, who had 14 points, scores against the Utah Jazz in Game 2 of the teams’ second-round playoff series Thursday night.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/STAFF The Warriors’ Klay Thompson, who had 14 points, scores against the Utah Jazz in Game 2 of the teams’ second-round playoff series Thursday night.

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