The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

NEXT STOP: CLE

Curry, Durant lead way as Warriors dominate again, take 2-0 advantage

- Photo gallery: More photos from Game 2 in Oakland can be found at MEDIA.NEWS-HERALD.COM.

Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James shoots against the Golden State Warriors during the first half of Game 2 of the NBA Finals in Oakland, Calif., on Sunday. The Cavaliers lost 132-113. The trail in the series 2-0. On Wednesday, the Cavs return home to The Q for Game 3.

OAKLAND » Stephen Curry dribbled every which way and beat LeBron James to the rim in a move reminiscen­t of his recent MVP magic, and the Golden State Warriors grabbed a 2-0 lead in the NBA Finals by downing the Cavaliers, 132-113, on June 4 in coach Steve Kerr’s return to the sideline.

Their leader and reigning NBA Coach of the Year back on the bench after a six-week absence, Curry and Kevin Durant tag-teamed the Warriors within two victories of another championsh­ip. Curry recorded his first career postseason triple-double with 32 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds, while Durant contribute­d 33 points, 13 rebounds and six assists while moving two wins from his first ring.

“He’s been around, the last couple weeks especially, giving us input and giving us what he’s got,” Curry said of Kerr.

“But having him back on the bench means a lot. We love his presence. We love his voice. And we’re a full group when he’s out here. So that means a lot.”

Golden State improved to 14-0 this postseason to keep alive a chance of becoming the first group to go unbeaten all the way to a title.

James was equally spectacula­r with his own triple-double of 29 points, 14 assists and 11 rebounds, but again didn’t get nearly enough help to keep up with Golden State despite Kevin Love’s 27 points and 19 from Kyrie Irving.

Klay Thompson emerged from a postseason-long shooting funk to score 22 points with four 3-pointers while playing more stellar defense and pulling down seven rebounds for the Warriors, who shot 18 for 43 from deep.

“We turned the ball over too much in the first half. But the second half, I think we settled in, tried to play simple and defensivel­y just tried to contest their shots,” Durant said.

The best-of-seven series now shifts to Cleveland for two games, with Game 3 on June 7. Kerr returned to the bench to a rousing ovation, waving to the fans while back on the sideline for the first time since Game 2 of the first round against Portland on April 19 because of pain issues stemming from complicati­ons after 2015 back surgery.

“I’m going to pull out the ‘Win one for the Gipper’ speech,” Kerr joked. “‘... Maybe get a little tearyeyed. Implore them to win it for me because it’s not important for them to win it for themselves.”

Curry provided the coach more than a glimpse of his greatness from up close after Kerr had been watching games from the locker room while speaking to his players beforehand and at halftime. He ran circles around James during one masterfull­y skillful sequence, then drove left through the paint for a right-handed layup over the star’s outstretch­ed arm during a signature moment in another rout. James had little help as Love got there late.

Curry wore his emotions for everybody to see, willing the unblemishe­d Warriors even when Cleveland went on a third-quarter run after that play.

Durant scored from every corner of the court. An offbalance KD flicked the ball up while falling backward and being fouled by Love and got a lucky bounce for a three-point play 7:04 before halftime just after Love had hit a 3 on the other end.

Now, Golden State is headed to Northeast Ohio needing just two more — yet don’t count on anybody considerin­g this series close to done. The Warriors squandered a 3-1 lead to the Cavs a year ago.

“Well, it’s been a great run but none of that matters unless we can finish the job with this series,” Kerr said. “Trust me, we know. It was 2-0 last year, we lost.”

Curry made all 14 of his free throws. He and Durant combined for 66 points and 18 assists in the opener, then dominated again while the supporting cast shined. Draymond Green had 12 points, six rebounds and six assists playing all game in foul trouble and Shaun Livingston scored 10 off the bench. This time, Curry committed eight turnovers as Cleveland committed to putting more pressure on the ball to keep Durant from driving and dunking untouched as he did so many times in Game 1. It didn’t matter in the end.

“They won two games,” Cavs coach Tyronn Lue said, “now we’ve got to go home and regroup.”

 ?? KYLE TERADA — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Warriors center JaVale McGee, top, reaches for the ball over Cavaliers guard Kyrie Irving (2) and forward Channing Frye during the first half on June 4 in Oakland, Calif.
KYLE TERADA — ASSOCIATED PRESS Warriors center JaVale McGee, top, reaches for the ball over Cavaliers guard Kyrie Irving (2) and forward Channing Frye during the first half on June 4 in Oakland, Calif.
 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — AP ?? LeBron James reacts to a call during the first half on June 4 in Oakland, Calif.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — AP LeBron James reacts to a call during the first half on June 4 in Oakland, Calif.
 ?? JOHN G. MABANGLO — POOL PHOTO VIA AP ??
JOHN G. MABANGLO — POOL PHOTO VIA AP

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