The Sentinel-Record

Dominant Davis leads Pelicans past Warriors

- BRETT MARTEL

NEW ORLEANS — Rajon Rondo told Anthony Davis to “take a nap and think about 50” in the hours leading up to a playoff game New Orleans all but had to win to have any hope of staging a playoff upset against defending champion Golden State.

Davis didn’t quite score 50, but his dominance around and above the rim got the Pelicans back in the series.

Highlighte­d by dunks of the driving, put-back or alley-oop variety, Davis had 33 points to go with 18 rebounds and four steals, and the Pelicans defeated the Warriors, 119-100, on Friday night to trim Golden State’s series lead to 2-1.

“He came out aggressive. He set the tone on both ends of the floor,” Rondo said. “He attacked the rim strong tonight.”

Pelicans coach Alvin Gentry added that he “felt real good” during a timeout when he heard Davis say, “We’re not losing this game.”

Davis’ determined play around the basket helped New Orleans outscore the Warriors, 54-36, in the paint and outrebound Golden State, 54-44.

“Our mindset is to go out there and play, do what we’re supposed to do, follow the game plan and whatever results happen, happen,” Davis said. “We followed the game plan to a tee.”

The Warriors have been known to erase large deficits in a hurry, but each time they tried to do so in Game 3, the Pelicans responded resounding­ly. The Warriors never led by more than a single point and trailed by double digits for almost the entire second half, going down by 25 points in the third quarter and 26 in the fourth.

Golden State shot uncharacte­ristically poorly from outside, missing 22 of 31 3-point attempts and finishing at 38 percent shooting, 35 of 92, overall.

“Most of it is attributed to the Pelicans. Their defense was great,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “They were the aggressors. They brought the necessary force to the game on their home floor and these are the ebbs and flows of the playoffs.”

Jrue Holiday scored 21 for New Orleans and Ian Clark added 18 points against his former club. As in Game 2, Rondo once again had a heated exchange with Warriors forward Draymond Green. This time, Rondo backed it up with 21 assists.

“You can’t get assists without your teammates. They made shots tonight. Guys moved well without the ball,” Rondo said. “It starts with defense. We were able to get stops, get out in transition — create mismatches in transition.”

Klay Thompson scored 26 for Golden State, but missed 13 of 22 shots. Stephen Curry, in his second game back after a sprained knee sidelined him more than a month, missed 13 of 19 shots and finished with 19 points. Kevin Durant scored 22 points for the Warriors, but hit only two shots in the second half.

“I was rushing a little bit and just missed shots,” Curry said. “I’m not going to get in my head about it. … You can’t really dwell on anything.”

The Pelicans, meanwhile, made 14 of 31 3-pointers, with Holiday, Clark, Nikola Mirotic and Solomon Hill each hitting three.

Game 4 is this afternoon, when New Orleans can even the series or the Warriors can take a 3-1 lead back home for Game 5.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? NO EASY BUCKETS: New Orleans forward Anthony Davis (23) contests an attempt by Golden State Warriors guard Steph Curry (30) Friday during the second half of the Pelicans’ 119-100 home win in the second round of the NBA playoffs.
The Associated Press NO EASY BUCKETS: New Orleans forward Anthony Davis (23) contests an attempt by Golden State Warriors guard Steph Curry (30) Friday during the second half of the Pelicans’ 119-100 home win in the second round of the NBA playoffs.

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