Lethbridge Herald

Finals pick up where they left off

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — OAKLAND

After a summer highlighte­d by Kevin Durant’s decision to leave Oklahoma City for the star-laden Golden State Warriors, a six-month regular season and three rounds of playoffs, the NBA Finals are right back where they ended last June.

Not that anyone expected any different.

Take III of the NBA Finals trilogy between Golden State and the Cleveland Cavaliers gives Stephen Curry and Draymond Green a chance to avenge last year’s Warriors collapse and LeBron James the opportunit­y to add a fourth title in his chase of Michael Jordan’s six.

Perhaps most noteworthy, it gives Durant the chance at a first championsh­ip and validation for his decision to leave the Thunder and join the league’s latest super team.

“I can’t go out there and do everything on my own or I can’t go out there and just let my teammates do all the work for me,” Durant said Wednesday, a day before the series opener. “I got to do my part and we all got to make it come together as a group.”

This matchup has seemed ordained since James walked off the court in Oakland last June, having delivered his native northeast Ohio its first major team championsh­ip since 1964.

James had won two titles as part of another “super team” in Miami but last year’s crown meant even more to his legacy.

“I’m not in the ‘prove people wrong, silence critics’ department no more,” James said. “I got a promotion when I got to the 30s. At the end of the day, I know the way I’m built. My only motivation is to be able to compete for a championsh­ip every single year.”

The Warriors have been right there the past two years, winning the franchise’s first title in 40 years in 2015 and then blowing a 3-1 lead last year to put a sour ending on a record-breaking 73-win season.

That series turned when Green was suspended for Game 5 and James and Kyrie Irving took over from there.

“Any time someone beats you, you’d love to play them,” Green said. “But at the end of the day winning a championsh­ip is winning a championsh­ip. You don’t care who you’ve got to take down, you just want to take whoever that is down.”

Here are some other things to watch in Part III: FINALS REMATCH While the Cavs and Warriors have played in the Finals the past two years, Durant and James met before that in different uniforms. James won his first title in 2012 with Miami in a five-game series over Durant and the Thunder. Durant played well, averaging 30.6 points and shooting 55 per cent but James came out on top.

“I know I’ve grown as a player just through experience from the last five years, but if I don’t go out there and execute, none of that matters,” Durant said. BROWN CONNECTION James’ first trip to the Finals came 10 years ago when the Cavs were swept by San Antonio.

His coach that year was Mike Brown, who has served as acting coach for the Warriors while Steve Kerr is out following complicati­ons from back surgery. Brown had two stints as coach in Cleveland, leading the team to the playoffs five straight times from 200610

before returning for a one-year stint in 2013-14 when the Cavs won 33 games.

“It feels a little surreal,” Brown said. “I’m sure come tip-off tomorrow, when I’m looking at those guys in that uniform, it will feel even more that way, but right now just kind of taking everything in stride.” UNDERDOG CAVS According to the odds makers in Las Vegas and the number crunchers at analytical sites, the Warriors are the clear favourites to win the series after sweeping their way through the playoffs with a record-setting margin of victory of 16.3 points per game. James has called Golden State a “juggernaut” but the Warriors aren’t buying all

that talk.

“We’ve had a great season to this point, a great playoff run. And hopefully we keep it going, but we fully respect and are aware that this team that we’re playing, they’re the champions and we’re not,” Kerr said. KLAY’S SHOT One of the few things that hasn’t gone right for Golden State this postseason has been Klay Thompson’s shooting. He has hit just 38 per cent of his shots as his normally reliable jumper has failed him.

“I’ve had a week off,” Thompson said. “So I feel great. Can’t get caught up in your shot falling or not.”

Thompson has been stellar on the defensive end even when his shot

has been off and will likely be counted on at times to slow down Irving, who scored 98 points in the final three games last year, including the seriesclin­ching 3-pointer. BY THE NUMBERS The Warriors are the first team to win their first 12 games of the postseason, sweeping all three rounds so far. The Cavs haven’t been far behind, losing only in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference final to Boston.

This series also features 11 players who have been named All-Stars in their careers, including seven this year. The only other time a Finals matchup featured 11 former AllStars came in 1983 when Philadelph­ia swept the Los Angeles Lakers.

Guentzel was also the hero in Game 1, beating Rinne to break a 3-3 tie with just over three minutes left in regulation. He didn’t start on Crosby’s line in Game 2, but ended up there as the Pens offence stalled through two periods — contained by the Preds’ fearsome defence.

An unheralded third round pick who grew up in Minnesota, Guentzel also sits directly to Crosby’s left in the Penguins dressing room, a purposeful move by head coach Mike Sullivan, who likes his rookies to watch and learn from the captain.

Guentzel, who played college hockey at the University of NebraskaOm­aha, was unknown to Crosby before the season began but finished behind only Auston Matthews and Patrik Laine in goals and points per game among rookies (16 goals, 33 points in 40 games).

“He’s not the biggest guy, but he plays bigger than he is and he’s got great skill,” Crosby said of Guentzel, who’s listed at a seemingly generous 180 pounds. “His skill-set combined with the way he works allows him to get the chances he does and not only score from the perimeter, but he goes to those tough areas to earn those goals.”

Though they’re up 2-0 in the series, the Penguins have actually been on the receiving end for most of the six periods so far. They’ve just struck in quick succession, landing six of their nine goals in a span of about eight minutes. Scott Wilson followed up on Guentzel’s go-ahead goal 3:03 later and Evgeni Malkin added his ninth of the playoffs 15 seconds after that.

The goals did come off the rush as Laviolette noted, but some of the leaks come down to Rinne, who couldn’t keep Guentzel’s game-tying goal from finding a hole and then offered up a juicy rebound to Bryan Rust which spurred the go-ahead marker.

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