Marin Independent Journal

CURRY ANSWERS CRITICS, DROPS 62

Guard sets career-high in points in Golden State’s win over Portland

- By Wes Goldberg

Arms spread like an airplane, Stephen Curry took off down the sideline to celebrate making a very Stephen Curry-like 3-pointer.

After receiving the pitch from Draymond Green, Curry jumped, leaned and shot the ball from 27 feet out, drawing contact from guard Gary Trent Jr. As Curry fell to the court, the ball swished through the basket in the final seconds of the Warriors’ 137-122 victory over the Trail Blazers on Sunday at Chase Center to give him a career-best 62 points.

This was a much-needed win for the Warriors (3-3), who lost to the Trail Blazers (3-3) by 25 points in the first of this two-game series on Friday, and an inevitable breakout performanc­e by Curry.

“I had a feeling it was coming pretty quickly,” said head coach Steve Kerr. “He’s looked great from the start of camp, physically, but he’s barely played basketball the last year and a half.”

Over the past 14 months, Curry has rehabbed from a broken left hand that sidelined him for most of Golden State’s 15-win 2019-20 season, isolated for an offseason while his peers on other teams competed in the NBA bubble and toiled in the early going of this season as he tried to find his rhythm and jell with a new-look supporting cast.

But in recent days, Curry had moments that brought to mind what set the two-time MVP apart during so much of his 11-year career: brief scoring spurts, made contested jumpers and, in a practice last week, setting a personal record with 105 consecutiv­e made 3-pointers.

So when Curry took the floor Sunday night averaging near- career low shooting percentage­s of 41.3 overall and 31.8 from 3-point range, he did so inspired to get the better of Portland.

“I told [Kevon Looney] early in the game,” Green said, “‘ You keep screening … because he’s not passing.’”

Curry set the tone early with 21 points in the first quarter and 31 in the first half. With dazzling dribble moves, nifty finishes and patented pull-up jumpers, Curry surpassed his previous career-high of 54 points (at New York in February 2013).

Curry’s spectacula­r night set a new Chase Center high, taking ownership of the record from Portland’s Damian Lillard (39 points on Nov. 4, 2019), who finished Sunday with 32 points and four assists and helped lead a late comeback effort.

Lillard’s back- to- back 3-pointers midway through the fourth quarter cut the Warriors’ lead — which had earlier reached 20 points — to single digits, but Curry answered with a 3-pointer of his own to keep the Trail Blazers at a comfortabl­e distance.

Curry’s leaning pull-up jumper from 27 feet out with 42 seconds remaining put the finishing touch on his career

game. Afterwards, Kerr pulled him for what would have been his walk- off opportunit­y in front of fans in non-pandemic times. But, playing without fans in attendance, the applause and cheers came only from his teammates.

They also needed Green who, in his second game this season after missing the first four with a foot injury, did not score until 2:14 to go but helped make plays on offense and anchored the defense.

“He’s putting us in spots and getting Steph off the ball, which in turn confuses the defense,” Kerr said of Green, who finished with one point, eight assists and three rebounds and was a team-best plus-22 in 28 minutes. “That’s been really great to have him back.”

Throughout the game, Green helped erase Portland’s reliable pick-and-roll sets, recorded a weak-side block on a CJ McCollum layup

and jawed with Lillard in his typical fiery fashion.

It was Green’s assist that led to a 3-pointer from Kelly Oubre Jr. (17 points, five rebounds, two steals) and opened the Warriors’ 20-point lead with 4:08 left in the third quarter.

With Green supervisin­g the offense and Curry whizzing around the court, their new teammates experience­d the hallmarks of the Warriors teams that went to fivestraig­ht Finals.

“He’s an anomaly,” Oubre said of Curry, who posted a final stat line of 62 points on 18-for-31 shooting (8 for 16 from 3-point range and 18 of 19 from the free-throw line), five rebounds and four assists in 36 minutes.

“I was just happy to be on the same side as him tonight,” he said, “because I know it stunk for the other team.”

However over the last few days, as the Warriors stumbled

to start the season, questions mounted from national and social media about whether or not the 32-year- old Curry is still a player who can lead a championsh­ip-level team. After Friday’s loss to Portland, Lillard suggested Curry looked mortal when not surrounded by All-Star talent.

The Warriors dynasty may be over, but for Curry this 62-point outburst assured his critics he’s still in the heart of his prime. It put him in the company of Kobe Bryant, who on Dec. 20, 2005, was the last player score at least 30 points in both halves of a game. Curry also joined Klay Thompson, Rick Barry, Joe Fulks and Wilt Chamberlai­n as Warriors players to eclipse 60 points in a game.

“The great ones always are confident in who they are,” Curry said. “No matter what is said … it doesn’t affect us or me in that respect.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY TONY AVELAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) takes a 3-point shot over Trail Blazers center Enes Kanter (11) on Sunday in San Francisco.
PHOTOS BY TONY AVELAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) takes a 3-point shot over Trail Blazers center Enes Kanter (11) on Sunday in San Francisco.
 ??  ?? Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) celebrates with teammates after he scored his career-high 62 points against Portland Trail in San Francisco on Sunday.
Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) celebrates with teammates after he scored his career-high 62 points against Portland Trail in San Francisco on Sunday.
 ?? EZRA SHAW — GETTY IMAGES ?? The Warriors’ Stephen Curry, left, is showered in water by Damion Lee during a post-game interview after Curry scored a career-high 62 points against the Trail Blazers on Sunday.
EZRA SHAW — GETTY IMAGES The Warriors’ Stephen Curry, left, is showered in water by Damion Lee during a post-game interview after Curry scored a career-high 62 points against the Trail Blazers on Sunday.

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