New York Post

WARRIORS FACE KING- SIZE TASK

WON’T BE EASY TO WIN TITLE IN CLEVELAND: KERBER, VACCARO

- By FRED KERBER fred. kerber@ nypost. com

CLEVELAND — Now comes the hard part for the Golden State Warriors: Closing out the Finals. Think defending LeBron James is difficult? Believe that turning the series by playing a bunch of Smurfs was hard? Piece of cake, walk in the park compared to getting winNo. 4 in a Finals.

“The closeout game is always the hardest game in every series, but particular­ly in the Finals,” said Warriors coach Steve Kerr, whose gang moved to the brink of jubilation and a guaranteed trip to theWhite House by claiming a 3- 2 Finals lead Sunday with a 104- 91 home- court victory that included Stephen Curry scoring 17 of his 37 points in the fourth quarter.

So why is a closeout game the toughest, other than the fact you face an opponentwh­o likelywoul­d bite you to death if necessary, just to survive one more game to try the biting tactic all over again?

“It just is. There is a lot of emotion,” said Kerr, a five- time champion as a player with the Bulls ( three times) and Spurs ( twice). “You’re right there on the cusp of something ... and in this case we’ll be on the road against a great team. It’s going to be hard. It’s just theway it is.”

The Warriors may draw some comfort from their Game 4 win. It came in Cleveland.

“It’s a good feeling to get a win in Cleveland and understand we can get it done andhow we need to get it done,” saidCurry, who needed to be treatedwit­h extra fluids to fight dehydratio­n after his stunning Game 5. “So ready for the opportunit­y.”

An ongoing series theme has been reducing the Finals level to a street fight. J. R. Smith, who again delivered “Wow, he helps” moments along with “Wow, he hurts” moments in the same game, vowed the Cavs will hold nothing back.

“We have to come out swinging. That’s the only thing we can do,” said the ex- Knick who looked like a lifesaver Sunday in the first half, when he scored 14 points, then looked like a lead vest in the second half, when he scored zero. “We’re in a dogfight and our backs are against the wall. The only way we will make it out is to fight.”

Fighting has been the main topic for Warriors forward Draymond Green, who again proclaimed his anger has fueled him throughout the series.

Green expressed his anger earlier, after Game 3. But he was most angry with himself for a level of play he labeled “pathetic.” So he vowed to improve and was a real staple in the Warriors’ success in Games 4 and5.

“I was upset … because in playing with [ Michigan State coach Tom] Izzo, one thing he always taught me was if you’re going to be a leader, you sometimes have to take the blame on yourself. And if you’re going to call somebody out, you got to call yourself out too,” Green said.

“I know I was pathetic in the first three games, yet I also knew that there were some things that a lo t of guys on our team needed to do better. And that

was fight,” Green said. “But I wasn’t bringing any fight to the game. How could I call anybody else on our team out and I wasn’t bringing any fight?”

Life is full of baffling conundrums.

“We were completely getting outworked, outhustled, outdogged, however you want to put it,” Green said. “That can’t happen.”

History favors the Warriors: 20 of 28 previous 2- 2 Finals were won by the team that took Game 5. But history isn’t worth an illegal defense call once the game starts.

“We don’t want them celebratin­g at all, no matter if it’s on our home floor or their home floor,” James said. “We have to understand why we weren’t good in Game 4. We had a lack of energy. We had a lack of effort. … We can’t repeat that or they’ll raise the trophy for sure.”

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