Orlando Sentinel

For champs, either great or checkmate

- By Ben Golliver

OAKLAND, Calif. — The Warriors were so moved by their brilliant Game 5 comeback Monday, that Draymond Green declared it “the greatest” performanc­e of their stellar five-year run in the NBA Finals.

Trailing the Raptors by six points with less than three minutes to play, Klay Thompson and Stephen Curry combined to hit three 3-pointers, Green blocked a potential gamewinner at the buzzer, and the twotime defending champs celebrated the improbable end to a tragic night that saw Kevin Durant lost to an Achilles injury.

The Warriors staved off eliminatio­n, narrowing the Raptors’ series lead to 3-2 and forcing a Game 6 at Oakland’s Oracle Arena on Thursday.

“We could have thrown in the towel,” Green said. “We could have folded, but we didn’t. I said it before: I’ve never seen this group fold. And that stands true still.”

The tricky thing about digging out of a 3-1 deficit, though, is that it takes a lot more than one legendary performanc­e. LeBron James needed three masterpiec­es to lead the 2016 Cavaliers to the only 3-1 finals comeback in league history. In Game 5, he posted 41 points, 16 rebounds and seven assists. In Game 6, 41 points, eight rebounds and 11 assists. In Game 7, 27 points, 11 rebounds, and 11 assists, plus an all-time chasedown block on Andre Iguodala for good measure.

The Warriors, in other words, still have plenty of work to do.

The natural inclinatio­n following Game 5 was to focus on the huge thing that went wrong for the Warriors, namely Durant’s devastatin­g injury. On the eve of Game 6, it’s instructiv­e to note how many little things went right for the Warriors during their 106-105 victory.

Curry and Thompson were both red hot, combining for 12 3s. Durant’s first-half cameo was crucial to reinstilli­ng the Warriors’ customary swagger. DeMarcus Cousins offered strong contributi­ons for the first time since Game 2. Green, in addition to his timely stop, hit two huge 3s after enduring a cold postseason. And they skirted disaster when the Raptors couldn’t make them pay for an inexplicab­le over-and-back violation in the final minute.

The Warriors also benefited from numerous Raptors shortcomin­gs. Kawhi Leonard nearly sealed the Raptors’ first title by hitting four straight shots in the fourth quarter, but he shot poorly from the field and uncharacte­ristically committed five turnovers. Forward Pascal Siakam looked bothered by Durant’s length early and never got on track. The Raptors shot just 8 of 32 on 3s. And their late-game execution on both ends lagged.

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