The Mercury News

One win away: Warriors survive Cavs’ Game 3 counterpun­ch.

Stunning comeback places Warriors one win from title

- By Anthony Slater aslater@bayareanew­sgroup.com

CLEVELAND — The Warriors survived the Cavaliers’ powerful Game 3 counterpun­ch and, in doing so, are now just an inch away from the most sparkling run to an NBA title in history.

Trailing for much of the second half Wednesday night, the Warriors clawed back in the fourth quarter and beat the Cavaliers 118113, bumping them up 3-0 in these NBA Finals, pushing them to 15-0 in these playoffs and planting them on the doorstep of unpreceden­ted playoff perfection.

Of the 15 wins, this was the toughest. LeBron James was a human freight train the entire night, going off for 39 points and coming one assist shy of a tripledoub­le. And unlike the first two games, he finally had help from his co-star, Kyrie Irving, who scored 38 on a number of slithery moves and creative finishes at the rim.

But in the end, it was the Warriors’ stars who survived a raucous environmen­t, a two-pronged offensive attack and a sevenpoint fourth quarter hole, erasing many of the demons that plagued them from a season ago.

“I played against some great teams, but I don’t think any team has had this type of firepower,” James said. “So even when you’re playing well, you got to play like A-plus plus.”

Steph Curry was incredible much of the night, going for 26 points, a team-high 13 rebounds, six assists and only one turnover. Klay Thompson parlayed his huge Game 2 into a bigger Game 3, nailing six of the Warriors’ 16 3-pointers and hitting 30 points for the first time in this postseason. He kept them afloat early.

But Kevin Durant, the front-runner for Finals MVP, drove the Warriors home in the final sequence.

With less than two minutes left, the Warriors trailed by four and their perfect playoffs were in peril. But with 1:15 left, Durant powerfully pushed Kevin Love back on a drive, got to about 12 feet out and planted a floater to pull the Warriors within two.

On the ensuing possession, Kyle Korver got a decent look at a 3 from the corner, which would’ve put the Cavaliers back up five with less than a minute left.

But the sharpshoot­er bricked the shot that will likely haunt his offseason memories. Durant climbed high for the defensive rebound and then, six seconds later, made maybe the biggest shot of his storied career.

Durant pushed the rebound into the frontcourt and, without hesitation, bounced into a deep transition 3 over LeBron James. LeBron rose to try to bother the shot but did so cautiously.

“The last thing I want to do is foul a jump shooter,” James said. “So I wanted to jump and contest it, but I know he shoots, he kind of leans forward a little bit. So I just stayed there, high hands, contested.”

Didn’t matter. Durant drilled it, the most important shot of his career, putting the Warriors up 114-113 with 45 seconds left.

“He took over,” coach Steve Kerr said. “You can tell, he knows this is his moment. He’s been an amazing player in this league for a long time, and I think he’s — he senses this is his time, his moment.”

On the next possession, trailing by one, Irving tried to go to work on Klay Thompson, who has dogged him the entire series.

After a failed drive attempt, Irving eventually found himself backing up to that same spot on the right wing where he won the NBA Finals last year.

But despite Irving’s offensive exploits on this night — he was 16 of 22 on two-point shots — he was 0 of 7 from three. That seventh miss came with 26 seconds left when he left the pull-back 3 short.

“I’ll be replaying that one for a while,” Irving said.

Curry grabbed the huge rebound, his 13th, and Durant eventually received the ball and absorbed the foul. He hit both free throws, giving him seven points in 63 seconds — a personal 70 run that essentiall­y won this game. The Warriors led by three.

But they still needed one more stop. After a timeout, the Cavaliers drew up a play to get James a corner 3. James navigated into that spot, caught, turned and set up to fire.

But Andre Iguodala, who has had a quiet postseason, made the biggest defensive play of the night, stripping LeBron and knocking it off his leg out of bounds. Curry got the ensuing inbounds, absorbed the automatic foul and made the game-sealing free throws.

“We just kept our poise (in the fourth quarter),” Iguodala said. “In the past, we kind of got haywire and hectic.”

Perfection is one game away.

“It’s not over,” Durant said. “The job’s not done. Closeout games are the toughest.”

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/STAFF ?? Kevin Durant, right, shoots the go-ahead 3-point basket over the Cavaliers' LeBron James in the final minute of Game 3 of the NBA Finals on Wednesday night in Cleveland.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/STAFF Kevin Durant, right, shoots the go-ahead 3-point basket over the Cavaliers' LeBron James in the final minute of Game 3 of the NBA Finals on Wednesday night in Cleveland.
 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/STAFF ?? The Cavaliers’ LeBron James reacts as the final seconds wind down agains the Warriors.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/STAFF The Cavaliers’ LeBron James reacts as the final seconds wind down agains the Warriors.

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