No
panic for 'embarrassed' Warriors after Game Three rout
Send a link to a friend
[June 10, 2016]
By Frank Pingue
CLEVELAND (Reuters) - The Golden State
Warriors were left red in the face after a stunning Game Three
blowout loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers but insist their confidence
has not been shaken and promise to be better when the NBA Finals
resume.
The NBA's best team all season, who won the first two games of the
best-of-seven series by a combined 48 points, suffered a humiliating
120-90 loss on Wednesday at the hands of a much more aggressive
Cleveland Cavaliers team.
Game Four is Friday in Cleveland, where the Warriors will try to
avoid the same sluggish start they made on Wednesday when the host
Cavaliers raced out to a 20-point first-quarter lead that proved too
much for Golden State to overcome.
"We'll respond tomorrow. I mean, we've done it the whole year, and
the best part about this team is everyone's so competitive that
we're all embarrassed for Game Three. We really are," Warriors
shooting guard Klay Thompson said on Thursday after practice.
"So we're going to have a better showing tomorrow and I really
believe that."
The usually sharp-shooting Thompson accepted much of the blame for
the loss as he failed to provide his usual offensive spark for a
Warriors team that arrived in Cleveland on what seemed to be a
fast-track to a second consecutive NBA title.
Golden State's 110-77 Game Two blowout of Cleveland marked their
seventh straight victory over the LeBron James-led team dating back
to last year's NBA Finals, but the streak ended with a crash at
Quicken Loans Arena.
Warriors point guard Stephen Curry, arguably the best shooter in
league history, has been far from his best in the NBA Finals but
refuses to panic or complicate things ahead of Friday's pivotal Game
Four.
"It's all about our effort tomorrow, especially the starting five,
how we start the game, because you assume they're going to play with
the same energy as they did in Game Three," said Warriors point
guard and NBA Most Valuable Player Stephen Curry.
"For us, we have to just stop that force that they played with in
Game Three and come with more effort and more focus from the jump."
[to top of second column] |
The Golden State Warriors players react from the bench during the
final seconds in the fourth quarter of game three of the NBA Finals
at Quicken Loans Arena. The Cavaliers won 120-90. Mandatory Credit:
Ken Blaze-USA TODAY Sports
When the NBA Finals shifted to Cleveland this week, it seemed that
the Warriors, who won a record 73 games during the 82-game regular
season and beat the Cavs in six games in last year's Finals, were
just too good for the Eastern Conference champions.
But one game later, the Cavaliers have the momentum.
For the Warriors, a second consecutive NBA championship would be the
only way their record-setting season ends right. And they are not
about to let one ugly loss distract them from their goal even if
their top players are struggling.
"It's a team game. We get out there, we compete, different guys step
up and have big games, other guys may not shoot the ball as well,
but we all compete and we all play our asses off. And whatever
happens, happens," said Warriors coach Steve Kerr.
"But all this stuff about, 'Oh, my God, what are we going to do?'
All we have to do is take stock. We're up 2-1. We're in pretty good
shape. We haven't played that well. Let's play better."
(Editing by Larry Fine)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|