Warriors beat Cavs and move to brink of NBA title
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[June 11, 2016]
By Frank Pingue
CLEVELAND (Reuters) - The Golden State
Warriors bounced back from an embarrassing road loss two days ago to
beat the Cleveland Cavaliers 108-97 on Friday and move one win away
from a second consecutive NBA championship.
The win was a devastating blow to LeBron James's Cavaliers, who
lost their first home game of the postseason and now trail the
best-of-seven NBA Finals 3-1 with Game Five scheduled for Monday in
Oakland.
"All of our guys played extremely well. We just competed like
crazy," Warriors head coach Steve Kerr told reporters. "It was a
great response from Game Three, where we were really embarrassed by
our performance."
Stephen Curry powered Golden State, who lost by 30 points on
Wednesday, by scoring a game-high 38 while Kyrie Irving led the
Cavaliers with 34 points. James had 25 points and 13 rebounds for
his 10th double-double of the postseason.
Of the 32 teams that have faced a 3-1 deficit in the NBA Finals none
have ever come back to win the championship.
But Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue, well aware that the odds are stacked
against his team, had a blunt message.
"If you don't think we can win, don't get on the plane. I just think
we've got to come back anyway, so we might as well come back and
play," said Lue, about the possibility of forcing a Game Six. "We've
got to come back to Cleveland, don't we?"
The Warriors, who fell behind by as many as 20 points after a
miserable start to Game Three, responded with a much stronger effort
to start this one as each team traded shots for much of the first
two quarters.
The tightly-contested first half, easily the most intense 24 minutes
of the series so far, included 15 lead changes, which was more than
the previous three games combined.
Cleveland looked ready to pull away to start the second half when
they extended their lead to eight and whipped the home crowd into a
lather but Golden State would not fold.
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Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) and Warriors forward Anderson
Varejao (18) reach for the ball in front of Cleveland Cavaliers
guard Iman Shumpert (4) and Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23)
during the third quarter in game four of the NBA Finals at Quicken
Loans Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-USA TODAY Sports
The Warriors quickly took over in the final quarter when they shored
up their defense and kicked their offense into a higher gear.
With just under six minutes to play Harrison Barnes gave the
Warriors their largest lead of the night up to that point when he
drained a three-pointer for a 93-84 lead.
It marked a 17-point turnaround from the third quarter when
Cleveland, who went without a field goal for a six-minute stretch of
the fourth, led by eight points.
"I thought we played hard. I thought we competed. I just thought we
made some defensive mistakes that cost us," said Lue. "And every
time we made a mistake, they made us pay."
Late in the fourth quarter the game was briefly interrupted when a
shirtless fan with "Trump Sucks" painted on his chest ran onto the
court inside Cleveland's Quicken Loans Arena, which will host the
Republican National Convention next month.
(Editing by Steve Keating/Sudipto Ganguly)
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