Warriors throttle Spurs to take 2-0 lead
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[May 17, 2017]
OAKLAND, Calif. -- San Antonio
Spurs coach Gregg Popovich expected more from his ballclub Tuesday
night in Game 2 of the Western Conference finals.
Golden State Warriors acting coach Mike Brown was happy to see his
team stroll to a blowout victory, but he was prepared to head to San
Antonio fully convinced it wouldn't occur again.
The Warriors took full advantage of Kawhi Leonard's absence, bombing
the uninspired Spurs with 18 3-pointers en route to a 136-100
trouncing that gave Golden State a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven
series.
Stephen Curry scored 15 of his game-high 29 points in a 33-16
first-quarter run-away, allowing the Warriors to hold the serve at
home that they earned by running up the NBA's best regular-season
record.
"Steve (Kerr) told our guys we've got to come out and play with a
sense of urgency from the beginning. We can't ease into the game,"
Brown said of his ailing boss' address to the team in the locker
room before the game. "Give all of our guys credit.
"And that was the message to the team afterward, too, going into
Game 3. Think Game 1 was tough? Oh, down in San Antonio, it's going
to be more than a dogfight. Game 3's going to be tough for us."
The Spurs get three days off to lick their wounds and hope Leonard,
who sprained a previously injured left ankle in Game 1, can be ready
for Game 3 on Saturday.
Leonard or no Leonard, Popovich insisted the series is over if his
team doesn't get an attitude adjustment.
"I don't think we believed," he said. "I'm disappointed. The only
way I can process this is I think it's not about the O's and X's or
rebounds or turnovers or anything like that.
"You have to believe. I don't think as a group they really did,
which means probably a little bit feeling sorry for themselves
psychologically. It showed in the lack of edge, intensity ... That
was disappointing."
Two days after falling behind by 25 points in the first half to a
Leonard-led team, the Warriors had a 25-point lead of their own in
the 16th minute of the rematch en route to a 72-44 halftime
advantage.
The Spurs were never appreciably closer in the second half.
"We felt sorry for ourselves," Popovich said. "We need to get
slapped and come back and play Game 3 and see who we are.
"All I care about is the next game, and we'll see how they come out.
Whether they win or they lose, I want to see how they play. If they
do the right things and play the game and obey the basketball gods,
they'll have a great chance to win."
Curry used 6-for-9 shooting on 3-pointers to lead seven Warriors
scorers in double figures. He also found time for seven rebounds, a
game-high seven assists and three steals in 31 minutes.
Five other Warriors connected on multiple 3-pointers in an 18-for-37
barrage that dwarfed the Spurs' 8-for-23 success from beyond the
arc.
"It's fun to watch. (Curry) gets everybody else open once he gets it
going like that," said Kevin Durant, who added 16 points to the
Warriors' cause. "If he's got it going, give him the ball."
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Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) high fives forward Draymond Green
(23) and forward Kevin Durant (35) ahead of acting head coach Mike
Brown as a timeout is called against the San Antonio Spurs during
the first quarter in game two of the Western conference finals of
the NBA Playoffs at Oracle Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kelley L Cox-USA
TODAY Sports
Draymond Green contributed 13 points, a team-high
nine rebounds, six assists, two steals and two blocked shots to
Golden State's 10th consecutive postseason win this season.
Only eight other NBA teams have ever opened a postseason 10-0.
Warriors reserve Patrick McCaw took advantage of 27 minutes of
playing time to chip in with 18 points.
"When the game starts, it's whoever wants to grab that momentum
early and set the tone for the game, and I think we did that a
little bit better tonight. So that was huge," Curry said of the
Warriors, who had 39 assists on their 50 field goals, and shot 56.2
percent from the field. "You don't want to give them any reason and
any life."
Jonathon Simmons, starting in place of Leonard, had a team-high 22
points for the Spurs, who fell behind 2-0 in a playoff series for
the first time since being swept by the Phoenix Suns in the Western
semifinals in 2010.
Davis Bertans dropped in 13 points, and Dewayne Dedmon had nine
points to go with a team-high nine rebounds off the bench for the
Spurs, whose reserves outscored their starters 53-47.
"We can't necessarily play any worse than we did tonight," point
guard Patty Mills said of the Spurs, who made only 37 percent of
their shots. "We'll just lay it out there Game 3 on our home floor."
NOTES: The Warriors have won the last nine playoff series in which
they took a 2-0 lead. The last time they lost a series when up 2-0
was against the Los Angeles Lakers in the 1969 Western semifinals.
... The Spurs haven't rebounded from a 2-0 deficit to win a series
since overcoming the New Orleans Hornets in seven games in the
Western semifinals in 2008. ... Before the game, Spurs coach Gregg
Popovich labeled SF Kawhi Leonard (sprained left ankle)
"questionable" for Game 3 on Saturday. ... The Warriors played
without SF Andre Iguodala (sore left knee), then lost C Zaza
Pachulia to a heel injury in the first quarter. X-rays on Pachulia's
heel were negative, but he was scheduled for an MRI exam on
Wednesday nonetheless. ... Warriors coach Mike Brown had a run-in
with the police escorting the Spurs team bus while entering the
Oracle Arena parking lot, an incident witnessed by Popovich.
"Somebody's got to tell him," Popovich noted in a rare light moment,
"if the California Highway Patrol tells you to move over, you move
over." [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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