Warriors sink ice-cold Rockets, head back to Finals
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[May 29, 2018]
Behind another extraordinary
third quarter from Stephen Curry, the Golden State Warriors erased a
15-point deficit and claimed Game 7 of the Western Conference finals
with a 101-92 victory over the Houston Rockets on Monday at Toyota
Center in Houston.
Curry scored 14 of his 27 points in the third period as the Warriors
secured their fourth consecutive berth in the NBA Finals.
"This is a situation we've never been in before ... to win a Game 7
on the road, keep our composure for the whole series," Curry said
postgame on TNT. "All those hurdles and obstacles, we got over them,
so it's an unbelievable feeling, man. Winning a championship is
hard, so this is a testament to that."
The championship series begins on Thursday in Oakland, Calif., with
the Cleveland Cavaliers representing the Eastern Conference. The
same two teams met in the previous three Finals, with Golden State
winning the title in 2015 and 2017 and Cleveland emerging as the
champ in 2016.
Golden State, after trailing by 11 points at the intermission,
outscored the Rockets 33-15 in the third period. The Warriors posted
a plus-68 scoring margin in the third quarters for the series.
"The second half was unbelievable," Curry said. "This atmosphere is
crazy."
The Rockets fashioned their halftime lead on effort, both
defensively and on the glass, but when their offense collapsed in
the third quarter, their verve dissipated. Houston shot 24 percent
(6 of 25) in the third and while missing all 14 of its 3-point
attempts. Curry, meanwhile, finished the frame 5 of 6 from the floor
while draining 4 of 5 from beyond the arc as the Warriors shot their
way to the lead.
Warriors coach Steve Kerr said, "I'm proud of our guys for the way
they held together after almost coming completely unglued in the
first half. But that second half was something, a lot of amazing
shot-making from some talented players. And I don't know what the
hell else was going on out there, but we did fight and we got it
going in the second half."
The Rockets missed 27 consecutive 3-point attempts -- an NBA playoff
record -- before PJ Tucker drilled a corner trey with 6:28 left that
cut the deficit to 10 points. Houston went 7 of 44 from deep, 15.9
percent, while Golden State made 16 of 39 3-point attempts, 41
percent.
Kevin Durant totaled 34 points, five rebounds, and five assists for
the Warriors, and Klay Thompson chipped in 19 points despite early
foul trouble. Curry also produced nine boards, 10 assists and four
steals.
James Harden posted 32 points, six rebounds, six assists and four
steals for the Rockets, who again were without guard Chris Paul
(right hamstring strain).
Rockets guard Eric Gordon, who scored 23 points, said of the impact
of Paul's absence, "It sucks because you know you could win this
series if we just had one more playmaker. If we had Chris, if he was
out there, we'd have been playing on Thursday. It's just tough."
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Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) drives against Houston Rockets
forward Trevor Ariza (1) in the third quarter in game seven of the
Western conference finals of the 2018 NBA Playoffs at Toyota Center.
Mandatory Credit: Thomas B. Shea-USA TODAY Sports
Harden had a different viewpoint.
"We don't even think about that," Harden said of playing without
Paul. "We had an opportunity tonight and last game without Chris.
Obviously, he's a big part of why we're here, but we had
opportunities, especially in that first half both games."
Harden opened the game 4 of 5 from the floor but finished 12 of 29
for the game. Gordon shot 2 of 12 from 3-point range, slightly
better than Harden's 2 of 13.
While Clint Capela (20 points, nine rebounds) and Tucker (14 points,
12 rebounds) delivered on the interior, the Rockets were undone by
their ineffective perimeter options. Trevor Ariza finished 0 of 12,
including 0 of 9 on 3-point tries, while Gerald Green made just 1 of
7 shots.
Harden, who gave the Rockets a 48-33 lead with a transition dunk at
the 4:54 mark of the second quarter, fed Capela for an alley-oop
layup for a 61-55 lead with 5:38 left in the third. The Warriors
followed with a 17-2 run that included five 3-pointers, four from
Curry, whose finger-roll with 3:29 left in the period was the lone
basket from inside the arc during the decisive run.
"First of all, they've done that all year against everybody,"
Rockets coach Mike D'Antoni said of the Warriors' third-quarter
surge. "That's what their trademark is; we know it and it's not like
it's a secret. Just seems like they came out a little more
determined than we were in the beginning. The juice was flowing on
their side. When they get it going, it's tough to turn them off."
Durant praised the Rockets, who fell short in the playoffs after
posting a league-high 65 wins in the regular season.
"Much respect to the Houston Rockets for bringing the best out of us
and making this an incredible series and pushing us to the brink,"
Durant said. "You've got to give respect to them and the great
season that they had. But I'm glad that we're going back (to the
Finals) and I'm excited that we've got this opportunity. I look
forward to taking advantage of it."
--Field Level Media
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