Showing posts with label NBA Western Conference Finals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NBA Western Conference Finals. Show all posts
Sunday, May 24, 2015
MVP Steph Curry scores 40 as Warriors breeze to 35-point Game 3 rout of Rockets
The Golden State Warriors and their MVP, Steph Curry, were in dominant form on Saturday as they breezed past the Houston Rockets, 115-80, to take move to within a win of sweeping the NBA Western Conference finals.
Curry scored 40 points on 12-for-19 shooting from the field in a scintillating offensive performance. He scored 19 of those in the third quarter, where he hit four of his seven three-pointers in the game.
He shot 7-for-9 from beyond the arc and 9-for-10 from the free throw line as well as dishing out a team-high seven assists.
Curry set a new record for most three-pointers made in a single postseason, smashing Reggie Miller’s old mark of 58 in the 2000 NBA playoffs. The Warriors guard already had 64 at the end of Game 3.
The Warriors guard did it in fewer attempts and far fewer games. He needed only 13 games as compared to Miller’s 22 while tallying his 64 on just 143 attempts (44.7%) compared to Miller’s 147.
Golden State also got contributions from Draymond Green, who had 17 points and 13 rebounds, and Klay Thompson, who added 17 as well.
Behind Curry, the Warriors turned it into a rout as early as the first half. He scored 18 first half points – 15 of those in the second quarter – as they opened up a 25-point halftime lead, 62-37.
They held the Rockets to 12-for-41 (29.3%) from the field and 2-for-13 (15.4%) from beyond the arc. James Harden had just eight points on 1-for-8 shooting over the first two periods.
Houston tried to mount a run in the third. They scored seven unanswered points to get crowd pumped up and their deficit to under the 20-point mark.
But Curry stomped out the rally with a remarkable 19-point performance in the third quarter, with his three-pointer with 39.4 remaining in the period giving the Warriors a 31-point lead, 92-61.
The league MVP had 37 points in 31 minutes at the end of three periods.
source: interaksyon.com
Thursday, May 22, 2014
Spurs destroy Thunder by 35 points to take 2-0 series lead
SAN ANTONIO — They come at opponents in waves, future Hall of Famers and adept role players comprising the NBA’s deepest roster.
Guard Tony Parker, one of the stars, scored 22 points Wednesday. Guard Danny Green, part of the supporting cast, made seven 3-point baskets and scored 21. Thanks in part to the duo’s contributions, the San Antonio Spurs defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder 112-77 Wednesday night to take a 2-0 lead in the Western Conference finals.
San Antonio earned its seventh win in eight games. In this one, the Spurs outshot the Thunder 50 percent to 39.3 percent from the field and had a 21-5 edge in free throws made.
Oklahoma City forward Kevin Durant and guard Russell Westbrook were limited to 15 point apiece, converting just 13 of 40 shots between them. Their 30 points together were 26.6 fewer than they were averaging during the playoffs.
“Whenever great players have nights like that, it’s never one thing,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “I’m sure at times we guarded them well, and I’m sure at times they had open shots that they didn’t make.”
The Spurs, leading by 14 at halftime, outscored the Thunder 33-18 in the third quarter. San Antonio converted 12 of 16 shots in the process.
“I don’t think anybody on our team played well, including myself,” Thunder coach Scott Brooks said.
Oklahoma City is playing without injured shot-blocking forward Serge Ibaka, who has a strained calf and will miss the rest of the playoffs, according to Brooks.
The Spurs took advantage by scoring 54 points in the paint. They pummeled the Thunder with Green’s 3-point baskets. He needed only 10 attempts to make his seven 3-pointers.
Green also spent more time guarding Durant than he normally would because Spurs forward Kawhi Leonard was in foul trouble during the first half, playing just nine minutes.
Parker and Green had sufficient help even without much of a presence from Leonard. Forward Tim Duncan contributed 14 points and 12 rebounds. Center Tiago Splitter grabbed 10 rebounds, scored nine points and blocked three shots.
San Antonio made an 11-2 push during the final 2:18 of the first half to take a 58-44 lead.
The Spurs made three 3-point baskets during the run, two by Green, the other by guard Manu Ginobili.
Green hit four 3-pointers in the half. On one, Ginobili made one of those passes that only he seems to make, flinging the ball from the left corner across the baseline to the right corner.
Ginobili’s 3-pointer came from 27 feet after he secured an offensive rebound.
Oklahoma City contributed to San Antonio’s strong first-half finish by committing three turnovers during the final 1:31.
Parker produced 14 points and five assists in the half. Durant and Westbrook scored 11 each before the break, but they combined to make just nine of 26 shots.
“We had a really good quarter going, actually a good half,” Brooks said. “Then they hit three 3s, we turned it over three times and we took a couple of tough shots. We didn’t do a good job of responding after that run.”
San Antonio won Game 1 by 17 points. Now this. Durant, after two blowout defeats, said, “It’s hard to stay together. We have to figure it out.”
The series moves to Oklahoma City for Game 3 on Sunday and Game 4 on Tuesday. Parker suggested that the Spurs have not accomplished much yet, recalling that they went to Oklahoma City with a 2-0 lead in the 2012 Western Conference finals and lost four straight, including one in San Antonio.
“We just did our job (Wednesday),” Parker said. “We won our first two games at home. Nobody is very happy in the locker room.”
NOTES: Thunder F Nick Collison went scoreless Monday in Game 1 in his first start of the season, missing three shots in 15:32 of playing time. But coach Scott Brooks left Collison in the starting lineup on Wednesday as the replacement for injured F Serge Ibaka. Collison produced two points and two rebounds in 13 minutes during Game 2. … Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said F Boris Diaw was fine after getting poked in the right eye by Thunder C Steven Adams in the first half of Game 1. Diaw scored 11 points in Game 2. … The Spurs had the best record in the NBA this season, earning home-court advantage throughout the playoffs, despite F Kawhi Leonard missing 16 games and guards Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili and Danny Green sitting out 14 apiece. … Collison made a 12-foot shot in the first half by batting a pass from Derek Fisher into the basket. With one-10th of a second left on the shot clock, there was no time to catch the pass and get a shot off.
source: interaksyon.com
Guard Tony Parker, one of the stars, scored 22 points Wednesday. Guard Danny Green, part of the supporting cast, made seven 3-point baskets and scored 21. Thanks in part to the duo’s contributions, the San Antonio Spurs defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder 112-77 Wednesday night to take a 2-0 lead in the Western Conference finals.
San Antonio earned its seventh win in eight games. In this one, the Spurs outshot the Thunder 50 percent to 39.3 percent from the field and had a 21-5 edge in free throws made.
Oklahoma City forward Kevin Durant and guard Russell Westbrook were limited to 15 point apiece, converting just 13 of 40 shots between them. Their 30 points together were 26.6 fewer than they were averaging during the playoffs.
“Whenever great players have nights like that, it’s never one thing,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “I’m sure at times we guarded them well, and I’m sure at times they had open shots that they didn’t make.”
The Spurs, leading by 14 at halftime, outscored the Thunder 33-18 in the third quarter. San Antonio converted 12 of 16 shots in the process.
“I don’t think anybody on our team played well, including myself,” Thunder coach Scott Brooks said.
Oklahoma City is playing without injured shot-blocking forward Serge Ibaka, who has a strained calf and will miss the rest of the playoffs, according to Brooks.
The Spurs took advantage by scoring 54 points in the paint. They pummeled the Thunder with Green’s 3-point baskets. He needed only 10 attempts to make his seven 3-pointers.
Green also spent more time guarding Durant than he normally would because Spurs forward Kawhi Leonard was in foul trouble during the first half, playing just nine minutes.
Parker and Green had sufficient help even without much of a presence from Leonard. Forward Tim Duncan contributed 14 points and 12 rebounds. Center Tiago Splitter grabbed 10 rebounds, scored nine points and blocked three shots.
San Antonio made an 11-2 push during the final 2:18 of the first half to take a 58-44 lead.
The Spurs made three 3-point baskets during the run, two by Green, the other by guard Manu Ginobili.
Green hit four 3-pointers in the half. On one, Ginobili made one of those passes that only he seems to make, flinging the ball from the left corner across the baseline to the right corner.
Ginobili’s 3-pointer came from 27 feet after he secured an offensive rebound.
Oklahoma City contributed to San Antonio’s strong first-half finish by committing three turnovers during the final 1:31.
Parker produced 14 points and five assists in the half. Durant and Westbrook scored 11 each before the break, but they combined to make just nine of 26 shots.
“We had a really good quarter going, actually a good half,” Brooks said. “Then they hit three 3s, we turned it over three times and we took a couple of tough shots. We didn’t do a good job of responding after that run.”
San Antonio won Game 1 by 17 points. Now this. Durant, after two blowout defeats, said, “It’s hard to stay together. We have to figure it out.”
The series moves to Oklahoma City for Game 3 on Sunday and Game 4 on Tuesday. Parker suggested that the Spurs have not accomplished much yet, recalling that they went to Oklahoma City with a 2-0 lead in the 2012 Western Conference finals and lost four straight, including one in San Antonio.
“We just did our job (Wednesday),” Parker said. “We won our first two games at home. Nobody is very happy in the locker room.”
NOTES: Thunder F Nick Collison went scoreless Monday in Game 1 in his first start of the season, missing three shots in 15:32 of playing time. But coach Scott Brooks left Collison in the starting lineup on Wednesday as the replacement for injured F Serge Ibaka. Collison produced two points and two rebounds in 13 minutes during Game 2. … Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said F Boris Diaw was fine after getting poked in the right eye by Thunder C Steven Adams in the first half of Game 1. Diaw scored 11 points in Game 2. … The Spurs had the best record in the NBA this season, earning home-court advantage throughout the playoffs, despite F Kawhi Leonard missing 16 games and guards Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili and Danny Green sitting out 14 apiece. … Collison made a 12-foot shot in the first half by batting a pass from Derek Fisher into the basket. With one-10th of a second left on the shot clock, there was no time to catch the pass and get a shot off.
source: interaksyon.com
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