Cavaliers even NBA Finals with wild OT win over Warriors

by
Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

Nobody will be writing LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers off any longer.

It took overtime, but James and the Cavaliers evened the NBA Finals at 1-1 with a 95-93 victory Sunday.

It didn't come easy, and it almost didn't come at all, with the Golden State Warriors chipping away again and again, with questionable calls and unbelievable plays - and misplays - making Game 2 as exciting an affair as Game 1.

After missing a potential game-winner at the end of regulation in Game 1, which the Cavs would ultimately lose in overtime, James was given another opportunity. Tied at 87 with 7.2 seconds to go, James had a chance at redemption. He drove, he was met by several bodies, and he missed the well-contested layup.

And just like that, for the first time ever, the first two games of the NBA Finals both required extra time.

Playing incredibly shorthanded, here in his fifth consecutive finals, the exhaustion dripped off of James. Every miss was worn on his face. Every tough call - and there were a couple of iffy ones, to put it conservatively - had him seemingly ready to combust. He had done all he could and a tough overtime frame left him in need of some help.

Cue Matthew Dellavedova getting an offensive rebound, getting fouled in the process, and knocking down the game-tying, as well as the game-winning free throws with 10 seconds to play.

Steph Curry, the league's Most Valuable Player, missed a 19-footer for the lead and then committed a turnover as the Warriors rushed for a final shot, completing one of his worst performances in memory. He finished 5-of-23 overall for 19 points with six rebounds, five assists, six turnovers, and an NBA Finals-record 13 missed threes.

Turning Point

Coming out of the last third-quarter timeout, the Warriors found themselves down 62-56 with 14:14 left in the game. Their defense had kept things close to this point, despite a rather moribund offensive performance by their standards. That's the luxury of being a two-way juggernaut.

When play resumed, the Warriors defense became even more smothering. J.R. Smith was forced into a late-clock 28-footer, in so much as Smith can be "forced" into a shot. James then missed a 7-footer, and even when Tristan Thompson corralled the offensive rebound, Cleveland came up empty with a shot-clock violation. And on the next possession, another 24-second whistle.

When Draymond Green poked an errant Dellavedova pass loose, springing Mo Speights for a fastbreak, the momentum had swung.

But Speights blew the open dunk.

It's only two points, and the Warriors very nearly stole this game back in the closing moments. One basket didn't doom them, especially considering they eventually made the comeback and forced overtime. But that blown dunk, the lost momentum, the missed opportunity to enter the fourth quarter down one point, it seems in retrospect the avatar for an incredibly close game the Warriors uncharacteristically lost at the margins.

Star Performer

There is one player in the history of the NBA who has more playoff triple-doubles than James, who tallied the 13th of his career Sunday. The term triple-double undersells what James did in Game 2, which was nothing short of a legacy-defining masterpiece.

It was incredible, masterful, beautiful, and powerful. The best defense in basketball has been daring him to beat them one-on-one, and while it's taking a ton of shots to do so, James is answering the call. Yes, he missed a potential game-winner at the end of regulation and fatigued in overtime for a second consecutive game, but to focus only on that would miss a mystical forest for a few ugly trees.

James finished with 39 points on 11-of-34 shooting, grabbed 16 rebounds, dished 11 assists, and committed only three turnovers. To post those numbers, and do so with relative efficiency, given the incredibly high usage demand, is nothing short of amazing.

He's down a Kyrie Irving, down a Kevin Love, playing on what amounts to a seven-man team with James Jones playing significant minutes. The Cavaliers strapped firmly atop his pack, this generation's greatest player continued to trudge his way into basketball lore.

LeBron James.

Highlight Reel

One team employs James and the other is the Warriors. Of course Game 2 was flush with highlights, and Curry's fresh kicks were opening eyes before the game even tipped-off. A quick run through the reel:

Series at a Glance

Game 1: Warriors 108, Cavaliers 100 (OT) (Warriors lead series 1-0)
Game 2: Cavaliers 95, Warriors 93 (OT) (Series tied 1-1)
Game 3: Warriors at Cavaliers, Tue. June 9, 9 p.m. ET
Game 4: Warriors at Cavaliers, Thu. June 11, 9 p.m. ET
Game 5: Cavaliers at Warriors, Sun. June 14, 8 p.m. ET
*Game 6: Warriors at Cavaliers, Tue. June 16, 9 p.m. ET
*Game 7: Cavaliers at Warriors, Fri. June 19, 9 p.m. ET

* - if necessary

Check out the comprehensive guide to the NBA Finals for more.

Alternate Series at a Glance

The Digest

Comprehensive guide to the NBA Finals: Warriors crowned champions after dominant season

by theScore Staff
David Richard-USA TODAY Sports

The best team - from start to finish - was left standing in the end.

The Golden State Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers in six games to capture their first NBA title since 1975. Andre Iguodala was named NBA Finals MVP, scoring 20 points twice in the series, while playing inspiring defense against LeBron James.

This is your guide to the Finals: Game recaps, must reads, statistics, further reading, and more.

Game Recaps

Game 6: Warriors 105, Cavaliers 97

The Warriors are NBA champions, closing out the Cavaliers in Cleveland, in what was one of the most entertaining NBA Finals in years.

The league's best team throughout the regular season, the Warriors finishing 2014-15 with an 83-20 record puts them in the upper echelon of teams throughout the history of the league. Armed with the MVP in Steph Curry, a fun, exciting, and difficult-to-stop offensive attack, and a smothering, disciplined, amorphous defense, they've seemed both the unstoppable force and the immovable object for months.

They had some breaks, as most championship teams require. Their path to the finals was easier than it could have been with different playoff seeding or better injury luck for opponents, and they played the finals with 15 relatively healthy bodies, a minor miracle. That should not confuse what was a thoroughly impressive, unrelenting, season-long performance from a team that truly exemplifies that word: team. [Read More]

Game 5: Warriors 104, Cavaliers 91

The Warriors took a 3-2 series lead thanks to some insane shotmaking by Curry.

Curry drained three fourth-quarter triples as part of a 37-point effort to edge out LeBron James's 40-point, 14-rebound and 11-assist performance. Curry scored 17 in the fourth as the Warriors pulled away, en route to a 104-91 victory.

There's probably something to that report about Curry being upset with the lovefest for Matthew Dellavedova's supposed "lockdown" defense. [Read More]

Game 4: Warriors 103, Cavaliers 82

The NBA Finals are now a best-of-three.

Andre Iguodala made his first start of the year and turned in one of his best all-around performances of the season, helping the Golden State Warriors to a 103-82 Game 4 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers to even their series at two games apiece.

Iguodala replaced Andrew Bogut in the starting five to give the Warriors a super-small look that has worked for them throughout the playoffs. It worked again on Thursday, with Iguodala scoring a season-high 22 points to go with eight rebounds and a steal.[Read More]

Game 3: Cavaliers 96, Warriors 91

It took 45 years, but Cavaliers fans finally got to experience a Finals win in Cleveland.

After watching a 20-point lead nearly evaporate in the fourth quarter, LeBron James and the Cavaliers held on for a 96-91 Game 3 victory to take a 2-1 series lead over the Golden State Warriors.

James' 40 Game 3 points give him 123 for the series, which is the highest scoring total ever through three Finals games. [Read More]

Game 2: Cavaliers 95, Warriors 93 (OT)

Nobody will be writing LeBron James and the Cavaliers off any longer.

The King had a triple-double, the fifth of his Finals career, willing the Cavaliers to victory, finishing with 39 points, 16 rebounds, 11 assists, one steal, and a block.

Playing incredibly shorthanded, here in his fifth consecutive finals, the exhaustion dripped off of James. Every miss was worn on his face. Every tough call - and there were a couple of iffy ones, to put it conservatively - had him seemingly ready to combust. He had done all he could and a tough overtime frame left him in need of some help.

Cue Matthew Dellavedova getting an offensive rebound, getting fouled in the process, and knocking down the game-tying, as well as the game-winning free throws with 10 seconds to play. [Read More]

Game 1: Warriors 108, Cavs 100 (OT)

Game 1 was worth the torturous eight-day wait.

Despite a personal NBA Finals-best 44 points from LeBron James, the Warriors managed to eke out a 108-100 overtime victory in front of a raucous Oracle Arena crowd.

It was a costly loss in more ways than one for the Cavaliers, as Kyrie Irving left the game in overtime, limping off the floor after appearing to aggravate his left knee injury. Things turned out far worse, as Irving will miss the remainder of the finals with a fractured knee cap.

Curry had 26 points on 10-of-20 shooting to lead the Warriors. He played 43 minutes, adding four rebounds, eight assists, and two steals. [Read More]

Injury Report

Final Statistics

Playoffs

Team GP OffRtg DefRtg NetRtg TS% REB%
Cavaliers 20 104 (6th) 100.3 (4th) 3.6 (3rd) 52.4 (8th) 53.2 (1st)
Warriors 21 106.4 (2nd) 97.4 (1st) 9 (1st) 55 (1st) 51.1 (3rd)

Regular Season

Team Wins OffRtg DefRtg NetRtg TS% REB%
Cavaliers 53 107.7 (4th) 104.1 (20th) 3.7 (7th) 55.7 (4th) 51.1 (7th)
Warriors 67 109.7 (2nd) 98.2 (1st) 11.4 (1st) 57.1 (1st) 50.1 (12th)

MVPs (Playoffs)

Player MIN PTS REB AST STL TS% USG% OffRtg DefRtg
LeBron 42.2 30.1 11.3 8.5 1.7 48.7 37.4 104.2 100.2
Curry 39.8 28.3 5.3 7.3 1.9 60.7 30.5 106.4 96

Further Reading

  • A top-to-bottom breakdown on the Warriors' title team by the always-impeccably detailed Zach Lowe of Grantland.

    "Those who base everything they know on the past are in danger of missing the evolution happening in front of them. All that’s left now for the “jump-shooting team!” crowd is to point out that Golden State needed perhaps the greatest jump-shooter in league history to break some historical precedent." [Grantland]
  • Golden State closed out Cleveland by playing "Warriors basketball," writes Sports Illustrated's Rob Mahoney:

    "Every NBA playoff series is its own unique organism. It lives and breathes, and from that life comes growth. Winning, then, isn’t as simple as taking four games in seven tries. It’s a steady course of acclimation to a context that can’t help but shift. The Warriors were crowned the NBA champions on Tuesday because they were more flexible than the Cavaliers. They changed their lineup.They exaggerated their stylistic advantages. They helped to create an end to the series entirely different from its beginning. Game 6, and the NBA championship along with it, was won by Warriors basketball." [Sports Illustrated]
  • Sports Illustrated's Lee Jenkins nailed the headline on his latest piece: 'Andre and the Giant: How one veteran slowed LeBron and turned the Finals.' Here's an excerpt:

    "Iguodala is 11 months older, two inches shorter and 35 pounds lighter than the most punishing player in the world. He entered the NBA out of Arizona a year after James, drafted ninth by the 76ers in 2004, and immediately began composing a mental manual on how to halt him. The 6' 6", 215-pound Iguodala developed a similar guide for every small forward, but James was a particularly compelling subject, and they faced off regularly in the Eastern Conference. With each matchup Iguodala added another page, until he knew James’s tendencies as well as his own. 'That book is crazy big now,' says Iguodala, 31. 'What he does in the post, what he does when he goes left, what he does when he comes at me like this.' Iguodala wriggles his shoulders, miming James’s open-floor shimmy. He has spent more than a decade preparing for the assignment that will define his career." [Sports Illustrated]

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