tirto.id - Hasil final NBA 2018 game kedua antara Golden State Warriors vs Cleveland Cavaliers berakhir dengan skor 122-103. Bermain di Oracle Arena pada Senin, 4 Juni 2018, tuan rumah sukses menambah keunggulan mereka menjadi 2-0. Dengan demikian, Warriors hanya butuh dua kemenangan lagi untuk mempertahankan gelar. Diwarnai kegemilangan Stephen Curry sang bintang yang mencetak 33 poin, 7 rebound, dan 8 assist, Golden State Warriorrs sekali lagi menumbangkan Cleveland Cavaliers. Kali ini, tim tamu tidak cemerlang, setelah LeBron James sang kartu as hanya mengemas 29 poin, jauh berbeda dari game pertama kala ia membukukan total 51 poin. Kontras dengan game pertama yang digelar pada 31 Mei 2018 lalu ketika Cleveland Cavaliers sempat memimpin dan merepotkan Golden State Warriors, kali ini sejak awal game kedua, Cavs kesulitan berkembang. Mereka langsung tertinggal 4-0 oleh dua kali dunk shot JaVale McGee. Cavaliers hanya bisa terus membayangi Warriors, terutama karena LeBron James dibuat tidak bisa sebebas game pertama. Hingga akhir kuarter pertama, James hanya mencetak 10 poin. Timnya tertinggal 32-28 dengan permainan Kevin Durant, Stephan Curry, dan Klay Thompson dari kubu tuan rumah yang sangat prima. Tiba di kuarter kedua, keadaan tidak berubah. Cavaliers tetap tertinggal. Jarak sempat demikian jauh, ketika Stephan Curry dua kali menghasilkan tembakan tiga angka dan Kevin Durant sukses dalam dua lemparan bebas untuk kedudukan 59-44. Untunglah Lebron James menambah poin timnya di ujung kuarter sehingga skor menjadi 59-46. Situasi sempat membaik untuk Cavaliers ketika Tristan Thompson dan Kevin Love mencetak poin dan membawa timnya masuk dalam satuan angka sama 59-51. Namun, kekuatan Warriors tidak luntur oleh gertakan tersebut. Tuan rumah masih memimpin bahkan ketika di pertengahan kuarter, LeBron James mencetak tiga poin hingga kedudukan 72-64. Warriors menutup kuarter ketiga dengan selisih besar setelah rebound Kevin Durant dan tembakan tiga angka David West untuk kedudukan 90-80. Hanya menyisakan kuarter terakhir, Cavaliers lantas menyempitkan jarak dengan poin ke-25 James. Namun, Stephen Curry memastikan timnya unggul makin jauh dengan dua kali lemparan tiga angka. Skor 96-83, momentum sepenuhnya ada di pihak tuam rumah. Curry menciptakan sensasi ketika mengirimkan tembakan tiga angka dari luar areal lawan untuk kedudukan 103-89. Performa bintang bertinggi 1,91 meter itu semakin brilian ketika ia mencetak tiga angka lagi dalam posisi hilang keseimbangan. Ditambah dengan cutting dunk shot Kevin Durant, skor makin besar jadi 111-93. Kemeneangan dikunci oleh Golden State Warriors dengan skor akhir 122-103. Kini mereka tinggal membutuhkan dua kemenangan lagi untuk menjadi juara.
tirto.id - Game kedua final NBA antara Golden State Warriors vs Cleveland Cavaliers pada Senin, 4 Juni 2018 akan digelar pada pukul 07.00 WIB. Laga di Oracle Arena tersebut dapat dipantau melalui live streaming Vidio.com dan siaran langsung Indosiar. Setelah kekalahan 114-124 di game pertama, Cleveland Cavaliers mau tidak mau harus bisa memetik kemenangan di game kedua ini. Dengan demikian, mereka akan menyeimbangkan kedudukan jadi 1-1 dan segalanya dimulai kembali. Jika Cavs kembali kalah, Warriors unggul 2-0 dan tinggal butuh dua kemenangan lagi untuk menjadi juara. Fokus di game kedua ini mengarah pada J.R. Smith. Bukan tanpa alasan. Sang pemain kunci Cavaliers gagal menyelesaikan salah satu dari dua tembakan bebas di ujung kuarter keempat gim pertama. Akibatnya, ketika itu skor tetap sama kuat 107-107. Sialnya di sisa pertandingan, Smith yang lupa timnya masih imbang, justru membuang peluang menyerang ke pertahanan Warriors. Blunder Smith itu berujung fatal karena pada over-time, Warriors bangkit dan mengakhiri pertandingan dengan skor 114-124. Namun, LeBron James, bintang Cavaliers, mengingatkan, Smith akan bangkit pada game kedua ini, sebagai pemain yang akan menolong timnya yang sangat butuh kemenangan. "Dia mungkin menerima kekalahan itu seberat pemain lain di tim kami. Tapi satu hal tentang J.R., dia memiliki kemampuan luar biasa untuk bangkit kembali. Siapapun sudah melihat sepanjang musim ini, ketika J.R. tidak bermain bagus dalam sebuah laga, maka pada laga berikutnya dia bangkit dan menembak bola dengan sangat baik," ungkap James dikutip laman resmi NBA. Sebaliknya, Golden State Warriors mengincar kemenangan kedua yang akan memuluskan langkah mereka. Warriors juga menunggu kebangkitan Kevin Durant, pemain kunci mereka yang kurang bersinar pada game pertama. "Kami tahu kami memenangi Game 1 dengan perbedaan tipis. Sekarang, kami harus bermain lebih baik dan mengambil kendali seri final ini. Dan Kevin Durant akan menjadi bagian besar dalam hal tersebut," tutur Stephen Curry, pemain kunci Warriors dikutip laman resmi NBA . Jika tidak ada perubahan jadwal, pertandingan Golden State Warriors vs Cleveland Cavaliers dapat disaksikan pada Senin, 4 Juni 2018 pukul 07.00 WIB melalui link live streaming berikut ini. LIVE STREAMING CLEVELAND CAVALIERS vs GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS (via Indosiar) LIVE STREAMING CLEVELAND CAVALIERS vs GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS (via Vidio.com)
In an on-court interview with ABC’s Doris Burke following the game, Curry talked about what it was like to break the record for 3-pointers in a final game that Ray Allen had set for the Boston Celtics in Game 2 of the 2010 championship series.
“It means a lot,” Curry said. “As I’ve gone through my career I’ve been blessed to play, Reggie (Miller) and Ray Allen are the two names that always pop up at the top of all the 3-point shooter lists, so any time you’re mentioned with those type of names is pretty special.”
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James was not quite as dominant as he had been in Game 1, but he once again stuffed the box score with 29 points, 13 assists and 9 rebounds, playing through an eye injury he sustained in Game 1 courtesy of a poke by Draymond Green. His offensive impact was well beyond the 29 points, as he repeatedly set up Kevin Love (22 points) and George Hill (15) for quality shots. James also had his typical impact on defense, more than once ripping the ball out of Durant’s hands.
The difference for Golden State was that it got back to its ball-movement offense, with the team combining for 28 assists and coupling that with a far better effort on the glass, matching the Cavaliers with 41 rebounds. But Golden State had a dramatic advantage in field goal percentage (57.3 percent versus 41.6 percent), which essentially sealed the Cavaliers’ fate.
A big part of the team’s ability to compete on such a high level on both ends of the court was 34 solid minutes from Klay Thompson, who was questionable coming into the game with a high-ankle sprain sustained in a collision with J.R. Smith in Game 1. He received a great deal of treatment on his ankle to deal with swelling and bruising, but played through the injury just fine, which led to an amusing exchange between Thompson and Curry at their postgame news conference.
“I didnt realize how much you use your ankle until I hurt it,” Thompson said.
Curry, who endured chronic ankle problems earlier in his career, brought down the room by interjecting with “You should’ve asked me.”
Coming into the series, much was made of the talent disparity in the starting lineups of the two teams. Curry, Durant and Thompson each topped 20 points for a second consecutive game, but between McGee coming off the bench to have a huge impact at center, and the team getting huge minutes from older veterans like Shaun Livingston and David West, it could be argued that it was the reserves who made this a blowout just as much as the team’s All-Stars.
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Livingston and McGee combined to go a perfect 11 of 11 from the field, which Lue said they would simply have to put up with if they want to stand a chance in the series, though he acknowledged he would like to see his team make it a bit harder.
“I mean, when you’re trying to take away Klay, Steph and Durant, other guys are going to be open,” Lue said. “So, you’ve got to make those guys beat you, but they can’t get easy baskets and dunks and things like that.”
The series will now shift to Cleveland for Game 3 on Wednesday, and if anything, the talent disparity could tip even more in Golden State’s favor with Andre Iguodala close to returning from a bone bruise in his left knee. Thompson also will have had a few more days to let his injured ankle recover.
The Warriors are just two wins away from being back-to-back champions, and the competitive spirit that was so prevalent in Game 1 — from both teams — may be in danger of breaking. It will require a huge counterpunch from the Cavaliers to make this a series once again.
Warriors Coach Steve Kerr, who is well aware of his team’s tedency to have a let-down game following a blowout, seemed happy with the win but was not ready to declare the series over just yet.
“Yeah, we’re happy with the way we played,” he said. “But we know this is just getting started.”
Here’s how the Warriors won Game 2:
1st Quarter: JaVale McGee Makes Early Impact
JaVale McGee easily won the tip and Golden State took a quick 4-0 lead thanks to two dunks from their new starting center. The move away from Kevon Looney is working well so far.
1st Quarter: Warriors Take Early Lead With Easy Baskets
The Warriors are getting to the basket very easily so far, with Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant facing almost no resistance on layup attempts to go with JaVale McGee’s earlier dunks. Golden State’s first 10 points came in the paint which is a fairly different strategy, but they are playing to the defense. They changed it up on their sixth shot, with Klay Thompson pulling up from 3-point range and making it easily.
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At the first timeout, Golden State is leading 15-6 and looking far more energetic than Cleveland on both ends of the court.
Marc Stein: Did someone trick the Warriors into thinking it’s the third quarter already? The hosts got to the rim so easily on their first five possessions; Cleveland looking very much like the league’s 29th-ranked defense early. Also: For all the grief JaVale McGee gets at his shakiest, his presence often (bizarrely) energizes the Warriors’ stars.
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1st Quarter: Cleveland Adjusting to Warriors’ Hot Shooting But Still Trailing
Coach Tyronn Lue showed good instincts with his timeouts in Game 1, with the Cavaliers often cutting off a potential run once they got back onto the court. They were clearly more competitive coming out of his first timeout tonight. George Hill hit a 3-pointer, LeBron James turned around a 3-point play and the Warriors actually missed a shot for the first time tonight. Even with the decent adjustments, Cleveland is trailing 19-14 with just over six minutes left in the first quarter.
1st Quarter: J.R. Smith Shrugs Off the Crowd
J.R. Smith isn’t taking the bait from a crowd at Oracle Arena that has been mocking him all game. He hit a big 3-pointer on one end of the court and then got a steal on the other.
As of the Warriors’ first timeout with 4:34 left in the quarter, Cleveland trails 21-17 and is staying in this game even though Golden State is a ridiculous 10 of 12 from the field. If the Cavaliers can maintain this intensity when the Warriors start missing some shots, the score could turn around quickly.
Marc Stein: J.R. Smith’s short memory isn’t all bad. He clearly forgot the score at the worse possible time late in regulation in Game 1, but it has to help when it comes to coping with the aftereffect of that blunder. The crowd here at Oracle Arena gave Smith a standing ovation during introductions — and just serenaded him with an M.V.P. chant at the free-throw line — but Smith isn’t playing timid so far. He’s already gotten one 3 to go down.
End of 1st Quarter: Warriors Lead, 32-28
As the buzzer rang ending the first quarter, the Warriors were leading the Cavaliers by a score of 32-28, with an offense that featured a lot more ball movement and a lot less dribbling than they have shown in recent games. Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson have 7 points each and Kevin Durant has 6, which thus far is enough to negate another strong effort by LeBron James, who has 10.
Golden State shot 15 of 23 for the quarter and more important, they were not nearly as beaten up on the boards, with 10 rebounds to Cleveland’s 8. It helps when you don’t miss your shots.
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The fact that Cleveland is still fairly close considering all of that could portend a tightly-contested game the rest of the way. It feels like the rest of the Cavaliers are more involved than they were in Game 1, but that’s mostly a mirage. James has scored or assisted on 22 of Cleveland’s 28 points.
Marc Stein: Have to believe that the Cavaliers are thrilled to be trailing by a mere 4 points after a quarter when Golden State shot 15-for-23 from the field. LeBron is comfortably on a triple-double pace already. The King, giving us his best Scott Skiles, has 5 assists already.
2nd Quarter: Warriors Go on a Run; Durant Has 2 Fouls
The second quarter started with a Cleveland miss and a Kevin Durant make on a midrange jumper. While neither team looked nearly as smooth in the quarter’s first few minutes, a Klay Thompson 2-pointer with 9:12 left put Golden State up by 9 points. A timeout is an opportunity for Tyronn Lue to snuff out this 8-2 run, which Cleveland suddenly desperately needs.
Marc Stein: Hard to get too worked up about Kevin Durant’s two early fouls when he’s made his first five shots from the field and runs a fast break that leads to a Klay Thompson corner 2-pointer.
2nd Quarter: Old Guys Get it Done for Golden State
It took less than two minutes of game clock for Cleveland to get the lead back down 4 points, but a tough offensive rebound by David West helped set up a midrange jumper by Shaun Livingston, and then the veteran West had a huge block on defense which was followed by a Livingston layup. The old guys for Golden State are contributing a lot to this game.
After a Stephen Curry 3-pointer with 6:11 to play in the half, the Warriors were up to an 11-point lead and Tyronn Lue had to burn another timeout. It is not that Cleveland hasn’t been resilient tonight, and it’s not that they haven’t made solid adjustments, but the Warriors are rebounding better, shooting better and are having a much easier time than they did in Game 1.
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2nd Quarter: ‘Wizards Lineup’ Working for Warriors
JaVale McGee came back on the court and immediately made an impact with a hook shot for 2 points. A few possessions later, he had a huge dunk following a Cleveland turnover. The Warriors have their 2011 Wizards lineup on the court, with both McGee and Nick Young, but the entire team is attacking this game in a way they haven’t in quite some time and their ball movement has been better than it has at any point this off-season.
With just over three minutes remaining, the Warriors have a 13-point lead and the Cavaliers may be running out of adjustments, especially with LeBron James not finding it nearly as easy to score.
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Marc Stein: We are a spoiled basketball public. LeBron James has 13 points, 7 rebounds and 8 assists — and everyone in the building with a press pass is wondering: What’s wrong? Is it the eye? Is he gassed? Either alibi would be understandable, but don’t forget this one: He doesn’t have enough help!
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Halftime: LeBron Needs Some Help
At halftime, Golden State is leading 59-46. The key stats for the first half were the Warriors having 18 assists and 24 rebounds, looking much better on both offense and defense than they did in Game 1.
Draymond Green is playing remarkable defense regardless of his matchup, and the Big Three of Warriors scoring (Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Kevin Durant) has combined for 39 points, with Curry having 16 points, 12 of which came off 3-pointers.
The decision to start JaVale McGee has paid off with 8 points, Shaun Livingston has 8 points off the bench and David West looks revitalized in his first chunk of action in quite some time.
That teamwide effort to fix the problems of Game 1 has made another terrific performance by LeBron James (15 points, 7 rebounds, 8 assists) mostly irrelevant, though Cleveland has gotten a very good performance from George Hill, who is making up for his missed free-throw in Game 1 with 12 first-half points.
If Golden State has one of its signature third quarters locked and loaded, this could turn into a real blowout.
Marc Stein: Don’t sleep on the very savvy minutes that Golden State got in the first half from Shaun Livingston and David West. The Warriors, in general, are playing their kind of game with 18 assists on 25 made baskets. The hosts are just getting too many contributions from too many people for LeBron and Co. to keep up.
[What’s the secret to the Warriors’ third-quarter success? See what they told us by clicking here.]
3rd Quarter: Can the Cavs Keep Up?
The second half got underway with Tristan Thompson getting a layup almost immediately. Kevin Love, who had been off in the first half, hit a 3-pointer, and while Kevin Durant hit a pair of free-throws, a dunk by Thompson had Cleveland off to a 7-2 run to start the half.
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Marc Stein: The Cavaliers have a 15-6 edge in free throw attempts and are trailing by 13 points entering Golden State’s beloved third quarter. I am not feeling optimistic about their comeback chances.
3rd Quarter: Love and Hill Heating Up
The Cavaliers have to be excited about Kevin Love’s two 3-pointers early in the half. George Hill hit another 3-pointer, but after yet another big dunk by JaVale McGee the Warriors lead is at 10. This definitely isn’t a vintage Warriors third quarter so far, but they are maintaining a solid lead even as Cleveland shows more energy.
3rd Quarter: LeBron Closing in on Triple Double
The Cavaliers are not going away. A 3-pointer in transition by Klay Thompson got the home crowd fired up (and put the Warriors up by 11), but LeBron James answered with a 3-pointer of his own. Stephen Curry missed a corner-3 and Tristan Thompson dunked the ball home, forcing Golden State to take a timeout with their lead down to 6.
James is picking up the pace, with 20 points, 10 assists and 8 rebounds, and even if Jeff Van Gundy is mocking the stats obsession in the N.B.A. on the ABC broadcast, the fact that James has been right in that range in nearly every finals game for the last two years — he averaged a triple-double for the entire finals last year — is remarkable.
3rd Quarter: Lue Gets Game’s First Technical Foul
Cleveland got Golden State’s lead all the way down to 5 points with a Kevin Love 3-pointer, but after a Jordan Bell free-throw it was back up to 8. Tyronn Lue picked up a technical after a non-call on what he thought was a foul of LeBron James by Stephen Curry (Curry gave James no place to land and James fell out of bounds). Curry sank the one shot afforded by that to stretch the lead to 9. The Cavaliers truly can’t catch a break in a game where they are doing everything they can to keep themselves in it.
3rd Quarter: Klay Thompson Surges to 20 Points
There had been fear that even if Klay Thompson started that he would not be able to play much in Game 2 as he worked back from a high-ankle sprain and some serious bruising on his left leg, but he has played 26 minutes so far and is tied with Kevin Durant for a team-high 20 points.
But Thompson’s surge hasn’t been able to give his team any real breathing room thanks to Kevin Love having really picked things up (he’s up to 20 points on 14 field-goal attempts) and the Cavaliers getting solid scoring contributions from four players instead of just two.
Golden State’s rebounding advantage in the first half has evaporated. The Warriors will need to figure out what is going wrong in the quarter when they normally dominate. Their lead may still be at 8 points, but Cleveland seems to be getting stronger, at least for the time being.
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End of 3rd Quarter: Cavs Keep it Close
Golden State’s ball movement of the first half largely disappeared late in the third quarter in favor of Kevin Durant isolation plays, but a driving Durant found a wide-open David West for a 3-pointer with 4.6 seconds remaining in the quarter, and the veteran connected, extending Golden State’s lead to 11. It was West’s first 3-pointer of the playoffs.
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While the Cavs got a Kyle Korver free-throw courtesy of a bad foul by Jordan Bell which narrowed it to 10 points, they couldn’t capitalize on maintaining possession of the ball thanks to a hustle play by Bell.
A double-digit lead at home seems fairly safe for the Warriors, but they definitely lacked for intensity in the third quarter. With a tireless LeBron James sure to come at them with everything he has, this game isn’t over yet.
4th Quarter: Curry Time?
LeBron James got the scoring started in the fourth quarter with a wide-open 3-pointer, but Stephen Curry shook Larry Nance’s coverage and immediately answered with one of his own. Golden State got a stop and Curry hit a corner-3, pushing the lead to 13 points and forcing Tyronn Lue to take another timeout to try to slow down the two-time M.V.P. It is Curry getting loose that usually sets off the Warriors’ big third quarters, so if he is going to start doing that in the fourth, Lue needs to do anything he can to figure out a way to break the rhythm.
Marc Stein: Kevin Love and George Hill have been functional. LeBron has been LeBron James. But it’s going to take more than that in this building for the Cavaliers to win. Golden State has already succeeded in one of Steve Kerr’s main missions in this Game 2: making LeBron work harder for everything. You can see the toll it’s taking on him every time they show a shot of James on the bench.
4th Quarter: No Rest for the King
Marc Stein: More problems for the visitors: LeBron James’ next second of rest in this game will be his first. He hasn’t missed a dribble of game action yet with 8:11 remaining in regulation. In related news: Cleveland was down to one timeout remaining with 10:11 to go in regulation. Expect a very weary LeBron James in his postgame news conference.
4th Quarter: Curry’s 4-Point Play Pushes Lead to 16
Stephen Curry hit a shot-clock-beating 28-footer to extend Golden State’s lead to 14 points, further pushing the momentum in the Warriors’ favor. With Cleveland having just one more timeout, there was nothing Ty Lue could do to slow things down.
The Warriors got yet another 3-pointer from Curry with 5:44 remaining, and he pushed the lead to 16 points after a free-throw earned thanks to a foul by Kevin Love on the shot attempt.
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4th Quarter: Cavs Clear the Bench, Down 18
The Cavaliers called yet another timeout after Stephen Curry found Kevin Durant for a huge dunk which extended Golden State’s lead to 18 points. The game is effectively over with 5:15 left to play unless LeBron James can somehow find a gear that even he might not consider possible.
The Cavaliers largely gave up with 4:09 left in the game, sending in bench players like Cedi Osman, Jordan Clarkson and Rodney Hood to see if any of them can get some confidence from a good stretch at the end of what has turned into a mild blowout. After 43 minutes, LeBron James is on the bench with 29 points, 13 assists and 9 rebounds.
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Marc Stein: Can’t argue with the Ty Lue’s decision to surrender with 4:09 to go and the Warriors up by 18. LeBron didn’t look thrilled with it as he exited the game, but it’s time to give the likes of Rodney Hood and Cedi Osman a taste of this series — and save LeBron from himself. He needs a rest.
Warriors 122, Cavaliers 103 (final)
Steph Curry scored 13 of his game-high 33 to lead an efficient Golden State Warriors win over the Cleveland Cavaliers, 122-103 on Sunday night in Game 2 of the NBA Finals to take a 2-0 series lead.
Curry hit nine three-pointers, breaking Ray Allen’s eight-year-old record for an NBA Finals game. But he wasn’t alone. Kevin Durant scored 26 on just 14 field goal attempts, and Klay Thompson overcame a high ankle sprain to add 20.
The Warriors shot 57% for the game and dished out 28 assists, eight by Curry. Golden State also never trailed. After 15 lead changes and 17 ties in Game 1, there were no lead changes and no ties in Game 2.
LeBron James had 29 points, 13 assists and nine rebounds, and Kevin Love had another double-double with 22 points and 10 rebounds, but the Cavs never got closer than five points in the second half.
Game 3 is Wednesday night in Cleveland.
Warriors 111, Cavaliers 93 (5:15, 4Q)
Steph Curry has taken over and now has 30 points, including eight three-pointers, tying Ray Allen (Game 2 in 2010) for the most in an NBA Finals game. Some of the shots have been ridiculous, including what Mike Breen called a “parking lot three” here:
Warriors 96, Cavaliers 83 (10:11, 4Q)
Steph Curry hit two quick threes early in the final quarter, including one in the corner that looked awfully familiar.
Warriors 90, Cavaliers 80 (End 3Q)
Defense went by the wayside in the third quarter, with Cleveland actually cutting into the lead in a 34-31 period. George Hill has been effective with 15 points on the game, including three makes from distance.
Warriors 72, Cavaliers 66 (6:28, 3Q)
Kevin Durant has been aggressive so far in the third quarter, and has 18 in the game. Durant, JaVale McGee and Shaun Livingston are a combined 16-for-17 from the field. McGee has made all six field goals, including five dunks.
Yet despite all that Cleveland is still hanging around, cutting the deficit to six. Kevin Love has a pair of threes in the third quarter and already has a double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds.
Warriors 59, Cavaliers 46 (Halftime)
Steph Curry got hot late with a pair of threes and leads all scorers at the half with 16 points, including four triples.
Kevin Durant added 13 points on 5-of-6 shooting. LeBron James had 15 points, seven rebounds and eight assists for the Cavaliers.
Warriors 51, Cavaliers 39 (3:13, 2Q)
LeBron James is threatening to get a first-half triple double with 11 points, seven assists and six rebounds, which is even more amazing because he’s doing it with the reddest eye imaginable:
Warriors 47, Cavaliers 36 (6:11, 2Q)
Golden State opened up their largest lead of the game thanks to a 7-0 run, with a pair of buckets by Shaun Livingston, who has eight points on 4-of-4 shooting, and a three by Steph Curry, who has 10 points.
Warriors 32, Cavaliers 28 (End 1Q)
The first quarter featured a load of easy buckets for Golden State, who scored 22 points in the paint and had 11 assists on their 15 field goal makes, shooting 65%. Let they lead by only four points.
Steph Curry and Klay Thompson each scored seven for the Warriors, and Kevin Durant had six on 3-of-3 shooting. LeBron James led all scorers with 10 for Cleveland, and had five assists.
Warriors 21, Cavaliers 17 (4:34, 1Q)
Golden State started out hot, making their first seven shots, but LeBron James and the Cavaliers are staying close. James has five points and three assists, including this nifty spin move:
Oh, and did you catch the pregame standing ovation the Warriors fans gave J.R. Smith, or the MVP chants when he was at the free throw line? Very petty, Oracle.
Warriors 13, Cavaliers 6 (8:21, 1Q)
JaVale McGee got the start on Sunday and rewarded Steve Kerr’s decision with two dunks to start the game. The Warriors are 6-for-6 to start Game 2.
Look at that
The Cavs and Warriors played in the same city on Sunday as they did Thursday, but LeBron took a red eye to Game 2:
For those wondering, LeBron's eye still doesn't look good. pic.twitter.com/S8aZVk0LWS — SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) June 4, 2018
Injury report
Klay Thompson’s ankle is good enough for him to start Game 2, as expected. But Golden State will be without Andre Iguodala for a sixth straight game with a left knee contusion.
Fans are ready
Warriors fans are out in full force on Sunday, ready with jokes.
Pregame
After two whole days to let the enormity of the opener of the NBA Finals, the Golden State Warriors and Cleveland Cavaliers are back at it for Game 2 on Sunday night at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif.
Golden State pulled away in overtime for a 124-114 victory on Thursday night, thanks to a combined 79 points from Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant and Klay Thompson.
The Warriors overcame a vintage performance from LeBron James, who scored 51 points, dished out eight assists and grabbed eight rebounds for the Cavaliers. It was just the sixth 50-point game in NBA Finals history, and it was James’ eighth game of 40 or more points in this postseason, matching Jerry West (1965) for the NBA record.
The ending of Game 1 was chock full of controversy, from the reversed block/charge foul call involving James and Durant, the inexplicable dribbling out the clock by J.R. Smith at the end of regulation, and the fracas surrounding the ejection of Tristan Thompson in overtime.
“We’ve got to move on,” James said on Friday, per the Associated Press. “This game is over and done with. We had opportunities.”
Golden State outscored Cleveland 28-22 in the third quarter in Game 1, continuing a theme for the Warriors, who are +136 in the third quarter this postseason, beating their foes by an average of 7.6 points per third quarter.
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Warriors vs. Cavaliers Game 7 info
Location: Oracle Arena, Oakland, Calif.
Game time: 8 p.m. ET
TV: ABC
Announcers: Mike Breen, Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson, Doris Burke
Online streaming: Watch ESPN