Stephen Curry had 28 points, Kevin Durant scored 24 and the Golden State Warriors advanced to the Western Conference finals by dismantling Anthony Davis and the New Orleans Pelicans, 113-104, in Game 5 Tuesday night. Klay Thompson added 23 points for the Warriors, who with a 15th straight home playoffs win tied Chicago for an NBA record. The Bulls did so from April 27, 1990 to May 21, 1991.

Davis had 34 points and 19 rebounds for a Pelicans team that overcame the loss of DeMarcus Cousins to a season-ending torn Achilles’ tendon three months ago to make this strong run. The Pelicans shaved the lead to seven points with two minutes left on a basket by Davis before Draymond Green’s turnaround fadeaway moments later.

The Warriors advance to play the top-seeded Houston Rockets in what has long been an anticipated Western Conference finals matchup—with a Finals feel, perhaps—and one Golden State will start on the road Monday night. The teams didn’t meet during the 2017 postseason, but the Warriors won a five-game series in the first round of the 2016 Playoffs. Houston eliminated Utah in their Game 5 earlier Tuesday.

Curry, who returned for Game 2 after nearly six weeks out with a knee injury, knocked down an open 3-pointer midway through the third and raised his hands to get the crowd going, then made another less than two minutes later. He converted three free-throws at the 6:25 mark following a hard foul by Jrue Holiday.

In the second quarter, Holiday shoved Curry hard into the basket, enraging the two-time MVP who let the officials know how upset he was by the push and no call.

Holiday contributed 27 points and 11 assists, but even with better shooting, New Orleans couldn’t stay with deep, score-at-will Golden State.

The defending champions are serious about a repeat title, and took one step closer to that goal.

So far this postseason, with Durant and Green leading the way, the Warriors have admirably defended the slower San Antonio Spurs and now the imposing, push-the-pace Pelicans.

Green had another superb all-around night on both ends with 19 points, 14 rebounds, nine assists, three steals and two blocked shots.

The Warriors came out of halftime with a 10-0 run over the opening 1:54, forcing two Pelicans timeouts and taking control for the rest of the game.

Thompson hit back-to-back 3-pointers midway through the first to put Golden State up 17-10, the second right in front of his own bench as teammates erupted in celebration. He began 6-for-9 and had 14 points by the 4:10 mark of the first.

Durant became irate when Nikola Mirotic made a late, hard bump on a 3-point try with 5:23 left in the first—a play that was reviewed and Mirotic received just a common foul.

As Durant took free-throws, Green tried to listen in on the Pelicans’ huddle before official Josh Tiven pulled him away.

CURRY’S SERIES

Curry went 10-for-16 in 37 minutes playing his fourth game back from a sprained left knee he hurt March 23. His minutes have increased each game he plays, up to 31 in Game 4 and 37 on Tuesday. He added eight assists and seven rebounds in Game 5.

He was 32-for-67 with 15 threes in the series.

On a side note, he went 0-for-5 on his signature tunnel shots before the game.

TIP-INS

Pelicans: New Orleans made 6-of-9 threes in the first and finished 10-for-24 from long range … New Orleans got back in it with an 11-0 run in the second.

Warriors: Golden State shot 4-of-14 from deep in the first half … Durant scored 20 or more points in a 17th straight postseason game. His first five points moved him past two players—Chris Mullin (685) and Harrison Barnes (687)—into 10th place all time for the Warriors in postseason scoring … Curry (366) passed Paul Arizin (364) for second place on the franchise postseason list for made free-throws … Curry (19) and Thompson (16) have made all of their free-throws this postseason … The Warriors are 9-1 in Game 5s since 2015. They also clinched their first-round series with San Antonio at home in Game 5 … Durant received the Al Attles Community Impact Award in a pregame ceremony. The Warriors Community Foundation will donate $15,000 to the charity Durant chose, Oakland Elizabeth House, which provides residences to women and children who have been homeless or faced violence or addiction.

QUOTEABLE

Steve Kerr on whether he needed to check in with his players on the urgency of closing out the series: “I dial people on my rotary phone. Nobody seems to answer, though. Nobody answers a home phone anymore. No texts necessary. Our guys know what’s at stake.”

First appeared on NBA.com

Courtesy: NBA.com

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here