NBA Finals: Stephen Curry leads Warriors’ surge in Game 2 win over Celtics
SAN FRANCISCO — Just like in Game 1, the Golden State Warriors took command with a big third quarter.
Unlike Game 1, they finished the job.
The NBA Finals are now tied, after the Warriors turned a close game into a rout with a third-quarter masterpiece. Stephen Curry scored 29 points, Jordan Poole connected from just inside of midcourt to cap the pivotal quarter, and the Warriors beat the Boston Celtics 107-88 on Sunday night in Game 2.
“I thought everybody was more engaged,“ Warriors coach Steve Kerr said after his team improved to 5-0 after a loss in these playoffs. “It’s pretty obvious. Just our level of force and physicality was ramped up quite a bit, and it had to be.“
Boston Celtics coach Ime Udoka got his first taste of the NBA as a Laker alongside Shaq and Kobe before carving out a career as a player and coach.
Poole finished with 17 points for the Warriors, who outscored Boston 35-14 in the third quarter to turn a two-point halftime lead into a 23-point edge. And when the Warriors then scored the first six points of the fourth, the Celtics waved the surrender flag and emptied their bench.
“We said we needed to play with desperation,” Curry said. “That’s what we did.”
Golden State also got 12 points from Kevon Looney on six-for-six shooting and 11 apiece from Andrew Wiggins and Klay Thompson.
Jayson Tatum scored 21 of his 28 points in the first half for Boston. Jaylen Brown added 17 for the Celtics but fought through a five-for-17 shooting night, and Derrick White scored 12 points.
Just like in Game 1, a huge run decided everything. The Celtics went on a 48-18 run in the second half to decide the opener. The Warriors didn’t wait that long in Game 2, going on a 43-14 burst from late in the first half until early in the fourth quarter to turn a tie score into an absolute runaway.
Game 3 is Wednesday night in Boston.
Curry had 14 of his points in the third, making three of his five three-pointers in the quarter. Boston was four for 15 in the quarter, got outscored 21-6 on threes, and let the Warriors turn five turnovers into 11 points.
“Steph was breathtaking in that quarter,“ Kerr said.
The Celtics turned a 15-point third-quarter deficit into a 15-point fourth-quarter lead in Game 1, but that wasn’t happening again Sunday. Boston coach Ime Udoka even picked up a technical foul in an effort to show his displeasure with things, including whistles or lack thereof, to no avail.
“I just let them know how I felt throughout the game in a demonstrative way, on purpose, to get a technical,“ Udoka said.
Poole provided the exclamation point as the third quarter closed, taking a pass in the final seconds, dribbling over the midcourt stripe, creating a bit of space for himself and letting fly.
Swish.
A Southern California auction house says a jersey worn by Kobe Bryant in his rookie season has sold at auction for $2.73 million.
Curry greeted him with a smile and a hug, the fans at Chase Center leaped to their feet — if they weren’t on them already — and the outcome was pretty much decided right there.
And for the first time, the crowd in the Warriors’ new building finally saw the Celtics lose. Boston entered the night 4-0 in the Warriors’ three-year-old home, the only team to have won its first four games in the arena.
The Celtics were bidding to join only two other teams — the 1993 Chicago Bulls and 1995 Houston Rockets — on the list of clubs that swept two road games to open the NBA Finals. Those Bulls and Rockets went on to win the championship, and 31 of the previous 36 teams to open with 2-0 leads ended up celebrating a title.
Quin Snyder resigned as coach of the Utah Jazz, ending an eight-year run in which the team never got past the second round of the playoffs.
All is not lost for Boston. The Celtics need to only win their remaining home games to become champions, though that won’t be easy against a Warriors team that has won at least one road game in an NBA-record 26 consecutive playoff series.
“I think the deeper you get in the playoffs, the better the competition, the better the defense,“ Kerr said. “So you have to adjust. You’ve got to figure out how to attack, and you have to do that as a team. You have to do that individually too.“
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