Warriors ride 3-point wave in 96-88 Game 7 win over OKC

Two-time MVP Stephen Curry reacts after hitting a three-pointer late in the fourth quarter against Oklahoma City in Game 7 of the NBA Western Conference final Monday night. Curry scored 24 of his game-high 36 points in the second half to carry Golden State back to the NBA Finals with a 96-88 victory. The Warriors trailed 48-42 at the halftime but outscored the Thunder 29-12 in the third quarter to take over and advance to face Cleveland in the championship series for the second year in a row.
Two-time MVP Stephen Curry reacts after hitting a three-pointer late in the fourth quarter against Oklahoma City in Game 7 of the NBA Western Conference final Monday night. Curry scored 24 of his game-high 36 points in the second half to carry Golden State back to the NBA Finals with a 96-88 victory. The Warriors trailed 48-42 at the halftime but outscored the Thunder 29-12 in the third quarter to take over and advance to face Cleveland in the championship series for the second year in a row.

OAKLAND, Calif. -- MVP Stephen Curry knocked down yet another three-pointer in the waning moments, pulled his jersey up into his mouth and yelled to the rafters in triumph once more.

photo

AP

Golden State guard Klay Thompson (right) drives past Russell Westbrook in the second half. Thompson finished with 21 points as the Warriors beat the Thunder in seven games.

Splash Brothers Curry and Klay Thompson carried the 73-win Warriors right back to the NBA Finals, as Golden State rallied from a 3-1 series deficit to beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 96-88 on Monday night in Game 7 of the Western Conference finals.

Now, Curry and Co. are playing for another NBA title -- just as they planned for since Day 1 of training camp in late September.

Bring on LeBron James again.

"We survived by the skin of our teeth," Coach Steve Kerr said. "We were able to pull it out, and we're moving on."

Curry scored 36 points with 7 three-pointers to finish with an NBA-record 32 in a seven-game series, while Thompson added 21 points and 6 threes, two days after his record 11 three-pointers led a Game 6 comeback that sent the series home to raucous Oracle Arena for one more.

The Warriors became the 10th team to rally from a 3-1 deficit and win a postseason series. They return to the NBA Finals for a rematch with James and the Cleveland Cavaliers, who lost the 2015 title in six games as Golden State captured its first championship in 40 years.

Game 1 is Thursday night in Oakland.

His mouthpiece dangling out and the game ball cradled in his left hand, Curry pumped his right arm as yellow confetti fell through Oracle Arena once the final buzzer sounded.

"This is who he is. Having a clutch performance in a Game 7, that's Steph Curry," Kerr said.

The Thunder had closed to within 90-86 when Serge Ibaka fouled Curry on a three-point try with 1:18 to go and the shot clock running out. Curry made all three free throws, then a three-pointer to seal it.

And Golden State's beloved "Strength In Numbers" catchphrase coined by Coach of the Year Kerr was needed in every way on this night to do it.

"No one had any doubt we could get this done," Draymond Green said.

Andre Iguodala joined the starting lineup for just the second time all season and the 2015 NBA Finals MVP hung tough against Kevin Durant, who scored 27 points on 10-for-19 shooting. Shaun Livingston's breakaway, one-handed dunk late in the third provided a big lift off the Warriors bench.

Oklahoma City won Game 1 108-102 at deafening Oracle Arena, so Golden State never envisioned this one coming easily. Russell Westbrook had 19 points, 13 assists and 7 rebounds for the Thunder.

"It hurts losing, especially being up 3 games to 1," Durant said.

It took a quarter and a half for Thompson to warm up after his 41-point performance in a 108-101 victory Saturday at Oklahoma City that sent the series to a decisive seventh game back home in the East Bay.

He missed his first seven shots before hitting a three-pointer 6:02 before halftime, energizing the Warriors in their first Game 7 at home in 40 years.

Back-to-back there-pointers by Thompson and Iguodala pulled the Warriors within 54-51 with 7:57 left in the third. They tied it on Curry's three at 7:21 and he followed with another three to give his team the lead.

Curry and Thompson each topped the previous record for three-pointers in a seven-game series, 28 by Dennis Scott and Ray Allen. Curry hit one over 7-foot Steven Adams in the third, and Thompson wound up with 30.

Iguodala replaced Harrison Barnes in the starting lineup and what a move by Kerr and his staff, who did the same thing last year in crunch time. Iguodala made a pretty bounce pass through the paint to Green for Golden State's first basket of the game, and his smothering defense on Durant kept the Thunder star without a shot until his 3 at the 5:45 mark in the first. Durant had just nine points on five shots in the first half.

But Oklahoma City dictated the tempo with snappy passes and the hard, aggressive rebounding that had been such a part of its success this season. The Thunder couldn't sustain it.

"They won a world championship last year, and they've broken an NBA record, and people are already talking about it before the playoffs started, this may be the greatest team to ever lace them up in the history of the NBA," Thunder Coach Billy Donovan said.

The Warriors, who began 3 for 11 from long range and 9 of 32 overall while falling behind 35-22, lost their last Game 7 at home: 94-86 to Phoenix in the Western Conference finals on May 16, 1976.

Sports on 05/31/2016

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