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Posts Tagged ‘stephen curry’

Canada’s NBA Rapture

Wednesday, June 19th, 2019

June 19, 2019

Last week, on June 13, the Toronto Raptors of the National Basketball Association (NBA) defeated the Golden State Warriors 114-110 to win the team’s first NBA championship. The Raptors won the best-of-seven finals four games to two. Raptors stars Kawhi Leonard, Kyle Lowry, and an underrated supporting team overcame Stephen Curry and his two-time defending champion Warriors to bring the first-ever NBA championship to Canada. The Raptors team, with its “We the North” slogan, celebrated the Canadian coup with nearly 2 million fans at a Toronto parade on June 17.

Kawhi Leonard #2 of the Toronto Raptors attempts a shot against the Golden State Warriors during Game Six of the 2019 NBA Finals at ORACLE Arena on June 13, 2019 in Oakland, California.  Credit: © Kyle Terada, Getty Images

Kawhi Leonard of the Toronto Raptors lobs a shot over Golden State defenders during the sixth and deciding game of the NBA Finals at Oracle Arena on June 13, 2019, in Oakland, California. Credit: © Kyle Terada, Getty Images

The Warriors, one-time heavy favorites to “three-peat” (repeat a third time) as champions, played most of the finals without the nine-time All-NBA forward Kevin Durant. (A calf injury limited Durant to just 12 minutes before a ruptured Achilles tendon ended his postseason). The Warriors also lost the star shooting guard Klay Thompson to a hamstring injury in game three and a torn knee ligament in game six. Curry and teammates Draymond Green and Andre Iguodala failed to muster enough offense to keep up with the hungry Raptors, who delivered big plays in the series’s final moments.

The Raptors began the 2018-2019 season with high hopes, having acquired the top forward Leonard from the San Antonio Spurs in a trade involving longtime Raptors swingman (multi-position player) DeMar DeRozan last July. Toronto also netted the steady shooter and defender Danny Green in the transaction, and they picked up the center Marc Gasol in a deal with Memphis this February. The emergence of the rangy third-year forward Pascal Siakam gave the Raptors star power at every position.

Toronto finished the regular season with a 58-24 record, good for second in the Eastern Conference. The Raptors defeated the Orlando Magic in five games in the first round of the playoffs. The team then topped the Philadelphia 76ers in a hard-fought seven-game series. Toronto overcame a two-games-to-none deficit against top-seeded Milwaukee and its towering superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo, sweeping the last four games to close out the conference finals.

The Warriors, the most storied NBA dynasty since Kobe Bryant’s Los Angeles Lakers and Michael Jordan’s  Chicago Bulls, finished 57-25 in the regular season, tops in the Western Conference. In the opening playoff round, the Warriors defeated the Los Angeles Clippers in a tough series that went six games. In Golden State’s second-round match up against the Houston Rockets, Durant exited after a game five calf strain. The Warriors still prevailed, however, and went on to sweep the upstart Portland Trail Blazers in the conference finals.

In game one of the finals in Toronto, the Raptors thrilled the home fans with a 118-109 victory over the Warriors—the first-ever NBA Finals game played in Canada. (The Raptors entered the league as an expansion team for the 1995-1996 season, and this was the team’s first finals. The only other Canadian NBA team, the Vancouver Grizzlies, never made the finals before moving to Memphis.) Toronto looked strong through halftime of game two, but the Warriors outscored the Raptors 34-21 in the third quarter and held on to win, evening the series at a game a piece.

The series continued on Golden State’s home court in Oakland, where the Raptors showed themselves to be the more complete team. Toronto won game three 123-109 and game four 105-92. Back in Toronto for game five, the Warriors overcame Durant’s postseason-ending injury, winning a tight 106-105 contest. In game six, Toronto stormed back after Klay Thompson’s injury, and Leonard, Lowry, and Siakam, together with the reserves Serge Ibaka and Fred VanVleet, proved invincible down the stretch. Leonard—who averaged 28.5 points, 9.8 rebounds, 4 assists and 2 steals per game in the series—won the NBA Finals Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award. The award was Leonard’s second; he earned finals MVP honors in 2014 as a member of the champion Spurs.

Finals game six was the last the Warriors will play in Oakland’s Oracle Arena, which first hosted games as Oakland-Alameda County Arena in 1966. Warriors fans enjoyed championship teams at the venue in 1975 and again during the team’s recent dominance in 2015, 2017, and 2018. Beginning next season, the Warriors will play their home games at the new $1.4-billion Chase Center across the bay in San Francisco.

Tags: basketball, canada, golden state warriors, kawhi leaonard, kawhi leonard, kevin durant, national basketball association, nba, nba finals, stephen curry, toronto, toronto raptors
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Basketball’s Golden State

Friday, June 15th, 2018

June 15, 2018

On June 8, 2018, Kevin Durant, Stephen Curry, and the Golden State Warriors took down LeBron James and his overmatched Cleveland Cavaliers 108-85 to capture a second straight National Basketball Association (NBA) title. (Golden State owns three of the last four NBA crowns.) The team’s win last Friday at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, completed a four-game sweep in the best-of-seven series. Curry broke the Cavs’ collective will with 37 points in the final game to bring the series—and the season—to a predictable conclusion.

Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors drives to the basket in the second half against LeBron James #23 of the Cleveland Cavaliers during Game Four of the 2018 NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena on June 8, 2018 in Cleveland, Ohio.  Credit: © Kyle Terada, Getty Images

Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors drives to the basket against LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers during game four of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on June 8, 2018. Credit: © Kyle Terada, Getty Images

This year’s NBA Finals had megastars (Curry, Durant, and James) and history (an NBA-record fourth-straight finals matchup of Cleveland vs. Golden State). There were even intriguing nicknames for the series: Cavs-Warriors IV, or, if you prefer, The Tetralogy (a college-level word meaning trilogy-plus-one). What the series lacked, however, was suspense. The Warriors followed up close matches in games one and three with blowouts in games two and four, easing their way to the title while preventing the Cavs from earning a single win. Durant, who averaged nearly 29 points, 11 rebounds, 8 assists on high-percentage shooting in the finals, won the Bill Russell Finals Most Valuable Player Award for a second-straight year.

Between the two teams, only eight players remained from the teams’ first finals tangle in 2015: LeBron James, J. R. Smith, and Tristan Thompson for Cleveland; and Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, Andre Iguodala, Shaun Livingston, and Klay Thompson for the Oakland-based Golden State squad.

Finals game one in Oakland offered the most hope for the Cavaliers and their narrow championship chances. The game was tied at halftime and close throughout. With 35 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter, and Cleveland ahead by 2, a curious reversal of a foul call during a video review changed a Durant charge into a blocking foul on James. On a night when James did nearly everything right—51 points, 8 rebounds, and 8 assists—the changed call proved a bit of bad luck the Cavaliers could not overcome. Durant made two free throws to tie the score. Then, with fewer than 5 seconds to go in a tie game, Cavs guard Smith secured an offensive rebound near the basket. Bizarrely, Smith neglected to put up a shot to try to win the game, and he was dribbling away from the basket as time expired. He explained later that he thought his team was ahead at the time. In overtime, Golden State quickly jumped out front and won the game going away, 124-114.

Game two saw no such drama. The Warriors led from start to finish for an easy 122-103 victory. The series moved to Cleveland for game three, and although the game was close, the result was the same. Durant scored 43 points and added 13 rebounds and 7 assists to pull the Warriors ahead down the stretch for a 110-102 win and a commanding 3-0 series lead. James tallied 33 points, 10 rebounds, and 11 assists for the losing Cavs, extending his NBA-record 10th finals triple double (double digits in points, rebounds, and assists). Game four was the least dramatic of all as the Warriors jumped out early and cruised through the second half with leads hovering around 20 points.

In the Eastern Conference playoffs, James almost single-handedly carried his Cavaliers past the Indiana Pacers, Toronto Raptors, and Boston Celtics en route to his team’s fourth straight NBA Finals appearance. James also secured his individual legacy with an eighth consecutive trip—and ninth overall—to the NBA Finals. James first made it to the finals in 2007 during his first go-round with the Cavs. He then reached the finals with the Miami Heat from 2011 through 2014, winning championships in 2012 and 2013. James returned to Cleveland for the 2014-2015 season, and he brought the Cavaliers their lone championship in 2016.

In the western playoffs, the Warriors downed the San Antonio Spurs and New Orleans Pelicans before outlasting the regular season NBA-best Houston Rockets in an exciting seven-game Western Conference Finals.

Tags: basketball, cleveland cavaliers, golden state warriors, kevin durant, lebron james, national basketball association, nba, sports, stephen curry
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The Warriors’ Golden Rule

Wednesday, June 14th, 2017

June 14, 2017

On Monday, June 12, the Golden State Warriors overwhelmed the defending champion Cleveland Cavaliers 129-120 in the deciding game five of the best-of-seven National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California. Warriors standouts Kevin Durant and Stephen Curry led the way against Cleveland stars LeBron James and Kyrie Irving to bring Golden State its second championship in the last three seasons.

Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors goes up for a shot against the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 5 of the 2017 NBA Finals at ORACLE Arena on June 12, 2017 in Oakland, California. Credit: © Kyle Terada, Pool/Getty Images

On June 12, 2017, Stephen Curry (30) of the Golden State Warriors drives to the basket as Draymond Green (23) blocks out Cleveland Cavaliers defenders in Game 5 of the 2017 NBA Finals at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California. The Warriors won the NBA title four games to one. Credit: © Kyle Terada, Pool/Getty Images

This year’s NBA Finals was the third straight match-up between the Warriors and Cavs. Never before in NBA history have two teams returned three straight years to face each other in the finals. After last year’s dramatic win for Cleveland—their first in team history—both the Warriors and Cavs improved their team depth. But it was the Warriors that made the biggest off-season splash, adding free agent do-everything wing Kevin Durant, perhaps the game’s greatest scorer.

LeBron James, who made a record seventh-straight appearance in the finals (including three years with the Miami Heat), became the first-ever player to average a finals triple-double (double-digit totals among three statistical categories) with 33.6 points, 12 rebounds, and 10 assists per game. “I left everything on the floor every game,” James said after his team’s defeat. LeBron’s sustained excellence was not enough, however, to contain the lethal combination of Durant and the sharpshooting Curry, a two-time NBA Most Valuable Player (MVP). Curry averaged 26.8 points, 8 rebounds, and 9 assists per game in this year’s finals.

The championship series began auspiciously for the Warriors, who in game one exploited 20 Cavaliers turnovers and numerous defensive breakdowns in a 113-91 rout. Acting Coach Mike Brown led the Warriors in game one and in most of the early rounds of the 2017 playoffs. Warriors Head Coach Steve Kerr, who missed 11 playoff games dealing with chronic pain caused by complications from a 2015 back surgery, returned to the team’s bench in game two, when the California squad outscored their Lake Erie counterparts, 132-113.

In a pivotal game three at Cleveland’s Quicken Loans Arena, the Warriors closed on a 11-0 run over the last two-plus minutes to win 118-113, crushing the Cavs’ hopes of making the series competitive. The Cavs built a late 113-107 lead but went scoreless thereafter. Durant calmly sank a three-pointer over James to give the Warriors the lead with 45 seconds to go. James (39 points and 11 rebounds) played a wonderful all-around game but could not will his team to victory down the stretch. Golden State’s Klay Thompson (30 points), Curry (26 points, 13 rebounds), and Durant (31 points, 8 rebounds) proved too much for the Cavs, despite masterful shot-making displays by Cleveland guard Irving (38 points) and a 16-point effort from guard J.R. Smith. In game four, the Cavs raced out to an 86-68 halftime lead—the 86 points a Finals halftime record—and held off the Warriors in the second half for a comfortable 137-116 win. The Cavs—led by Irving, Smith, and forward Kevin Love—made 52 percent of their three-pointers in the game.

In game five back in Oakland, the Warriors built a 71-60 halftime lead, but the Cavaliers, behind Smith’s seven-of-eight shooting from beyond the three-point arc, remained within striking distance for much of the second half. Warrior swingman Andre Iguodala, who scored 20 points in his best game of the series, disheartened the Cavs with four rim-rattling dunks, including two on alley-oops from forward Draymond Green.

Durant won the Bill Russell Finals MVP Award after becoming the first player since Shaquille O’Neal in 2000 to score 30–plus points in each game of the NBA Finals. Durant downplayed his individual award, emphasizing that the championship belonged to the team and the city. “We’re champions and we did it on our own floor,” he said.

Tags: cleveland cavaliers, golden state warriors, kevin durant, lebron james, national basketball association, nba finals, stephen curry
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Cavs Claim NBA Title

Monday, June 20th, 2016

June 20, 2016

Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) handles the ball against Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) during the third quarter in game seven of the NBA Finals at Oracle Arena.  Credit: © Bob Donnan, USA Today Sports/Reuters

Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) handles the ball against Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) during Game 7 of the NBA Finals on June 19, 2016.
Credit: © Bob Donnan, USA Today Sports/Reuters

Yesterday, June 19, the Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Golden State Warriors 93-89 to win the National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals. Cleveland‘s thrilling victory completed the first-ever comeback from a 3-games-to-1 deficit in the best-of-7 NBA championship series. It was the first title for the Cavs, and the first major sports championship in Cleveland since the Browns topped the National Football League in 1964. The win was also sweet revenge for Cleveland against Golden State, who had downed the Cavaliers in the 2015 NBA Finals.

LeBron James, a native of Akron, Ohio, just south of Cleveland, led the way for the Cavaliers, earning the Finals Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award. James and teammates Kyrie Irving, Tristan Thompson, Kevin Love, and J.R. Smith outlasted a flashy, often scintillating Warriors team that had passed and swished its way to a best-ever NBA season record of 73-9, surpassing the 72-10 mark set by the 1995-1996 Chicago Bulls. The Warriors built a 3-1 series lead behind two-time league MVP Stephen Curry and his backcourt mate Klay Thompson—standout guards nicknamed the “Splash Brothers” for their uncanny accuracy sinking long-range three-point shots. A year earlier, Warriors do-everything swingman Andre Iguodala contained James and the Cavaliers en route to his own Finals MVP Award. This year, however, no Warrior could match James’s will to win as the Cavalier forward amassed a Game 7 “triple-double” with 27 points, 11 rebounds, and 11 assists.

In leading his team to the comeback win—the Cavs trailed 49-42 at halftime—James completed a storybook turnaround for his team, his reputation, and his own place in league history. The Cavaliers drafted “King James” straight out of high school in 2003. He led the team to a Finals appearance in 2007, but the Cavs couldn’t get by the more broadly talented San Antonio Spurs.

Many championship-starved Cleveland fans burned their James jerseys in 2010 after he spurned the Cavs to seek titles with the Miami Heat. The Heat played in the next four consecutive Finals, winning titles in 2012 and 2013. Following the 2013-14 season, a sentimental James returned to Cleveland, where he joined young point guard Kyrie Irving and the embattled Kevin Love, a crafty rebounder who, despite a sweet shooting touch, had never led his prior Minnesota teams to a playoff appearance.

The dynamic Irving—a 2011 first overall draft pick—had something of a national coming-out party in the 2016 Finals’ crucial Game 5, when he converted numerous spinning, off-balance baskets, making 17-of-24 shots en route to a 41-point performance. James matched Irving’s point total and added 16 rebounds in the game, which proved a turning point in the series. Warriors hero/goat Draymond Green watched Game 5 from outside the arena while serving an automatic one-game suspension for his fourth flagrant foul of the playoffs. Green proved rusty in his return in Game 6, but he brought his team close to a second consecutive title with a 32-point, 15-rebound, 9-assist performance in the deciding Game 7.

Tags: basketball, cleveland cavaliers, golden state warriors, lebron james, nba, stephen curry
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Home and Road Warriors: NBA’s Best

Thursday, April 14th, 2016

April 14, 2016

Stephen Curry (30) and the Golden State Warriors finished the NBA season with a record-setting 73 wins against just 9 losses. Credit: AP Photo

Stephen Curry (30) and the Golden State Warriors finished the NBA season with a record-setting 73 wins against just 9 losses. Credit: AP Photo

Last night, April 13, the National Basketball Association (NBA) regular season finished in dazzling style. In Oakland, California, the Golden State Warriors dismantled the Memphis Grizzlies 125-104. The home win was nothing new for Stephen Curry and the Warriors, who ended the year 39-2 at Oracle Arena. The Warriors played well on the road this season, too, disappointing other teams’ fans 34 out of 41 times. Golden State finished 73-9, an all-time season best, breaking the 72-10 record set 20 years ago by the seemingly invincible Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls.

Last season, the Warriors went 39-2 at home as well, but they finished with an overall record of just 67-15. Masking their disappointment, the Warriors coasted through the playoffs on their way to an NBA championship. Basketball experts are banking on the Warriors repeating their championship run this year, with maybe one team standing in the way: the San Antonio Spurs. The Spurs, by the way, won only 67 games this year. Poor Spurs.

Last night in Los Angeles, Lakers star Kobe Bryant took the court for the final time in his flamboyant 20-year NBA career. Bryant pleased the Laker faithful by scoring 60 points in his team’s 101-96 win over the Utah Jazz. Bryant’s teammates gave him the ball nearly every possession, and he took a career-high 50 shots from the floor. Bryant ended his sure-fire hall-of-fame career with 33,643 career points, third-most in NBA history.

The Lakers bring up the other end of the NBA spectrum, however. Last night’s headline victory pushed the Lakers to a 17-65 record—their worst season ever, but not the worst in the NBA this year. That distinction fell to the lowly Philadelphia 76ers, who finished 10-72. The 76ers fell one defeat shy of breaking their own record for losses in an 82-game NBA season. The ‘Sixers went 9-73 in ’73.

Tags: golden state warriors, Kobe Bryant, Los Angeles Lakers, nba, stephen curry
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Megastar Monday: Steph Curry and the Warriors

Monday, January 25th, 2016

January 25, 2016

Stephen “Steph” Curry of the Golden State Warriors has become the poster player for the National Basketball Association (NBA). His mixture of an outgoing and sunny disposition with a “try and stop me” swagger has captivated the American sports world. Simply put, Curry is fun to watch, especially when he nonchalantly makes 25- and 30-foot 3-point shots with a flick of the wrist and a defender in his face. He’s the perfect leader for a Warriors team that has earned praise for playing basketball “the right way,” emphasizing teamwork and speed.

Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) puts up a shot against Cleveland Cavaliers guard J.R. Smith (5). Credit: © Tony Dejak, AP Photo

Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) puts up a shot against Cleveland Cavaliers guard J. R. Smith (5). Credit: © Tony Dejak, AP Photo

Curry has been widely proclaimed to be the greatest shooter in NBA history, and his complementary skills as a passer, dribbler, and rebounder make him one of the NBA’s most complete players.

He was named the NBA’s Most Valuable Player for the 2014-2015 season and led the league in scoring. Curry is leading the NBA in scoring again for the 2015-2016 season, and his Warriors have the best record in the league as they compete for their second straight championship.

Wardell Stephen Curry II was born on March 14, 1988, in Akron, Ohio, but grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina. While attending high school at Charlotte Christian, Curry led his team to three conference championships. Curry did not receive a scholarship offer from any major college basketball program. He finally accepted a scholarship from Davidson College in Davidson, North Carolina.

Curry built a reputation as a scorer during his three years at Davidson. In his freshman season in 2006-2007, he set a single-session NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) record for made 3-point shots. The next season, he set an NCAA record for 3-point field goals by any player, and in 2008-2009, he was the NCAA Division I scoring leader. Division I consists of all major college teams.

Curry decided to leave school after his junior year to enter the NBA draft. His scoring exploits at Davidson convinced the Warriors he was worth selecting in the 2009 draft, and the club picked him as the seventh player in the first round. Some people predicted that Curry, a guard at only 6 feet 3 inches (1.19 meters) in height and 190 pounds (86 kilograms) in weight, was too small to withstand the demanding physical style of the NBA. But his scoring average of 17.5 points, 5.9 assists, and 1.9 steals was good enough to finish second in the Rookie of the Year voting. In his second season, Curry was awarded the NBA’s Sportsmanship Award. The championship 2014-2015 season was his coronation as one of the NBA’s superstars.

Other World Book articles: 

  • Basketball (2008) – A Back in Time article

Tags: golden state warriors, megastar monday, national basketball association, stephen curry
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Warriors End Four-Decade Finals Drought

Wednesday, June 17th, 2015

The Golden State Warriors ended a 40-year NBA Finals drought yesterday, bringing the NBA title back to the Bay Area with a 105-97 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 6.

Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) puts up a shot against Cleveland Cavaliers guard J.R. Smith (5) during the first half of Game 6 of basketball's NBA Finals in Cleveland. Credit: AP Photo

Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) puts up a shot against Cleveland Cavaliers guard J.R. Smith (5) during the first half of Game 6 of basketball’s NBA Finals in Cleveland. Credit: AP Photo

The underdogs from Cleveland, led by powerhouse LeBron James, lost in overtime in the first game, but won the next two games by slim margins of just two and five points, respectively.

The Warriors came roaring back in Game 4, winning by 21 points to tie the series 2-2, followed by a 13-point win in Game 5.

Yet even being down two games didn’t diminish James’s confidence in, well, himself and his team’s ability to come back and take the title after the loss in Game 5. “I feel confident because I’m the best player in the world,” he said to reporters after the game. “It’s that simple.”

That bold statement does carry some weight. James is the first player in NBA finals history to lead both teams in points, assists, and rebounds for the entire series. He averaged 35.8 points, 13.3 rebounds, and 8.8 assists across the six finals games.

LeBron James put up record numbers in the Cavaliers' championship loss to the Warriors. © Aaron Josefczyk, Reuters/Landov

LeBron James put up record numbers in the Cavaliers’ championship loss to the Warriors. © Aaron Josefczyk, Reuters/Landov

But it was the player charged with defending James in the final three games of the series, Andre Iguodala, who ended up taking home the NBA Finals Most Valuable Player (MVP) trophy, making him the first player in history with zero regular-season starts to hold that honor.

ESPN NBA insider Brian Windhorst gave World Book editors an exclusive take on this year’s matchup, saying that the Warriors have always been the favorite to win the title this year because of their young stars and style of play.

“The Warriors are statistically one of the best teams of the last 25 years in the NBA,” he said. “They embody the new age style of playing, which relies on smaller players and high volume three-point shooting.”

The players that arguably best represent that statement are “Splash Brothers” Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson of Golden State—so named because of the duo’s ability to “splash” the net with the ball, especially for three-point shots. “They are classically a well-built team with a modern feel, sort of mimicking the region they represent,” Windhorst said.

Coupled with James, whom Windhorst dubs as “one of the greatest draws in the history of the sport,” this year’s series generated record TV ratings.

At the helm for both teams are rookie coaches: Steve Kerr of the Warriors and David Blatt of the Cavs. The only other time rookie head coaches have met in the NBA finals was in 1947—the first season the league existed. Kerr also broke the record for the most regular season wins for a rookie coach this year.

This season marks the fourth time the Warriors have held up the championship trophy. They took home the NBA championship in 1947 and 1956 when they were the Philadelphia Warriors, and again in 1975, two years after the team had moved to Oakland from San Francisco to become the Golden State Warriors.

This was the just second time in franchise history that the Cavaliers have made it all the way to the NBA finals. The first was in 2007, but they were blown out in four games by the San Antonio Spurs, making this year’s Game 2 win the first NBA finals game win in Cavaliers franchise history.

The Cavs have lost two of their star players to injuries during this year’s playoffs. Power forward Kevin Love dislocated his left shoulder during the first-round playoff match-up, and point guard Kyrie Irving suffered a fractured left kneecap in the first game of the finals.

Related information in World Book:

  • NBA Playoff Champions: 1950 to Present (a Timeline)

 

Tags: andre iguodala, brian windhorst, cleveland cavaliers, golden state warriors, lebron james, mvp, nba championship, stephen curry, steve kerr
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