NBA Finals: Warriors Seek To Extend Dominance As Raptors Hunt First Title
29th May 2019
Golden State's five consecutive NBA Finals appearances is the second-best run in history trailing only Boston's epic run from 1957-66
- While the Golden State Warriors try to cement their legacy as the NBA's greatest dynasty in half a century, the upstart Toronto Raptors made history just reaching the NBA Finals
- Thursday's opener in the best-of-seven championship showdown will be the first NBA Finals game played outside the United States, the Canadian contest coming in the same city where the first league game was played in 1946
- Three-point sharpshooter Stephen Curry attempts to lead the injury-hit Warriors to their third consecutive NBA title, a feat last achieved by the Los Angeles Lakers in 2002
TORONTO, Canada- While the Golden State Warriors try to cement their legacy as the NBA's
greatest dynasty in half a century, the upstart Toronto Raptors made history
just reaching the NBA Finals.
Thursday's opener in
the best-of-seven championship showdown will be the first NBA Finals game
played outside the United States, the Canadian contest coming in the same city
where the first league game was played in 1946.
Three-point
sharpshooter Stephen Curry attempts to lead the injury-hit Warriors to their
third consecutive NBA title, a feat last achieved by the Los Angeles Lakers in
2002, and Golden State could become the first team to win four crowns in five
seasons since the 1969 Boston Celtics.
"Four more wins
defines your season and brings you a championship," Curry said. "We
have to stay locked in."
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Blocking their path
is a Raptors team powered by Kawhi Leonard, obtained in a trade with San
Antonio last July. He has sparked a squad that was ousted by Cleveland in the
playoffs each of the past three years, creating a breakthrough campaign.
"They are the
champions. We've got to go in with mental focus and accept the challenge,"
Leonard said. "We're in the finals and we're not done yet."
Golden State's five
consecutive NBA Finals appearances is the second-best run in history trailing
only Boston's epic run from 1957-66.
"It hasn't been
done for a reason. It's really difficult," Warriors coach Steve Kerr said.
"I can't say
enough about the competitive drive of these players and the culture they have
built. This group has a fiber about them. When guys go down, they find a way to
play harder and win. The experience of having won titles helps you come
through."
The Warriors have
proven that during the NBA playoffs since forward Kevin Durant went down with a
right calf injury three weeks ago. Center DeMarcus Cousins is also sidelined
with a torn right quadriceps muscle suffered in the first round of the playoffs.
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- Warriors OK without KD -
Golden State has
risen to the challenge of losing two stars with a return to the style that made
them a force before Durant arrived in 2016 -- scrappy defensive work and
pinpoint 3-point shooting courtesy of Curry and Klay Thompson plus expanded
roles for Draymond Green and Andre Iguodala as well as other reserves.
"We set that
culture from the beginning and it manifested itself during the season,"
Curry said. "You've got to have guys step up. Everybody with a jersey on
is going to help out."
Green says Golden
State's well prepared reserve role players are a major reason the Warriors went
5-0 in the playoffs without Durant.
"We have a
bunch of guys committed to winning," he said. "No matter what bump in
the road we hit, we know what the goal is. When you have that kind of
commitment, great things happen."
Kerr calls Green
"a wrecking ball out there, destroying everything in his path"
and has praised the efforts of 23-year-old backup center Kevon Looney as a
"foundational piece" and "cornerstone" for the Warriors in
the playoffs since Durant absent.
Looney has averaged
7.5 points and 4.9 rebounds and provided solid minutes inside, where he will
test Spanish stars Marc Gasol and Serge Ibaka for Toronto in the finals.
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"We're going to
rely on him in the finals," Kerr said. "He's a hell of a
player."
- Kawhi ignites Raptors -
The Raptors picked
up Leonard after he sat out most of last season with a sore right quad and
watched the 2014 NBA Finals Most Valuable Player revive the excitement for
himself and the passionate Raptors fans who pack their arena and thousands who
stand outside watching on giant televisions in "Jurassic Park."
"He's just so
good," Raptors coach Nick Nurse said. "I'm seeing a level of
competitive greatness out of him. It's just competitive desire... it's just his
willing us to win."
Iguodala figures to
lead a team-based defensive effort against Leonard.
"He can create
a shot out of nothing," Gasol warned. "He's a mismatch all
around."
The Raptors will
counter against Curry with Kyle Lowry and two-time NBA Defensive Player of the
Year Leonard unless Durant returns to change the dynamics for Golden State.
No matter how the
series concludes, it could be the end of an era for both clubs with Durant and
Leonard likely to be the top prizes on the free agent market by the end of
June.