Like everyone else, Draymond Green could only watch as LeBron James and Kyrie Irving sent the NBA Finals back to Cleveland.
James had 41 points, 16 rebounds and seven assists, while Irving also scored 41 points to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 112-97 victory over the Warriors on Monday night, ensuring the NBA Finals would go back to Cleveland.
Stephen Curry scored 25 points and Klay Thompson had 37 for the Warriors, who lead the best-of-seven series 3-2. However, the Warriors sorely missed Green, who was suspended after striking James in the groin in Game 4.
Photo: EPA
With the defensive dynamo next door in Oakland Alameda Coliseum, the Cavaliers shot 53 percent, hit 10-of-24 three-pointers and handed the Warriors their fourth home loss this season.
Green was suspended after the NBA retroactively charged him with a flagrant-one foul for hitting James in the groin during Game 4. The foul triggered an automatic suspension and left the Warriors and their fans fuming at the decision.
Green watched the game sitting in a suite with general manager Bob Myers while his teammates tried to pick up their exiled comrade. However, it was clear from the start that they missed him badly, especially on the defensive end.
Even though he is only 203cm tall, Green is a ferocious interior presence for the Warriors and allows the rest of their versatile group to switch liberally and make it hard on the Cavaliers to get open looks from the perimeter.
However, Cleveland had little trouble getting to the basket on Monday night, with James and Irving plowing into the paint without fear against Andrew Bogut, Festus Ezeli, Anderson Varejao and James Michael McAdoo.
The Cavs hit 54 percent of their shots in the first half, including going 10-of-14 from the mid-range area that Green likes to blow up with his pick-and-roll coverage.
Coach Steve Kerr went with Andre Iguodala in the starting lineup in place of Green to matchup with James, but struggled to find suitable help at center.
Golden State’s most effective lineup all season long — the “Death Lineup” with Green at center, Harrison Barnes at power forward, Iguodala at small forward and the “Splash Brothers” in the backcourt — made life miserable for their opponents with their ability to switch on defense and get out in transition on offense.
Green would often lead those fast breaks, playing a point forward, while Curry and Thompson spread out on the wings for three-pointers.
The three-pointers were still there in Game 5 — the Warriors made 14 of 42 from long range. However, the defense that helped them surge to a 3-1 lead in the series was nowhere to be found, and Bogut had to be helped off the court two minutes into the third quarter with an injured left knee.
James followed Bogut’s exit with a dunk and Irving hit his third three-pointer of the game to give the Cavaliers a 74-68 lead and never looked back.
Leading up to this game, the Warriors blamed James for Green’s suspension. They viewed James stepping over Green as a blatant show of disrespect and openly chided him for complaining about Green crossing the line with some of the trash talk that he hurled the four-time Most Valuable Player’s way during the exchange.
Thompson said James “got his feelings hurt,” Marreese Speights posted a baby bottle emoji on Twitter and even Curry’s wife, Ayesha, got in on the act.
If they were trying to humiliate James, it did not work. Instead, it appears to have just made him angry.
Then the 203cm-tall, 114kg James imposed his will on the weakened Warriors front court.
While absorbing merciless boos from the amped-up Oracle Arena crowd every time he touched the ball, James steamrollered to the basket with no regard for the smaller Warriors. Powerless to stop him, Golden State resorted to hacking Tristan Thompson intentionally at the end of the third quarter to try to throw the Cavaliers off.
However, James and Irving continued to answer every push from the champions with a bucket on the other end, and those Warriors fans that walked into Oracle smelling blood headed for the exits early with their heads in their hands.
The Warriors are still in the driver’s seat heading back to Cleveland. No team has ever lost in the NBA Finals after leading the series 3-1. They are to get Green back for Game 6, but it is unclear if Bogut will be there as well.
And now they face a Cavs squad that heads back to Cleveland with the one thing the Warriors wanted to take away — hope.
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