Golden State Warriors vs Cleveland Cavaliers: Game 6 Highlights - NBA Finals 2015
Golden State Warriors vs
Cleveland Cavaliers:
Game 6 Highlights -
NBA Finals 2015
Their 40-year
NBA championship drought is finally over.
A half century of misery in
Cleveland drags on.
LeBron James just didn't have enough help.
For the first time since
Gerald Ford was in the
White House, disco was in vogue and
Rick Barry was flicking in free throws under-handed, the best pro basketball team resides in the
Bay Area.
And these
Warriors are a lot like
Barry and his old crew: fluid, balanced, together. Just like coach
Steve Kerr hoped.
After falling behind by two points early in the third quarter, the Warriors took control with
Curry, the league's
MVP, and
Iguodala, who made his first start of the season in
Game 4, leading the way.
"
World champs," Curry said, letting the title sink in. "This is truly special. This group is a special group. From the time we started the season this is what we envisioned and a lot of hard work goes into it, all the way down to the last minute of this game. This is what it's all about
. ... We're going to remember this for a long time."
Golden State allowed the Cavaliers to creep within eight points in the fourth before unleashing a flurry of 3s to ensure they would be taking the
Larry O'Brien Trophy back to
California. Curry's step-back made it 78-68, and after the
Cavs closed within seven on
J.R. Smith's trey, Iguodala, Curry and
Klay Thompson each drained one in a span of 81 seconds to make it 89-75.
Iguodala added another long shot for good measure before he strutted back on defense holding out three fingers on each hand.
He could have shot an index finger into the air at that
point - Golden State is
No. 1.
James returned from
Miami to deliver a title to his home region, but the 30-year-old, left to do most of the work by himself after All-Stars
Kyrie Irving and
Kevin Love were injured in the postseason, came two wins shy of giving Cleveland its first pro sports championship since 1964.
They city's three pro teams - the Cavs,
Browns and
Indians - have gone a combined
144 seasons without one of them winning it all.
James had 32 points, 18 rebounds and nine assists in Game 6 and was dominant during the series, showing why he's the world's best player.
The Warriors were simply the better team.
James was replaced in the final seconds, but before he left the court, the four-time MVP shook hands with Curry and offered congratulations to
Kerr and the rest of the Warriors.
"The sacrifice every guy made from
Andre and
David (Lee) stepping away from the starting lineup, we just played," Kerr said. "And they were all in it just to win. That's all that mattered. This is an amazing group of guys."
This series, which opened with two overtime games in
Oakland, flipped when Kerr employed a small lineup in the fourth quarter of
Game 3 and the Warriors nearly overcame a 20-point deficit before losing.
Kerr stuck with revamped lineup in Game 4, giving Iguodala a start, switching
Green to center and benching the ineffective
Andrew Bogut. The move was as golden as the Warriors, who finished with 83 wins, the third-highest single-season total in history.
Only the 1995-96 and 1996-97 Bulls won more, and Kerr was on both of those teams.
Cleveland fans did all they could to force a
Game 7.
They entered the building chanting "
Let's Go Cavs!" and joined Marlana VanHoose for the final stanza of the national anthem, a touching moment that showed Cleveland was "
All In" to take on Golden State.
The Warriors, though, were ready.
Down early after missing open shots, they began finding their range. Golden State capitalized on nine turnovers in the first quarter, made four 3s and built a 13-point lead when
Harrison Barnes knocked down a long 3 - a shot that sent several dozen gold-and-blue Warriors fans sitting near their bench into a frenzy.
This was their night, the one they've waited for 40 years.
While Golden State had some solid teams in the past - the "Run
TMC" version coached by
Don Nelson and featuring
Tim Hardaway,
Chris Mullin and
Mitch Richmond among them - the franchise has been undermined by dysfunction. Along with long playoff gaps, there were bad trades, poor drafts and numerous coaching changes.
The Warriors often made headlines for the wrong reasons.
Remember when Latrell Sprewell choked coach
P.J. Carlesimo?
Well, those days are gone, washed away by Curry and
Thompson - the "
Splash Brothers" - and a roster of selfless players who bonded under Kerr and have returned basketball glory to Oakland.
These new Warriors have been a model team: sharing the ball, defending together and sacrificing individual goals.