{"id":50090,"date":"2022-06-14T11:29:06","date_gmt":"2022-06-14T11:29:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/2022-nba-finals-nine-plays-that-explain-warriors-game-5-victory-over-celtics\/"},"modified":"2022-06-14T11:29:06","modified_gmt":"2022-06-14T11:29:06","slug":"2022-nba-finals-nine-plays-that-explain-warriors-game-5-victory-over-celtics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/2022-nba-finals-nine-plays-that-explain-warriors-game-5-victory-over-celtics\/","title":{"rendered":"2022 NBA Finals: Nine plays that explain Warriors’ Game 5 victory over Celtics"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Golden State Warriors are one victory away from a championship. In a way, their Game 5 win was precisely the opposite of their Game 4 victory – after Stephen Curry lit up TD Garden for 43 points on 14-for-26 shooting on Friday, he scored just 16 points on 7-for-22 shooting at Chase Center in their 104-94 victory on Monday. In another way, it was extremely similar – the Warriors won by 10 points, shut down the Boston Celtics in the fourth quarter and overcame an inefficient offensive performance. <\/p>\n
Here are nine plays that explain Game 5: <\/p>\n
In the first four games of the NBA Finals, Golden State progressively tilted its attack toward Curry running high pick-and-rolls. It started Game 5, however, with classic Warriors movement. Curry hands the ball off to Otto Porter Jr., then cuts along the baseline, with Al Horford face guarding him. When Porter slips a screen, there’s no rim protection, as Robert Williams III is guarding the ball and Horford is preoccupied with Curry:<\/p>\n
The Celtics have done a fantastic job defending Golden State’s off-ball actions, but that doesn’t mean coach Steve Kerr is going to default to static pick-and-rolls. The Warriors want to make Boston deal with multiple actions because every action requires defenders to think and communicate.<\/p>\n
The first possession of the game provided a tidy microcosm of the battle taking place whenever Golden State has the ball. Defending the Warriors is exhausting, and they believe that, if they keep running their stuff, the opponent will eventually wear down. Scoring against the Celtics is exhausting, and they believe that, if they are locked in and limit their mistakes, the opponent will eventually wear down. Here, Golden State beat the switch with a slip, but Draymond Green had to place his pass perfectly and Porter had to hit the layup over Jayson Tatum’s outstretched arms. <\/p>\n
This bucket was the beginning of a 14-4 Warriors run in which Curry accounted for only two points. <\/p>\n
In Boston’s series-opening win, Tatum had 13 assists and Horford made six 3s. In Game 3, the Celtics’ other win, Tatum had nine assists and they effectively targeted Curry. This late-second-quarter possession, which ended with a Horford kickout 3 from Tatum, illustrates what has worked for Boston offensively in this series:<\/p>\n
Tatum got into the paint with good spacing around him, collapsed the defense, made Andre Iguodala think he was passing to Jaylen Brown in the corner and hit Horford for an open 3. Boston’s problem is that this didn’t happen nearly enough. This was only the Celtics’ second 3-pointer of the game – they missed their first 12 – and Tatum finished with four assists. It is not a coincidence that his other assists di lui all came in the third quarter, the one that they dominated. <\/p>\n
“When we’re at our best, it’s simple ball movement,” Boston coach Ime Udoka said. “I think the third quarter showed that. The drive and kick was beautiful, was working, getting guys wide-open shots.” <\/p>\n
Here’s a profoundly strange sequence: After a double-team on Tatum and a steal, Curry declines to take a pull-up 3 in transition, perhaps spooked by Robert Williams III behind him. He gives the ball up to Green, who fires a lefty pass to Klay Thompson on the opposite side. Thompson attacks Horford’s close-out, then goes into an outrageous, one-legged runner over Williams from, oh, 17 feet or so? Look at Green’s reaction when this goes in:<\/p>\n
Thompson finished with 21 points on 7-for-14 shooting, including 5-for-11 from deep. This is an objectively ridiculous shot.to take in any NBA game, let alone Game 5 of the NBA Finals, but it’s Thompson, so it wasn’t shocking when it went in.<\/p>\n
Why did I include this? Because the Warriors had nine steals to Boston’s two, and five of those Golden State steals led directly to buckets on the other end. (The other four: Three missed pull-ups from Curry and a take foul.) We’ve seen this before.<\/p>\n
The Celtics didn’t completely change how they defended Curry, but they did selectively get more aggressive. Here, they throw a surprise double-team at him, but Curry calmly gets Tatum out of his way, keeps probing and finds Gary Payton II for a layup with a crisp, lefty pass:<\/p>\n
This is my favorite of Curry’s eight assists, and it demonstrates why the Celtics have been reluctant to put two on the ball against him. He missed all nine of his 3-pointers, but still left his imprint on the game. <\/p>\n
“It’s just using that aggression against them,” Curry said. “Getting into the paint. The fact, you know, I don’t know if I have more than like five assists the first four games, and that total goes up, and we still left a lot out there because we have different ways to attack you, even if it’s not me just trying to hunt shots. And using gravity, using ball movement, all that type of stuff to do normal Warriors basketball. It’s just a feel thing. And obviously never losing your aggressiveness even though you’re not making shots like you normally do.<\/p>\n
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