The Golden State Warriors swept the Finals for their second championship in a row, and third in four years.
A few particularly good pieces on game 4, on Steph Curry, and FiveThirtyEight on the Warriors culture contributing to a dynasty, similar in some ways to the ESPN piece before the finals started.
Kevin Durant got his second Finals MVP in a row, though many observers thought it should have gone to Steph Curry. But today's sportswriting is enthralled with stats, and KD's were arguably better. That doesn't make him the MVP. It was Steph.
Everybody's got their narrative, especially now that LeBron James revealed that he played the last 3 games with a hand he injured in frustration after the first game. But here's mine.
In these playoffs LeBron has often spent the first game feeling out the opposition, but in the first game of the Finals he came out firing. The Dubs were good defensively but not quite keyed in to LeBron and the Cleveland players they'd never seen before. At the end of the game, GS unquestionably got the breaks to keep the game tied in regulation, and they blew Cleveland away in overtime.
Another factor in game 1 was how to compensate for Andre Igoudala still being out. Coach Kerr solved it by starting JaVale McGee, who jumpstarted the Warriors energy, especially in the second game. The Dubs upped their defense, especially on James, and Curry caught fire late, pumping in a Finals record 9 three pointers.
Iggy came back for the third game but the Warriors had some difficulty integrating him again early, and his rust showed. The Cavs decided to trap Curry, and Steph had an off night shooting as well. But it was Iggy's presence on defense that freed KD from responsibility for James, and the combination of that with the Cavs obsession with Steph gave KD openings on the offense. He responded with a magic touch on short, mid-range and especially long range shots, and carried the offense.
Statistically Steph had a bad shooting game but he made key buckets--especially his only three in the fourth quarter, which gave the momentum back to the Warriors.
Game 4 saw the Warriors take defensive intensity to a new level, while the Cavs sagged. Numerous commentators saw the Cavs give in, but the Cavs weren't that good on defense the entire series. It was their lack of defensive skills and defensive energy vs. Golden State, and the Warriors tremendous defense that made for the sweep.
At least one commentator criticized the Warriors bench before the Finals started, but even though starters always play more minutes in the Finals, the Warrior bench contributed mightily. It was a team effort that won the championship, again. Congratulations to the Golden State Warriors, 2017-18 NBA Champions!
A World of Falling Skies
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Since I started posting reviews of books on the climate crisis, there have
been significant additions--so many I won't even attempt to get to all of
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