Warriors

Curry, Warriors Hold Off Kings 126-125 to Even Series 2-All

Game 5 in the best-of-seven series is Wednesday night at Sacramento’s Golden 1 Center.

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Stephen Curry scored 32 points but gave Sacramento a late chance when he called a timeout Golden State didn't have, and the defending champion Warriors held on to beat the Kings 126-125 on Sunday when Harrison Barnes missed a 3-pointer at the buzzer, evening their playoff series at two games apiece.

De'Aaron Fox had 38 points, nine rebounds and five assists for Sacramento. His 3-pointer with 28.7 seconds left pulled the Kings within one, and then Curry missed a 16-foot jumper on the other end and Keegan Murray corralled the rebound. With Curry and Draymond Green defending, Fox dished to former Warrior Barnes for the potential game-winning 3, which hit the back of the rim.

Golden State led 126-121 with 42.4 seconds left when Curry called the excessive timeout, and Malik Monk made the technical free throw for Sacramento.

Klay Thompson made a baseline 3-pointer to beat the third-quarter buzzer and another with 3:24 left, finishing with 26 points for the Warriors.

Game 5 in the best-of-seven series is Wednesday night at Sacramento’s Golden 1 Center.

Curry’s 3 with 4:10 remaining gave Golden State a 121-117 lead and he finished 11 for 22 with five 3s while dueling all afternoon with Fox.

After Monk’s layup made it 107-106 Kings with 9:03 to play, Curry responded with a driving layup and a 3 in a 14-second span.

Green came off the bench after serving a one-game suspension while the Warriors dominated Thursday’s Game 2 without him. Given the momentum and success, coach Steve Kerr stuck with Jordan Poole in the starting five Sunday.

Green made a nifty behind-the-back pass for a Curry 3 midway through the fourth, then swatted a shot by Domantas Sabonis with 1:37 left.

Green, disciplined for stepping on Sabonis’ chest in the fourth quarter of Game 2, checked in to a rousing ovation with 6:38 left in the opening quarter and wound up with 12 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists. He and Fox picked up double technicals at the 5:43 mark of the first.

Sabonis added 14 points, seven rebounds and eight assists and now heads home determined to get the Kings closer to winning their first playoff series since eliminating Dallas in the 2004 first round.

Poole scored 22 points, Andrew Wiggins added 18 points and eight rebounds and Kevon Looney pulled down 14 rebounds to go with eight points and six assists.

Murray’s 3 with 10:43 left pulled the Kings within 102-99 after a 7-0 burst to begin the fourth after the 3 by Thompson to end the third put the Warriors ahead 102-92. Coach Mike Brown instructed his young star to “let it fly” and Murray shined in the moment under the matinee lights, scoring 23 points.

Thompson’s driving and dishing is something Kerr pointed to as a success opening up the floor in Game 3 and Thompson penetrated and found Moses Moody for a baseline 3 late in the first. Golden State moved the ball with snappy passes that created open looks.

MURRAY’S GROWTH

Murray shot 9 for 13 with five 3s after he went a combined 1 for 8 on 3s and 3 of 13 in the first three games. He had 12 points on 5-for-7 shooting in the first half.

“What he’s going through now is invaluable. I couldn’t script it better for a young man like himself who’s going to be really, really good in this league to be able to hit some adversity in a situation like this, obviously on this level,” Brown said.

TIP-INS

Kings: Sacramento scored 18 points off Golden State’s 12 turnovers while committing just 10 of its own.

Warriors: Gary Payton II returned to play seven minutes after missing Game 3 with an illness. ... Green had started the last 132 postseason games he played, last coming off the bench in Game 3 against the Clippers in 2014. ... Golden State shot 52.2% in the first.

LEADING LATE

The Warriors improved to 75-3 since Kerr became coach when leading a playoff game by 10 or more at any point in fourth quarter.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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