Published
6 years agoon
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AP NewsTORONTO — The scoreboard said Golden State 106, Toronto 105.
The reality was that both teams lost.
It’s almost unimaginable: an NBA Finals game where neither team felt like celebrating afterward. That was the bizarre reality on Monday night, after the Warriors staved off elimination by rallying in the final moments to beat the Raptors and send this series back to Oracle Arena for Game 6 — on a night when Kevin Durant’s season came to an end.
Durant has an Achilles injury. The Warriors know it’s bad. They’ll find out how bad Tuesday.
“It’s devastating,” Toronto forward Kawhi Leonard said.
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He wasn’t talking about losing the game.
He was talking about seeing Durant get hurt.
Leonard knows what it’s like to have the game taken away by injury. He missed most of last season with a leg injury, one that limited him to nine games. He saw his commitment to the game questioned — the same way Durant had by some in recent days — and came out the other side an even better player.
That was the hope after Game 5 of the NBA Finals. The series truly seemed insignificant, with both sides aching over Durant’s situation.
They have a chance at the ultimate comeuppance, a 3-1 finals rally of their own. Maybe when practice resumes Wednesday, that will bring some joy.
There was no joy Monday night. The Raptors weren’t celebrating. Neither were the winners, who lost much more than Toronto did.
“Those talking heads who say we’re better without him, that’s just ludicrous,” Warriors guard Klay Thompson said. “Like, that’s crazy. This is the best player in the world. You could put him on the 30th best team in the league, and that team will make the playoffs. That’s how talented he is.”
The Warriors won the last two NBA championships largely because of Durant.
If they win the next two games for another championship, it’ll be for Durant.
“It’s a team full of heart,” said Warriors center DeMarcus Cousins, who spent a year recovering from an Achilles injury that denied him a monster contract last summer and saw him sign with Golden State on a mid-level deal. “It’s as simple as that. We’re fighters. It’s in our DNA. We’re going to go down fighting. Period.”
Durant would want it no other way.
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