* Tonight on ABC:Warriors vs. Cavs, Game 4 (9 ET)
CLEVELAND — Stephen Curry has played in 89 postseason games, and in none of the previous 88 had he shot as poorly as he did in Game 3 of the 2018 Finals.
Of course, the Golden State Warriors won Game 3 with an efficient offensive performance despite Curry shooting 3-for-16, including 1-for-10 on 3-pointers. One reason is that Kevin Durant had himself a night, scoring 43 points, with 28 of them coming on an incredible 11-for-15 from outside the paint.
Another reason is that the Warriors scored 48 points in the restricted area, tying their high for the postseason. They didn’t shoot as well in the restricted area as they did in Games 1 and 2 (82 percent), but their 37 attempts there were five more than they’ve had in any other game in these playoffs.
It’s been written here before (including between Games 2 and 3) how the Warriors leverage their 3-point shooting (along with the Cleveland Cavaliers’ defensive issues) to get better shots (layups and dunks). But the attention paid to Curry in Game 3 was particularly important in getting shots at the basket, and adds some context to that 3-for-16 performance.
Early attention
The Warriors may be the most difficult team to defend in NBA history, but it’s kind of amazing that, in his 27th game against the Warriors over the last four seasons, Smith is making the same mistakes over and over again. Smith scored five points in the first minute and a half of Game 3, but he gave four right back to the defending champs.
After Game 3 and again after practice on Thursday, LeBron James put an emphasis on having “cerebral” players in this league.
“Not only do you have to have the talent,” James said Thursday, “you have to have the minds as well.
“We’re all NBA players. Everybody knows how to put the ball in the hoop. But who can think throughout the course of the game?”
Beating the trap
After having their switches punished too often in Games 1 and 2, the Cavs chose to trap Curry in Game 3. And that just freed up the Warriors’ bigs for more dunks and layups.
- NBA.com/Stats: Green finds Bell rolling to the basket after the Cavs’ trap
Bell drew a foul on almost the exact same play on the Warriors’ next possession and again on a direct feed from Curry early in the fourth. To start the third quarter, McGee was the roll man taking the feed from Green in a slightly different spot on the floor.
Midway through the fourth, Durant was the roll man, slipping the screen, taking the feed from Curry, and finding Andre Iguodala for a layup after weak-side help from Love. And the Warriors’ final layup of Game 3 came when Curry slipped a screen, drew attention on the left wing, and found Green on the baseline.
“I thought we did a good job of taking the ball out of Steph’s hands,” Cavs coach Tyronn Lue said Thursday. “The first two games, I thought with the switches, he really hurt us. So we went to the blitzes and tried to get the ball out of his hands. When that happens, you’re going to give up some easy shots for (JaVale) McGee and (Jordan) Bell and those guys.”
Double attention on the pin-down
The best job in the Warriors’ offense may be setting pin-down screens for Curry and Klay Thompson, because it can get you free layups a few times a night.
The ATO
The Cavs defended Curry in Game 3 better than they did in Games 1 and 2. But the extra attention he got freed up some other things in the Warriors’ offense, which has had its most efficient series (121 points scored per 100 possessions) of the playoffs. Curry finished with six assists, including a particularly gorgeous dime to Andre Iguodala in the first quarter when Smith left Iguodala under the basket to help on Curry’s isolation on Love.
Even in shooting 3-for-16, Curry was a valuable part of the Warriors’ offense on Wednesday. And maybe he still deserves series consideration for Finals MVP should the Warriors win Game 4.