2 minute read
GWS's Missed Win!
from SPECTRUM - PRAC
Golden State Warriors sadly lost to The Los Angeles Lakers eliminating them to.
Die hard fans of the Warrior shed tears as their favorite was eliminated to competing for the finals.
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The whole game was a display of teamwork by the Lakers which the Warriors clearly lack. The fourth quarter was very tense for both teams as it was a the struggle between defeat and victory.
Sadly the Warriors lost as they severely lack any big names and team play. which led to Stephan Curry to carry the whole team throughout the game.
The first quarter led by Lakers as the Warriors are too scattered to conduct a meaning full defense while lacking in offensive capabilities as only Curry is the only one bold enough to take on the opponent alone
The second quarter did not differ from the first as Lakers formed a solid defense impenetrable by the disorganized Warriors. This is implying the need of teamwork by the GSW.
Same goes to the third quarter as the Warriors badly needs any big
By: Julianna Gabrielle Verallo
names or at least team players. The incoherent plays of GSW had led it to be very unorganized.
The players themselves are capable it's just they are not able to conduct an insurmountable offense as they're over reliant of Curry to solo the whole game
GSW needs to hire big names and further practice as they need to invest in improving their team play if they ever want to compete in the NBA finals again.
It might be too soon to say with conviction that a dynasty died Friday, but there was indeed a rebirth.
For the past series of play-offs, the Los Angeles Lakers never won a victory against the defending Champion Golden State Warriors.
The Lakers finally eliminated the Warriors with a 122-101 Game 6 victory at Crypto.com Arena on Friday, advancing to face No.1 seeded Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference.
The Lakers, tossed aside as a bad experiment just three months ago, and who had to participate in the Play-in Tournament, are in the Western Conference.
Meanwhile, on the same night, Lebron James saw his season continue, the defending Champion Warriors were in shambles and nothing like the club that won yet another title just last summer or in any in a tremendous nine-year run.
If anyone needed to pinpoint the exact moment this shift occured, look no further than the sequence at the end of the firs half of Game 6, which explained it all.
Davis said, "Me and 'Bron want another one," meaning a championship to match the first together, in 2020, in four years together Davis and Lebron have never lost a series in which they were both completely healthy.
It wasn't quite the 40-point trashing that the Lakers used to knock out the Memphis Grizzlies in the first, but Friday's victory was comprehensive with five Lakers scoring a double digit.
Did you know?
Basketball began with its invention in 1891 in Springfield, Massachusetts, by Canadian physical education instructor James Naismith as a less injury-prone sport than football. Naismith was a 31-year old graduate student when he created the indoor sport to keep athletes indoors during the winters.[1] The game became established fairly quickly and grew very popular as the 20th century progressed, first in America and then in other parts of the world. After basketball became established in American colleges, the professional game followed. The American National Basketball Association (NBA), established in 1946, grew to a multibillion-dollar enterprise by the end of the century, and basketball became an integral part of American culture.