kiwi詹姆斯和韦德谁厉害哪个厉害

吴悠单打KIWI为什么会惨败
八月七日,麦蒂巡回赛的最后一场上海站比赛结束,也正式宣告了自己退役,主办方在现场给麦蒂办了一个隆重的退役仪式,也宣告麦蒂正式退役。这场比赛的中场,中国著名街球王吴悠对阵麦迪队中的矮个后卫Kiwi。用这样单挑的方式,来向麦迪致敬。不过很遗憾的是吴悠三局两胜中零比二输给了KIWI。
很多朋友都在对这场比赛进行评论,有的说吴悠徒有虚名,有的说比赛结束太快了,根本没看出来什么。教授这里来分析一下。
吴悠对战KIWI,在个人条件上我们先对比一下,1.74米的吴悠和1.71米的KIWI在身高上半斤八两,高那三公分也不占什么太大的优势,68.59KG和70KG使两人在体重上也差别不大,要说唯一能拉开两人区别的就是年龄了。30岁的吴悠对阵22岁的KIWI,在年龄上差距太大了,八岁相当一个鸿沟,在体力和爆发力上,吴悠已经不能和冉冉升起的KIWI去对比了。
其次,这场一对一斗牛,说是街球有点牵强了,它更像是正规比赛中的个人能力展示,整整两局,没有什么太花哨的运球或者夸张的街球动作,KIWI得分也是简单的突破上篮,甚至连胯下背后也很少使用。
开场由吴悠先发球,没有热身的吴悠似乎把这场斗牛当作了娱乐,上来没有经过任何的预热直接选择了突破,结果球部跟手,直接出现了失误。
转换球权之后的KIWI,貌似很珍惜这个进攻的机会,没有选择任何花式的运球,直接就是一个体前换手衔接后转身稳扎稳打的拿下了两分。
KIWI已经跟随麦蒂打了一个半场,身体充分活动开来,动作做的也是很轻松流畅,反观吴悠似乎还没有活动开,僵硬的起跳没能组织KIWI得分,所以,热身确实很重要。
仍然是KIWI球权,KIWI一个假动作衔接外侧胯下,吴悠脚步并没有跟上,被KIWI轻松甩开得分。看看吴悠脚下,已经乱了,到了这个时候还没有进入比赛的状态,被自己绊倒在地。
KIWI球权继续,几个三重威胁姿势,其实一对一只能算是两重威胁了,吴悠似乎有点犹豫,前两次的失误好像让他觉得应该认真起来,所以对KIWI的三重威胁姿势反应非常大,KIWI通过几个假突动作使吴悠距离拉的渐渐变大,轻松三分出手。
KIWI的进攻很简单,就是加速突破,但是吴悠的脚步已经跟不上了,无奈只好选择犯规。
就像教授所说的那样,吴悠的脚步动作确实跟不上了,KIWI又一次用同一种方式进行了突破得分。
还是同样的一招,KIWI似乎并不像多做纠缠,迅速得分才是正途。
现在的比分已经九比零了,KIWI似乎想迅速拿下这一局,而且好像吃定了吴悠防不住自己的同一招,于是又选择同一方向利用爆发力硬吃,已经连连吃亏的吴悠这次没有上当,提前一步封堵了进攻路线,KIWI无奈勉强出手,球没进,交换球权。吴悠拿球之后,似乎是体力已经有点吃紧,并没有以三重威胁姿势开始,而是直接连续几个胯下调整了一下节奏,用出和KIWI同一方向的进攻方式,颇有以彼之道,还施彼身的意思,不过爆发力似乎收到了体力的影响,没有完全甩开KIWI,硬吃了一个篮下,球总算是进了。
再次进攻的吴悠已经有点急躁了,突破未果,选择了和上次一样的硬吃,结果球没进,转换球权。
KIWI拿到球之后处理的很干净,一个单手变向衔接后转身,吴悠只能打手犯规,KIWI两罚两中,第一局以11比2拿下比赛。
第二局开场,KIWI似乎已经有些轻敌了,连三重威胁做出来都不太认真,但是似乎吴悠仍然在调整第一局输掉的情绪和身体节奏,没有太过用心的防守KIWI,使得KIWI又一次三分命中。
KIWI似乎觉得能轻松赢得这场比赛了,开始用组合的突破动作增加观赏性,但是明显有了比赛规则的限制,很多动作还是不能随便做出,这套组合在吴悠的防守下没有起到什么效果,选择了后仰投篮,球还是进了。但是明显感觉到,吴悠这个时候已经活动开了,脚步也灵活不少,并且封盖的跳跃动作也不再僵硬。
KIWI的球权,感觉到吴悠身体减减活动开,KIWI似乎觉得拖下去很不利,选择了干净利落的进攻方式,再次后转身得分。七比零。
轻松的得分使得KIWI觉得赢球很轻松,于是不再思考,直接选择通过爆发力突破,但是吴悠已经活动开了,紧跟着防守,用犯规将KIWI拦了下来,但是这次的犯规更像是故意做出的犯规动作,就是为了球权的转换和打乱KIWI的节奏。
KIWI再次选择快速突破,吴悠将球打出了底线,仍然是KIWI球权。
KIWI又是一个加速的突破,利用节奏的变换再次得分。
已经九比零的KIWI最后一球放松了精神,处理变得草率,球权终于到了吴悠的手中。
吴悠似乎急于追上比分,接球后发现KIWI并没怎么贴身防守,就迅速投出一记三分,可惜没有命中。
KIWI再次拿出了屡屡建功的绝活,又是后转身,可惜节奏没有掌握好,吴悠又打手犯规,这球没进。KIWI两罚中一,十比零领先。
吴悠球权,这时候吴悠已经有点心不在焉了,处理球很草率,虽然出了空档,但是仍然没有把握住。
KIWI似乎想做出一个后撤步,但是脚下打滑了,没有成功出手,球权回到了吴悠手中。
吴悠抓住了一个机会,一个变向划开了防守的一个小空档,轻松上篮得分。
吴悠找到了节奏,利用身体小小的强打了一下,KIWI似乎也无心思防守,吴悠再下一城。
教授觉得这个动作应该是这场比赛吴悠的一个亮点,小幅度的后转身,把自身灵活的特性发挥到了极致,再次得分。
连得6分的吴悠似乎自我感觉良好,想趁热打铁,直接拼起了身体,无奈体力似乎已经跟不上了,这球遗憾投失。
最后一球,以身体打身体,KIWI直接强攻得分,最后以12比6赢了这局,总比分2比0拿下比赛。
纵观这场比赛,吴悠在第一局的时候似乎根本没有睡醒一样,屡屡失误,处理球草率,让对手轻松的拿下了第一局。其实反过来分析一下并不难理解,30岁的吴悠对阵22岁的KIWI,在没有热身的情况下不占任何优势,KIWI不难运球娴熟,而且脚步灵活,爆发力优秀,一些干脆利落的进攻动作对于还没有进入状态的吴悠来说简直就是致命伤。第二节开始以后,吴悠慢慢进入了状态,但是大局已定,为时已晚,除了拿出了两个不错的变向以外基本上可以说是交了白卷,另外,吴悠和KIWI的对抗中,力量并不占优势,可不知道什么原因,吴悠连续两次选择用身体硬伤。通过上面那个吴悠的后转身来看,吴悠的灵活度依然还在,如果这场比赛持续下去,两个人都在充分热身的情况下,谁赢谁输真的是尚未可知。吴悠此场比赛输在,1:对比赛不够重视,赛前根本不经过热身就上场直接比赛。2:身体素质和体能因为年龄关系差了对方不少。3:处理球草率,似乎并不在乎输赢。4:不利用自己的长处去打,反而针对对方的长处去硬碰硬。整场比赛看下来,教授感觉非常无语,吴悠不是不能打,好像只是不想打。这场比赛可以说根本没有打出自己的水平,不知道现在的吴悠看到网络上一系列累死“吊打”“完爆”这样的词的时候心理会不会后悔没有认真对待这场比赛?
实战区已经讨论完毕了。。。因为真的打不过啊。。。全方位碾压
引用7楼 @ 发表的:
吴悠岁数大了 差距也没那么太大 对抗也不差太多 但是远投差不少 臂展差不少 5U很快 但KIWI更快 11分的 多打几次 吴悠还是能赢一次的
吹,继续吹。。。
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应某人要求,必须介绍一下NUS Lee Kuan Yew School的MPP项目。迟迟难产,因为短短一年感受实在太五味杂陈了。这潭子水太深了,我只能盲人摸象一样把我摸到的一条象尾巴拿出来甩一甩,在5方面解释我一个非主流MPP学生眼中这个学校和其背后的新加坡高等教育的一个侧面。&
Generosity新加坡的高校我猜想是世界上最慷慨的学校群体,发放的奖学金数额以及覆盖的比例应该是名列前茅的。原因不外乎国小人少,要保持knowledge economy的竞争力不得不仰赖进口外国聪明青年,用银票收买了多少中印两国的聪明脑瓜阿!从初中就开始笼络一帮中国学生,想当年我同届高中里最优秀的3个同学通通被挖墙角就是一例证。不过普遍情况是给奖学金后要求毕业后在新加坡&工作服役&6年, 愣要你在狮城生娃发芽,目前解除合约的case虽有上升,但试想在一个地方呆了太多年朋友圈就业优势都在当地了,想要解脱也不是想象的那么容易了。所以新加坡在引进高端人才和引进底层国际民工的策略是一样的,忒精明也忒狠了。当然啦,金字塔顶端的人从来都是有办法来去自由的,争夺比较高端的中流砥柱人才就是战略之一。&至于LKY学校么算是一个典型中的极致,特例中的奇葩。给钱之多之广还是很惊人的。我原来以为我拿的funding package涵盖全部学费机票住宿书费保险什么杂费已经很得涩了,一去才知道自己赤条条贫农啊,所有收的中国学生都是在我基础上还有工资每月1000新币 (5000RMB)的啊!!更严重的问题是除了本土坡人和几棵不差钱的欧美人,剩下所有人都是大于等于我的。一个项目总共60人,40人拿大于等于我这种package的,剩下坡人有国家补助也象征性付点学费,少数自费有的还是自己政府赞助的,这是什么概念啊?!除了阿联酋这种乱洒钱的,我很好奇还有哪个地方找的出同类!!&此外,学校还每年赞助学生自己报名参加的国际会议,一般给500新币(2500RMB),有paper的话给1000新。这个政策很爽啊,我今年就找了个台湾的会议一边旅游顺便开个会还有赞助拿哈哈哈!然后因为学校和政府官员的network很是紧密,有些活动也会得到财团赞助,比如今年日本10日考察游&95%费用是日本政府和财团出资的,我记得自己大概交了大约130新币和少数几顿日本牛肉饭的钱就豪华游了一回, 坐的还是新航哇咔咔。还有双学位项目,学校居然还能在双学位学生不在的一年继续原来的funding package, 自己补差价,传说前几届学校还全额承担第二方学校的费用,生晚了我没赶上巅峰期。还有学校给买的医疗保险,每次去医院付5-10新币就可以涵盖每次所有治疗和药品费用,我这种久被中国医疗体制困扰的小市民顿时就鸡冻地乱跑医院了,一年受伤以及各种小毛病花销估计有5000 RMB,保险公司看见我大概都要哭了。学校还经常赞助各种学生party, 有一次几个欧美学生因为多喝了点小酒没给补酒钱还闹情绪,可见这帮学生被财主给惯的。&而且最重要的是!!!!沾了LKY各位官员的光,没有bonding, 这个学校拿奖学金不用和坡政府签卖身契毕业后留在新加坡,来去自由!所以就慷慨这一点,作为一个来自developing country的小百姓,我还是灰常感激涕零的&
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品评校花校草,体验校园广场From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for . Please help
by . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (April 2015) ()
were the postseason tournament of the 's . The tournament concluded with the
defeating the
4 games to 2 in the .
was named .
For the first time since , all teams from a particular division made the playoffs (in this case, all five teams from the ).
hosting the San Antonio Spurs in Game 5 of the First Round series at the Staples Center.
made their 18th straight playoff appearance, while the
(eighth straight playoff appearance) and the
(third straight playoff appearance) entered the playoffs as the first seeds of their respective conferences. The Warriors and Hawks advanced to the Conference Finals for the first time since
and , respectively.
made their first postseason appearance since , the final season of ' first stint with the Cavaliers. They also made their first Conference Finals appearance since , where they lost 4–2 to the , and their first Finals appearance since , when they were swept by the San Antonio Spurs. On the other hand, James' former team, the , missed the playoffs after making the , becoming the first team to do so since the . Miami had qualified for the playoffs for six consecutive seasons before missing this year, also reaching the NBA Finals four consecutive times.
The Heat were also one of three conference finalists from the previous year to miss the playoffs, along with the
and the . Oklahoma City and Indiana were tied with the
with 45 and 38 wins, respectively, but missed the playoffs due to tiebreakers.
Despite starting their respective seasons in a rebuilding mode, both the
returned to the playoffs after a one-year absence. Bucks head coach
became the first head coach to lead two teams to the playoffs in his first two seasons, having led the Nets to the playoffs .
The first round of the playoffs saw a record six teams take a 3–0 lead in their respective series, the first time it had happened since the first round expanded to a best-of-seven series in .
The fifth seed defeated the fourth seed in both conferences for the third straight year.
Game 7 between the Clippers and Spurs ensured a 16th straight postseason in which at least one Game 7
was the last postseason to not feature a Game 7.
The San Antonio Spurs became the first defending champions to be eliminated in the first round since the . This was only the second time it had happened since .
With the Spurs being eliminated in the first round, none of the eight teams remaining at the beginning of the Conference Semifinals had previously won an NBA championship in the 21st century. After the first round of the playoffs, of the teams who had previously won an NBA championship, the
had the shortest drought at 17 years, having most recently won an NBA championship in , while the Atlanta Hawks had the longest overall drought at 57 years, having won their only previous championship in
when the franchise was based in .
For the first time since , the Hawks made the Conference Finals (then called the Division Finals). Since 1970, they had lost all 15 Division or Conference Semifinal series they participated in. The Warriors made their first conference finals appearance since , and the
made their first conference finals appearance since .These three were the NBA teams which had been waiting for the longest time for a return to the conference finals.
For the second straight year, the No. 1 seed faced the No. 2 seed in the Conference Finals, and for the fourth time since 2000.
In the second round, all teams that held a 2–1 series lead within the first three games of their respective series had gone on to lose that series.
The Rockets became only the second franchise to twice come back from 3–1 series deficits to win the series by defeating the
in the Semifinals. They had first achieved that goal
against the Phoenix Suns. The
are the only other franchise to twice make this comeback, doing it in
and . Overall, eleven teams have achieved the feat, with the Warriors doing it in the Conference Finals and Cavaliers doing it in the NBA Finals .
For the first time in NBA playoff history, both
teams, the Warriors of the West and the Cavaliers of the East, held commanding 3–0 series leads. Cleveland went on to the finals, sweeping the Atlanta Hawks 4–0 while Golden State won their series 4–1 defeating the Houston Rockets.
For the first time since the , two rookie coaches,
of the Cavaliers and
of the Warriors, met each other in the NBA finals.
Within each conference, the three division winners and the five non-division winners with the most wins qualified for the playoffs. The
are based on each team' however, a division winner is guaranteed to be ranked at least fourth, regardless of record.
Each conference' there is no reseeding. All rounds are best-of- the team that has four wins advances to the next round. As stated above, all rounds, including the NBA Finals, are in a 2–2–1–1–1 format. Home court advantage in any round does not necessarily belong to the higher-seeded team, but instead to the team with the better regular season record. If two teams with the same record meet in a round, standard tiebreaker rules are used. The rule for determining home court advantage in the NBA Finals is winning percentage, then head to head record, followed by record vs. opposite conference.
The tiebreakers that determine seedings are:
Division leader wins tie from team not leading a division
Head-to-head record
Division record (if all the tied teams are in the same division)
Conference record
Record vs. playoff teams, own conference
Record vs. playoff teams, other conference (only in two-way tie)
, all games
If there are more than two teams tied, the team that wins the tiebreaker gets the highest seed, while the other teams were "re-broken" from the first step until all ties were resolved. Since the three division winners were guaranteed a spot in the top four, ties to determine the division winners had to be broken before any other ties.
As the 2014–15 regular season proceeded into February 2015, the ninth-place team in the Western Conference had a better record than the eighth-place team in the East. This led NBA Commissioner
to suggest changing the playoff format, where the top 16 teams throughout the entire league would qualify, regardless of division or conference. Silver then stated that the league might not be able to implement such changes until the 2016–17 season at the earliest.
On March 3, the
became the first team to clinch a playoff spot. This was the earliest a team had clinched a playoff spot since the
clinched on March 2. The
became the first Western Conference team to clinch a playoff spot on March 16.
Playoff berth
Division title
Best record
in Conference
Best record
Playoff berth
Division title
Best record
in Conference
Best record
Brooklyn Nets clinched #8 seed over
based on a 2–1 regular season series record.
Houston Rockets clinched #2 seed over Los Angeles Clippers based on winning .
Memphis Grizzlies clinched #5 seed over San Antonio Spurs based on
winning percentage. (.563 vs .500)
New Orleans Pelicans clinched #8 seed over
based on 3–1 regular season series record.
Teams in bold advanced to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding in its conference, and the numbers to the right indicate the number of games the team won in that round. The division champions are marked by an asterisk. Teams with home court advantage are shown in Italics.
First Round
Conference Semifinals
Conference Finals
* Division winner
Bold Series winner
italics Team with home-court advantage
Memphis had home court advantage in the first round despite being a lower seed as they had a better regular season record than their opponent, but did not have the best record of the non-division-champion playoff teams in the West.
All times are in
Scoring by quarter: 20–32, 25–23, 17–19, 30–25
Asts: three players 3 each
Hawks leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 18,440
Referees: , Marc Davis,
Scoring by quarter: 24–29, 23–21, 20–25, 24–21
Hawks leads series, 2–0
Attendance: 18,207
Referees: Mike Callahan, Michael Smith,
Scoring by quarter: 16–31, 24–16, 22–20, 21–24
Hawks leads series, 2–1
, , New York City
Attendance: 17,732
Referees: , Tony Brown,
120 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 24–25, 27–20, 31–29, 22–30, Overtime: 11–16
Series tied at, 2–2
, , New York City
Attendance: 17,732
Referees: James Capers, Eric Lewis, Jason Phillips
Scoring by quarter: 16–33, 28–20, 26–29, 27–25
Hawks leads series, 3–2
Attendance: 18,105
Referees: , David Jones, James Williams
Scoring by quarter: 36–23, 15–22, 41–21, 19–21
Atlanta wins series, 4–2
, , New York City
Attendance: 17,732
Referees: , John Goble, Ed Malloy
Regular-season series
Atlanta won 4–0 in the regular-season series
December 5, 2014
, , New York City
January 28, 2015
April 4, 2015
April 8, 2015
, , New York City
This was the first meeting in the playoffs between the Hawks and Nets.
Scoring by quarter: 31–27, 23–35, 22–29, 24–22
Cavaliers leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 20,562
Referees: Mike Callahan, Pat Fraher,
Scoring by quarter: 26–25, 24–26, 18–24, 23–24
Cavaliers leads series, 2–0
Attendance: 20,562
Referees: , Marc Davis,
Scoring by quarter: 31–25, 25–23, 28–28, 19–19
Cavaliers leads series, 3–0
Attendance: 18,624
Referees: James Capers, David Guthrie, Jason Phillips
Scoring by quarter: 29–19, 28–17, 13–25, 31–32
Cleveland wins series, 4–0
Attendance: 18,624
Referees: , John Goble, Leroy Richardson
Regular-season series
Tied 2–2 in the regular-season series
November 14, 2014
March 3, 2015
April 10, 2015
April 12, 2015
Previous playoff series
Boston leads 4–1 in all-time playoff series
Scoring by quarter: 29–30, 22–30, 24–26, 16–17
Bulls leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 21,812
Referees: Scott Foster, Kane Fitzgerald, Bill Kennedy
Scoring by quarter: 16–11, 22–28, 30–32, 14–20
Bulls leads series, 2–0
Attendance: 21,661
Referees: James Williams, Bill Spooner,
106 (2OT)
Scoring by quarter: 27–27, 22–26, 25–18, 21–24, Overtime: 6–6, 12–5
Bulls leads series, 3–0
Attendance: 18,717
Referees: , Brian Forte, Ed Malloy
Scoring by quarter: 23–19, 27–31, 21–23, 19–19
Asts: three players 5 each
Bulls leads series, 3–1
Attendance: 18,717
Referees: , David Guthrie, Jason Phillips
During the final minute of the game,
drove inside then passed to
who laid it in as he was fouled. Gasol would then make the free throw and tie the game at 90. Then, when Rose tried to win the series for Chicago, he crossed but then was stripped by . He then attempted a half court shot, which was blocked by
when timeout was called. With 1.3 seconds left,
found the lead pass for , due to a defensive breakdown by Rose, who then hit the game-winning lay-up at the buzzer, allowing the Bucks to stave off elimination for at least one more game.
Scoring by quarter: 23–22, 29–27, 24–21, 18–18
Asts: , , 6 each
Bullls leads series, 3–2
Attendance: 21,814
Referees: , Sean Corbin, Sean Wright
Scoring by quarter: 34–16, 31–17, 26–19, 29–14
Chicago wins series, 4–2
Attendance: 18,717
Referees: Mike Callahan, Derrick Stafford, Tom Washington
Regular-season series
Chicago won 3–1 in the regular-season series
November 5, 2014
January 10, 2015
February 23, 2015
April 1, 2015
This was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Bucks winning two out of the first three meeting.
Previous playoffs series
Milwaukee leads 2–1 in all-time playoff series
86 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 19–23, 27–19, 19–14, 17–26, Overtime: 11–4
Wizards leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 19,800
Referees: , Derrick Stafford, Josh Tiven
Scoring by quarter: 26–31, 34–18, 37–26, 20–31
Wizards leads series, 2–0
Attendance: 19,800
Referees: Scott Foster, Bill Kennedy, Courtney Kirkland
Scoring by quarter: 35–33, 13–21, 22–18, 29–34
Wizards leads series, 3–0
, Washington, D.C.
Attendance: 20,356
Referees: , Sean Corbin, John Goble
Scoring by quarter: 22–36, 28–30, 20–36, 24–23
Asts: three players 4 each
Washington wins series, 4–0
, Washington, D.C.
Attendance: 20,356
Referees: , Brian Forte, Ed Malloy
Regular-season series
Toronto won 3–0 in the regular-season series
November 7, 2014
January 31, 2015
116 (OT)
, Washington, D.C.
February 11, 2015
This was the first meeting in the playoffs between the Raptors and Wizards.
Scoring by quarter: 26–37, 27–26, 28–20, 23–15
Wizards leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 18,148
Referees: Scott Foster, Pat Fraher,
Scoring by quarter: 20–28, 26–25, 29–27, 15–26
Series tied at, 1–1
Attendance: 18,131
Referees: , Marc Davis, Josh Tiven
Scoring by quarter: 18–28, 25–28, 23–29, 35–18
Pts: three players 17 each
Wizards leads series, 2–1
, Washington, D.C.
Attendance: 20,356
Referees: , ,
The Hawks rallied from a 19-point deficit heading into the final period to tie the score at 101 with a basket. On the ensuing possession, Paul Pierce, who was double-teamed, hit a fadeaway jumper off the backboard at the buzzer to give the Wizards a 103–101 victory and a 2–1 lead in the series. After the game, when ESPN analyst
asked Pierce if he called bank on that shot, he responded, "I called game!"
Scoring by quarter: 29–26, 36–29, 20–20, 21–26
Series tied at, 2–2
, Washington, D.C.
Attendance: 20,356
Referees: , John Goble, Ed Malloy
Scoring by quarter: 19–23, 28–18, 15–22, 19–19
Hawks leads series, 3–2
Attendance: 18,854
Referees: Mike Callahan, , Tom Washington
With 8.3 seconds left, Kyle Korver inbounded the ball to Dennis Schroder, who drives for the layup that was blocked by John Wall, then Al Horford gets the offensive rebound and hits the game-winning layup with 1.9 seconds left. John Wall then misses the half-court buzzer beater, and the Hawks take the 3–2 series lead.
Scoring by quarter: 19–20, 26–19, 27–25, 22–27
Atlanta wins series, 4–2
, Washington, D.C.
Attendance: 20,356
Referees: , James Capers, Derrick Stafford
The Hawks were up by 3, with 6.4 seconds to go. Bradley Beal's inbound pass goes to John Wall who tries to get open with time running down, then he gives to Paul Pierce who hits the off-balanced game-tying 3. But then, after the officials review the play, they said the shot did not count. The Hawks won the series and advanced to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 1970.
Regular-season series
Hawks won 3–1 in the regular-season series
November 25, 2014
, Washington, D.C.
January 11, 2015
February 4, 2015
April 12, 2015
, Washington, D.C.
This was the fifth playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Wizards (formerly known as the Bullets) winning three out of the first four meetings.
Previous playoff series
Washington leads 3–1 in all-time playoff series
This section does not
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Scoring by quarter: 27–15, 22–29, 32–26, 18–22
Bulls leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 20,562
Referees: , Brian Forte, Ed Malloy
The Bulls led wire to wire to go up 1–0 in the series, leading by as many as 16 points in the second quarter. The Cavs rallied to tie the game early in the third quarter. However, the Bulls went on a 15–0 run in the third quarter to regain control before holding off the Cavs late in the 4th quarter.
Scoring by quarter: 18–38, 27–26, 26–23, 20–19
Series tied at, 1–1
Attendance: 20,562
Referees: , James Capers, James Williams
Facing the possibility of going down 2–0 heading to Chicago, the Cavaliers blew out the Bulls in Game 2, leading wire to wire as they evened the series 1–1. The Cavs outscored the Bulls by 20 points in the first quarter and never looked back. The Bulls got no closer than 11 for the rest of the game. LeBron led the Cavs with 33 points on 13/29 shooting while Irving chipped in 21 points.
Scoring by quarter: 24–18, 25–29, 24–27, 23–25
Bulls leads series, 2–1
Attendance: 22,246
Referees: Mike Callahan, , Eric Lewis
J.R. Smith returned to the lineup after missing the first two games due to suspension. This was a very competitive game that saw neither team lead by more than 8 points. Trailing 94–93, LeBron James missed a go ahead layup with under 24 seconds to play. Taj Gibson was fouled and made two free throws to make it 96–93 Bulls. James found Smith, who hit the game tying three to make it 96–96. The Bulls called timeout on their final possession of regulation. Rose shot a deep three that went off the backboard and into the basket, giving the Bulls a 99–96 win and a 2–1 series lead. Rose led the Bulls with 30 points. LeBron led the Cavs with 27, but he continued to struggle with his shot and Jimmy Butler's defense, going 8/25 for the game and 1/7 on threes.
Scoring by quarter: 26–28, 23–17, 12–23, 25–16
Series tied at, 2–2
Attendance: 22,256
Referees: Scott Foster, Jason Phillips, Tom Washington
Looking to go up 3–1 and take complete control of the series, the Bulls went up 37–29 early in the second quarter. However, the Cavs scored 16 unanswered points to go up 45-37 before settling for a 49–45 halftime lead. The Bulls dominated the third quarter, outscoring the Cavs 23–12. They led by as many as 11 points before settling for a 68–61 lead heading into the 4th quarter. Led by J.R. Smith and Timofey Mozgov, the Cavs would rally, opening the 4th quarter on a 19–5 run to take an 80–73 lead with just under 5 minutes to play. With just under 40 seconds to play, LeBron hit two consecutive free throws to put the Cavs up 84–79. Butler hit a three on the Bulls' next possession, cutting the deficit to 84–82. The Cavs were forced to burn three consecutive timeouts as they were unable to inbound the ball. Once they inbounded the ball, James tried to burn the clock down as he was double teamed by Rose and Dunleavy. However, he swung his arm and committed an offensive foul on Dunleavy, giving the ball back to the Bulls with 14 seconds remaining. Rose tied the game with a layup to even the game at 84–84 with 8 seconds remaining. James rushed down the court and tried to score the go-ahead layup but was blocked. The ball went out of bounds with 1.5 seconds remaining. On the Cavs' final possession, Matthew Dellavedova inbounded the ball to James. James fired a jumper over Butler that went through the hoop as the buzzer sounded, giving the Cavs an 86–84 win. The Cavs regained homecourt advantage as they evened up the series at 2–2. James led the team with 25 points (10/30 shooting) while Rose led the Bulls with 31 points on 11/23 shooting.
This game was particularly controversial due to a timeout that wasn't called late in the game. After Rose made the layup to tie the game at 84–84, Cavaliers head coach, David Blatt, attempted to call timeout. However, the Cavs were out of timeouts. Calling a timeout without having one would have resulted in a technical foul and possession of the ball would go to the Bulls. Tyron Lue held back Blatt and prevented him from getting that timeout. None of the officials noticed Blatt signaling timeout as James ran up the court for what would eventually lead to his game winning buzzer beater.
Following the game, the NBA officiating report revealed that Blatt should have been charged with a timeout that would have drawn a technical and Cavs turnover.
Scoring by quarter: 24–25, 20–29, 27–26, 30–26
Rebs: three players 9 each
Cavaliers leads series, 3–2
Attendance: 20,562
Referees: , Derrick Stafford, Zach Zarba
The Bulls scored the first 8 points of the contest and led 18-8 early in the first quarter. However, the Cavs closed the first quarter on a 17–6 run to take a 25–24 lead into the 2nd quarter. The Cavs' momentum carried over into the 2nd quarter as they built a 54–44 halftime lead. James, who had struggled mightily with his shooting throughout the series, scored 24 points on 10/12 shooting in the first half. The Cavaliers controlled the third quarter and led by 9 after three quarters. Early in the 4th quarter, Dellavedova fell down, and Gibson's legs got tangled up with his. Gibson, attempting to break free, kicked Dellavedova. Gibson was charged with a flagrant 2 and ejected. The Cavs went up by as many as 17 points in the 4th quarter and led 97-82 with just over 6 minutes to play. However, the Bulls would rally, going on a 17–4 run to make it 101–99 Cavs with just over one minute to play. Trailing by 2, Butler attempted a three that would have given the Bulls to lead. However, he missed. James ran the clock down and missed a shot on the Cavs' next possession. However, Shumpert grabbed the offensive rebound. With 20 seconds remaining, and trailing by 2, the Bulls were forced to foul. However, the Cavs made their free throws and closed the game out, winning 106–101 and taking a 3–2 series lead. James led the Cavaliers with 38 points and 12 rebounds to go along with 6 assists and 0 turnovers. Butler led the Bulls with 29 points. Rose scored 12 points in the first quarter on 5/9 shooting. He had only 5 points on 2/15 shooting in the final three quarters, including 0 made baskets in the second half.
Scoring by quarter: 33–31, 25–13, 15–16, 21–13
Cleveland wins series, 4–2
Attendance: 22,695
Referees: , Marc Davis, Sean Wright
After three consecutive contests came down to the final minute, the Cavaliers finally finished off the Bulls, eliminating them 94–73 at the United Center to win the series 4–2. The Bulls led 40–38 halfway through the second quarter. However, the Cavs closed the half on a 20–4 run, leading by 14 at halftime. The Cavs never relinquished control, leading by double digits for the entire second half and going up by as many as 27 points in the 4th quarter. Irving was forced out of the game after suffering an injury in the second quarter. However, Dellavedova led the way, scoring a playoff career high and season high 19 points to lead the Cavaliers. James had 15–9–11, one rebound shy of a triple double. Butler led the Bulls with 20 points. The Bulls scored 31 points in the 1st quarter. However, they were held to 42 points in the final three quarters, including 29 in the second half.
It was the 4th time in the last 6 seasons that the Bulls were eliminated by a team with LeBron James on its roster.
Regular-season series
Cleveland won 3–1 in the regular-season series
October 31, 2014
108 (OT)
January 19, 2015
February 12, 2015
April 5, 2015
This was the seventh playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Bulls winning five out of the first six meetings.
Previous playoffs series
Chicago leads 5–1 in all-time playoff series
Scoring by quarter: 20–26, 31–25, 23–16, 23–22
Rebs: three players 7 each
Cavaliers leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 18,489
Referees: Scott Foster, Pat Fraher, Jason Phillips
The Cavaliers defeated the Hawks 97–89, stealing homecourt advantage and taking a 1-0 series lead. LeBron led the team with 31 points while J.R. Smith chipped in 28 points, going 8/12 on threes and setting a Cavaliers franchise record for made threes in a playoff game. The game was tied 63–63 in the 3rd quarter. However, the Cavs, led by Smith's hot shooting, went on a 22-4 run (including an 11–0 run to start the fourth quarter) as they went up 85–67 and seized control. The Hawks would attempt to mount a rally, cutting an 18-point deficit down to 4 with under 50 seconds remaining. However, James drove through the lane and made a dunk to put the Cavs up 6. After Paul Millsap missed a three that would have made it a one possession game with 23 seconds remaining, the Cavs made their free throws to close it out.
Scoring by quarter: 26–21, 28–28, 30–17, 10–16
Cavaliers leads series, 2–0
Attendance: 18,670
Referees: , Mike Callahan, Bill Spooner
With Irving sitting out due to injury, the Hawks were in a great position to even up the series. However, the Cavaliers blew out the Hawks and took a commanding 2–0 series lead, winning 94–82. The Cavs led 54–49 at halftime. Coming out of halftime, the Cavs seized control, outscoring the Hawks 30-17 in the third quarter, leading by as many as 20 before settling for an 84–66 lead heading into the 4th quarter. The Cavs scored only 10 points in the final period, but the Hawks trailed by double digits for the entire quarter and failed to make a significant run, managing 16 points. LeBron James led the way for the Cavs, scoring 30 points while having 11 assists and 9 rebounds. Dennis Schroder led the Hawks in scoring with 13 points off the bench. It was the first time this season that the Hawks had lost consecutive home games. The game was memorable when Hawks' 3-point specialist
sprain his right ankle after the Cavs'
fell on his right leg while attempting to dive for a loose ball. This injury kept Korver out for the rest of the postseason and would require surgery in the off-season along with an injured elbow that bothered him for most of the season.
114 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 24–21, 25–27, 27–33, 28–23, Overtime: 7–10
Cavaliers leads series, 3–0
Attendance: 20,562
Referees: , , Ed Malloy
In a pivotal Game 3, LeBron James got off to an awful start, going 0/9 in the first quarter as the Hawks led 24–21. Near the end of the second quarter, Al Horford and Matthew Dellavedova got tangled up on the floor. Horford, who had scored 15 points on 7/10 shooting in the first half, swung his elbow at Dellavedova. He received a Flagrant 2 and was ejected. Many believe he shouldn't have been ejected because Dellavadova seemed to be looking to perform another bad injury like he did on Kyle Korver during game 2 injuring him for the entire playoffs. The Hawks led 49–48 at halftime. However, the Cavs would dominate the third quarter again, outscoring the Hawks 33–27 to take a 5-point lead into the 4th quarter. The Cavs led by as many 10 in the 4th quarter, leading 88–78. However, the Hawks, led by Jeff Teague, would go on a 26–12 run, taking a four-point lead with just under 1:45 to play. The Cavs scored the final four points of regulation to tie up the game. The Hawks had the final possession of regulation. However, Teague's potential game winning three missed at the buzzer, and the game went into overtime. With just under one minute to play in overtime, the Hawks trailed 109–108. Teague hit a three pointer over Thompson to put the Hawks up 111–109. On the Cavs' next possession, James attempted a jumper that rimmed out. However, Thompson grabbed the offensive rebound and passed it back to James. James went behind the three point line and shot a three that went down, putting the Cavs back ahead 112–111. Out of the timeout, the Hawks turned it over on their next possession. On the Cavs' next possession, James ran the shot clock down before driving into the paint and making a layup to put the Cavs up 114–111. The Hawks had two chances to tie the game and potentially force a second overtime, but Shelvin Mack missed both game tying three point attempts, sending the Hawks to their third straight loss as the Cavs went up 3–0 in the series. James recorded his 51st career triple-double (12th of the postseason) with 37 points, 18 rebounds, and 13 assists. Teague led the Hawks with 30 points.
Scoring by quarter: 20–32, 22–27, 18–26, 28–33
Cleveland wins series, 4–0
Attendance: 20,562
Referees: , Marc Davis, Derrick Stafford
After missing the last two games against the Hawks, Irving made his return to the lineup. The Cavaliers routed the Hawks by 30 points, dominating from start to finish. The Cavs led 32–20 after the first quarter and never looked back. After leading by 17 at halftime, the Cavs controlled the entire second half. The Cavs led 85–60 heading into the fourth quarter, a quarter where very few starters logged minutes. The Cavaliers went on to win 118–88 as the franchise clinched their second Eastern Conference Championship in franchise history and returned to the Finals for the first time since 2007. The Atlanta Hawks became the first #1 seed to be swept in the Conference Finals since the Nets swept the Pistons in the 2003 Conference Finals. LeBron James and James Jones also became the first non-Celtics to appear in five consecutive NBA Finals series.
Regular-season series
Atlanta won 3–1 in the regular-season series
November 15, 2014
December 17, 2014
December 30, 2014
March 6, 2015
This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Cavaliers winning the only prior meeting.
Previous playoff series
Cleveland leads 1–0 in all-time playoff series
All times are in
Scoring by quarter: 13–28, 28–31, 25–25, 33–22
Warriors leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: , Sean Corbin, Jason Phillips
Scoring by quarter: 28–17, 24–38, 19–16, 16–26
Warriors leads series, 2–0
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: , , Sean Wright
119 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 25–26, 27–37, 17–26, 39–19, Overtime: 15–11
Warriors leads series, 3–0
Attendance: 18,444
Referees: Scott Foster, Kane Fitzgerald, Derrick Stafford
After Anthony Davis split a pair of free throws, Curry missed an attempted game-tying three, but Marreese Speights grabbed the offensive rebound and Curry hit another three to tie the game at 108. The Warriors would win in OT.
Scoring by quarter: 31–24, 36–30, 21–13, 21–31
Golden State wins series, 4–0
Attendance: 18,443
Referees: , Derrick Collins, Marc Davis
Regular-season series
Golden State won 3–1 in the regular-season series
December 4, 2014
December 14, 2014
122 (OT)
March 20, 2015
April 7, 2015
This was the first meeting in the playoffs between the Warriors and Pelicans.
Scoring by quarter: 19–32, 36–27, 22–25, 31–34
Rockets leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 18,231
Referees: , Tony Brown,
Scoring by quarter: 24–23, 27–30, 29–28, 19–30
Rockets leads series, 2–0
Attendance: 18,243
Referees: , David Jones, Ed Malloy
Scoring by quarter: 42–36, 23–36, 36–27, 29–29
Rockets leads series, 3–0
Attendance: 20,651
Referees: Mike Callahan, Michael Smith, Tom Washington
Scoring by quarter: 34–25, 19–36, 22–33, 34–27
Rockets leads series, 3–1
Attendance: 20,589
Referees: , Derrick Stafford, Josh Tiven
Scoring by quarter: 22–31, 28–25, 25–26, 19–21
Houston wins series, 4–1
Attendance: 18,231
Referees: , John Goble,
Regular-season series
Houston won 3–1 in the regular-season series
November 22, 2014
January 28, 2015
February 20, 2015
April 2, 2015
This was the third playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Mavericks winning both previous meetings.
Previous playoff series
Dallas leads 2–0 in all-time playoff series
Scoring by quarter: 18–30, 25–19, 21–30, 28–28
Clippers lead series, 1–0
, Los Angeles
Attendance: 19,309
Referees: , David Jones, Ed Malloy
107 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 28–24, 24–23, 25–27, 17–20, Overtime: 17–13
Series tied at, 1–1
, Los Angeles
Attendance: 19,482
Referees: , , Sean Wright
Scoring by quarter: 16–25, 22–21, 11–24, 24–30
Spurs leads series, 2–1
Attendance: 18,581
Referees: , Bill Spooner, Gary Zielinski
Scoring by quarter: 25–25, 26–22, 30–29, 33–29
Series tied at, 2–2
Attendance: 18,581
Referees: Mike Callahan, Pat Fraher, Tom Washington
Scoring by quarter: 22–27, 31–27, 29–28, 29–25
Spurs leads series, 3–2
, Los Angeles
Attendance: 19,571
Referees: Scott Foster, Bill Kennedy, Josh Tiven
Scoring by quarter: 26–26, 25–25, 25–21, 26–24
Series tied at, 3–3
Attendance: 18,581
Referees: , Marc Davis,
Scoring by quarter: 30–28, 25–29, 23–22, 31–32
Los Angeles win series, 4–3
, Los Angeles
Attendance: 19,588
Referees: , James Capers, Jason Phillips
This section does not
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by . Unsourced material may be challenged and . (May 2015) ()
In Game 1, the Clippers had a dominant game. It was close in the first half, but the Clippers pulled away in the second half. Chris Paul scored 32 points, while Blake Griffin scored 27 points. This helped the Clippers win 107–92.
Game 2 was much closer, requiring overtime. The Spurs won 111–107 in the Staples Center, tying the series 1–1, lead by Tim Duncan's 27 points.
In Game 3, the Spurs completely controlled the offense, and never trailed. They won 100–73 with Kawhi Leonard scoring 32 points. In Game 4, the Clippers won 114–105. Chris Paul scored 34 points and 7 assists.
It was a tight game in Game 5 in the Staples Center, especially in the 4th quarter. At the end of the game, DeAndre Jorda however, the refs called goaltending. The Spurs prevailed 111–107, lead by Tim Duncan's 24 points and 11 rebounds.
In Game 6, Spurs Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobli, Tony Parker, Kawhi Leonard along with Clippers Chris Paul and Blake Griffin struggled offensively. The Spurs gave up a 10-point lead, allowing the Clippers to win 102-96.
Game 7 was a very tight game, featuring 31 lead changes and 19 ties. In the first half, Chris Paul injured his hamstring, but returned in the third quarter, concluding that quarter with a buzzer beater 3-pointer, giving them a 79–78 lead. The fourth quarter was a nail-biter, with the Spurs leading in the beginning and the Clippers at the end. With 1 second left in the game, Chris Paul hit the game winner, and the Clippers moved on to the second round by a meager two-point margin. The final score was 111–109.
Regular-season series
Tied 2–2 in the regular-season series
November 10, 2014
, Los Angeles
December 22, 2014
January 31, 2015
February 19, 2015
, Los Angeles
This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Spurs winning the only meeting.
Previous playoff series
San Antonio leads 1–0 in all-time playoff series
Scoring by quarter: 15–25, 24–33, 23–28, 24–14
Grizzlies leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 18,119
Referees: James Capers, Eric Lewis, Tom Washington
Scoring by quarter: 21–19, 18–31, 21–23, 22–24
Grizzlies leads series, 2–0
Attendance: 18,119
Referees: , Leroy Richardson, Bill Spooner
Scoring by quarter: 24–19, 38–30, 23–26, 30–34
Asts: three players 4 each
Grizzlies leads series, 3–0
Attendance: 19,945
Referees: Scott Foster, Mark Ayotte, Bill Kennedy
Scoring by quarter: 22–27, 26–28, 27–13, 17–31
Grizzlies leads series, 3–1
Attendance: 19,541
Referees: , Derrick Collins, Marc Davis
Scoring by quarter: 20–20, 19–26, 27–22, 27–31
Memphis wins series, 4–1
Attendance: 18,119
Referees: , Brian Forte, Ed Malloy
Regular-season series
Memphis won 4–0 in the regular-season series
November 28, 2014
January 17, 2015
February 22, 2015
March 21, 2015
This was the first meeting in the playoffs between the Blazers and Grizzlies.
Scoring by quarter: 25–32, 27–29, 14–22, 20–18
Warriors leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: , Tom Washington, Sean Wright
Scoring by quarter: 28–22, 22–17, 23–24, 24–27
Series tied at, 1–1
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: Scott Foster, Bill Kennedy, Jason Phillips
Scoring by quarter: 20–23, 19–32, 25–24, 25–20
Grizzlies leads series, 2–1
Attendance: 18,119
Referees: , Tony Brown, James Capers
Scoring by quarter: 28–20, 33–24, 21–20, 19–20
Series tied at, 2–2
Attendance: 18,119
Referees: Mike Callahan, , Pat Fraher
10:30 p.m.
Scoring by quarter: 25–26, 16–23, 16–25, 21–24
Warriors leads series, 3–2
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: , Ed Malloy, Bill Spooner
Scoring by quarter: 32–19, 26–30, 18–19, 32–27
Golden State wins series, 4–2
Attendance: 18,119
Referees: , John Goble,
Regular-season series
Golden State won 2–1 in the regular-season series
December 16, 2014
March 27, 2015
April 13, 2015
This was the first meeting in the playoffs between the Warriors and Grizzlies.
Scoring by quarter: 19–25, 27–25, 37–27, 34–24
Clippers lead series, 1–0
Attendance: 18,231
Referees: Mike Callahan, Bill Spooner, Derrick Stafford
Scoring by quarter: 24–35, 41–21, 20–27, 24–32
Series tied at, 1–1
Attendance: 18,310
Referees: , David Jones,
Scoring by quarter: 24–33, 33–31, 19–35, 23–25
Clippers lead series, 2–1
, Los Angeles
Attendance: 19,367
Referees: , John Goble, David Guthrie
Scoring by quarter: 33–30, 21–30, 25–43, 16–25
Clippers lead series, 3–1
, Los Angeles
Attendance: 19,490
Referees: , Marc Davis,
Scoring by quarter: 22–27, 26–36, 28–27, 27–34
Clippers lead series, 3–2
Attendance: 18,142
Referees: , James Capers, Sean Wright
10:30 p.m.
Scoring by quarter: 25–29, 37–35, 17–28, 40–15
Series tied at, 3–3
, Los Angeles
Attendance: 19,417
Referees: Scott Foster, Pat Fraher, Jason Phillips
Scoring by quarter: 21–28, 25–28, 22–29, 32–28
Houston wins series, 4–3
Attendance: 18,463
Referees: , , Mike Callahan
The Rockets recover from a 3–1 deficit for the first time since . They unexpectedly forced a Game 7 by overcoming a 19–point deficit on an incredible 49–18 run to end the game. The Clippers missed 14 straight shots as
dominated much of the 4th quarter. The three-point shots led Houston to a decisive Game 7, and they completed one of the greatest comebacks in NBA playoff history. This was the ninth time in NBA history a team has come back from a 3–1 deficit to win a series.
Regular-season series
Tied 2–2 in the regular-season series
November 28, 2014
February 11, 2015
, Los Angeles
February 25, 2015
March 15, 2015
, Los Angeles
This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Rockets winning the only previous meeting.
Previous playoff series
Houston leads 1–0 in all-time playoff series
Scoring by quarter: 31–24, 24–34, 24–26, 27–26
Warriors leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: , Marc Davis, Sean Wright
Scoring by quarter: 28–36, 27–19, 20–22, 23–22
Warriors leads series, 2–0
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: , James Capers, John Goble
Scoring by quarter: 30–18, 32–19, 30–24, 23–19
Warriors leads series, 3–0
Attendance: 18,282
Referees: Scott Foster, Jason Phillips,
Scoring by quarter: 22–45, 37–24, 25–30, 31–29
Asts: three players 4 each
Warriors leads series, 3–1
Attendance: 18,239
Referees: , Mike Callahan, Tom Washington
Scoring by quarter: 22–17, 24–35, 22–22, 22–30
Golden State wins series, 4–1
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: , , Ed Malloy
Regular-season series
Golden State won 4–0 in the regular-season series
November 8, 2014
December 10, 2014
January 17, 2015
January 21, 2015
This was the first meeting in the playoffs between the Warriors and Rockets.
108 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 29–19, 22–29, 22–25, 25–25, Overtime: 2–10
Warriors leads series, 1–0
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: , James Capers, Jason Phillips
93 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 20–20, 27–25, 15–14, 25–28, Overtime: 8–6
Series tied at, 1–1
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: Scott Foster, ,
Scoring by quarter: 20–24, 17–20, 18–28, 36–24
Cavaliers leads series, 2–1
Attendance: 20,562
Referees: , Marc Davis, Derrick Stafford
Scoring by quarter: 31–24, 23–18, 22–28, 27–12
Rebs: three players 8 each
Series tied at, 2–2
Attendance: 20,562
Referees: , Mike Callahan,
Scoring by quarter: 22–22, 28–29, 17–22, 24–31
Warriors leads series, 3–2
Attendance: 19,596
Referees: , James Capers, Jason Phillips
Scoring by quarter: 28–15, 17–28, 28–18, 32–36
Golden State wins NBA Finals, 4–2
Attendance: 20,562
Referees: Scott Foster, Marc Davis,
Regular-season series
Tied 1–1 in the regular-season series
January 9, 2015
February 26, 2015
This was the first meeting in the NBA Finals between the Warriors and Cavaliers.
Games played
broadcast the NBA Playoffs nationally. In the first round the regional sports networks affiliated with the teams can also broadcast the games. Throughout the first two rounds, TNT televises games Saturday through Thursday, ESPN televises games on Friday and Sunday, and ABC televises select games on Saturday and Sunday, usually in the afternoon. NBA TV televises select games in the first round. TNT televises the Eastern Conference Finals and ESPN the Western Conference Finals. ABC televises the NBA Finals for the thirteenth consecutive year.
has exclusive national radio rights to broadcast the playoffs in the United States. They broadcast mostly ABC games during the first two rounds, all of the conference finals, and the NBA Finals.
statistical leaders
. Atlanta Journal Constitution. March 4, .
2015. Jason Kidd now becomes first coach in NBA history to lead 2 franchises to playoffs in first 2 years as head coach.
Lee, Michael (April 25, 2015). . Washington Post 2015.
. ESPN.com 2015.
. ESPN.com 2015.
. ESPN.com 2015.
. Guardian. 27 May .
. Guardian. 27 May .
. Los Angeles Times. February 14, .
. ProBasketballTalk.com. February 14, .
. NBA.com. March 5, .
Vivlamore, Chris (March 4, 2015). . The Detroit Journal-Constitution 2015.
Vivlamore, Chris (March 21, 2015). . The Detroit Journal-Constitution 2015.
. ESPN.com. November 1, .
. ESPN.com. March 21, .
. ESPN.com. April 8, .
. ESPN.com. March 23, .
. Daily Mail. March 26, .
. ESPN.com. March 28, .
Castillo, Jorge (March 30, 2015). . The Washington Post 2015.
. ESPN.com. March 18, .
. San Jose Mercury News. April 4, 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
. basketball-reference.com 2015.
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