Raptors hit big shots, beat Warriors for 2-1 NBA Finals lead

Pascal Siakam of the Toronto Raptors is defended by Draymond Green of the Golden State Warriors in the second half during Game Three of the 2019 NBA Finals at ORACLE Arena on June 05, 2019 in Oakland, California. (Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images/AFP)
Updated 06 June 2019
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Raptors hit big shots, beat Warriors for 2-1 NBA Finals lead

  • Stephen Curry's playoff-best 47 not enough to save the injury-plagued Golden State Warriors
  • Game 4 is Friday at Oracle Arena, where Warriors fans will be rooting for the returns of Durant and Thompson

OAKLAND, California: For every amazing shot in a career night by Stephen Curry on his home court, Kawhi Leonard, Kyle Lowry and Danny Green kept finding dazzling answers of their own.
The Toronto Raptors decided to “let it rip,” and now they have the momentum again in these back-and-forth NBA Finals.
Leonard scored 30 points on a night Curry went off for a playoff-best 47, and the Raptors beat the banged-up Golden State Warriors 123-109 on Wednesday for a 2-1 series lead.
Curry also had eight rebounds and seven assists but couldn’t do it all for the two-time defending champions, down starters Kevin Durant and Klay Thompson and key backup big man Kevon Looney because of injuries.
“They outplayed us. They deserved it,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “I’m very proud of our effort, and now we’ve just got to bounce back and hopefully get back in here Friday night and hopefully get a little healthier and get some guys back.”
Splash Brother Thompson missed his first career playoff game after straining his left hamstring late in Game 2, while Looney is out the rest of the series after a cartilage fracture on his right side near the collarbone that also happened Sunday. Durant, a two-time reigning NBA Finals MVP, has been sidelined nearly a month because of a strained right calf.
Game 4 is Friday at Oracle Arena, where Warriors fans will be rooting for the returns of Durant and Thompson.
Before the game, one of the Raptors wrote “let it rip” on the locker room board.
Lowry contributed 23 with five 3-pointers and Green had 18 points with six 3s after Pascal Siakam got the Raptors rolling early. Toronto shot 52.4% and made 17 from deep.
“I give our guys a lot of credit. I thought we answered a lot of runs,” Raptors coach Nick Nurse said. “Each time they chipped, we kind of answered back. And that’s kind of what you got to do if you’re going to keep your lead.”
The Warriors trailed 96-83 going into the final quarter. Curry’s three free throws at 10:37 made it a seven-point game before back-to-back baskets by Serge Ibaka.
Siakam scored 18 points and established the momentum for Toronto from the tip, hitting his first three shots and setting a tone for a defensive effort that stayed solid without the foul problems that plagued the Raptors in Game 2.
“Every time we made a run or got the crowd into it they either made a tough 3 or there was a tough foul call and they slowed the tempo down or something went their way,” Curry said. “You have to tip your cap to all the guys who made pivotal plays in the right times.”
Golden State greatly missed not only Thompson’s touch from outside but also his stifling defense.
Nurse challenged his team to produce more defensive stops in order to get out in transition — “make them miss more,” he said.
The Raptors re-watched the costly 18-0 run by Golden State in Game 2, then got six blocked shots from Ibaka.
“We know that they’re going to make good runs and make shots but we watched that third quarter in Game 2 and we’ve just got to continue to play with pace,” Lowry said. “That was the one thing about it, we played with pace, half-court, full-court, and that was a big thing for us.”
Curry shot 14 for 31 including 6 of 14 on 3s while making 13 of 14 free throws in his sixth career 40-point playoff performance.
Nurse pulled out a box-and-one to try to stymie Curry in Golden State’s 109-104 Game 2 win, then the Raptors made Curry’s short-handed supporting cast try to beat them this time — and it sure worked.

TIP-INS
Raptors: All five Toronto starters scored in double digits and Fred VanVleet added 11 off the bench. ... The Raptors began 10 for 14 and scored 12 early points in the paint. .. Former Warriors G Patrick McCaw, who departed after last season in contract dispute, drew boos from the crowd when he checked into the game late in the first.
Warriors: Curry’s 17 first-quarter points matched his most in the period for the postseason. He also did so on April 27, 2014, against the Clippers. ... In the first half, Curry was 4 of 8 from 3-point range the rest of the Warriors 1 for 11. ... Draymond Green’s streak of double-doubles ended at a career-best six games after he had 17 points and seven rebounds. A 12th would match Denver’s Nikola Jokic for most in the 2019 playoffs. ... Tim Hardaway from the Warriors’ “Run TMC” era attended the game.

WARRIORS INJURIES
Durant went through extensive workouts both Tuesday and Wednesday at the practice facility with the hope he would do some scrimmaging Thursday. While the Warriors aren’t scheduled for a regular practice, Kerr said some of the coaches and younger players might be called upon to give Durant the full-speed court work he still needs before being medically cleared to return.
He missed his eighth straight game since the injury May 8 in Game 5 of the Western Conference semifinals against the Rockets.
Thompson was hurt in Game 2 and was to be evaluated by the training staff before tipoff. He didn’t end up warming up on the court.
DeMarcus Cousins went to the locker room late in the game to be checked but Kerr expects him to be fine.

ORACLE OVERDUE
The home fans waited 20 days between home playoff games after the Western Conference finals sweep of Portland before Golden State opened the finals in Toronto.
It had been since Game 2 against the Trail Blazers on May 16 that the Warriors hosted — the second-longest lapse between home games since the current 16-game, four-round format was established in 1983.
The Warriors hosted a Game 3 in the finals for the first time since winning the 1975 title, having begun at home in each of the previous four.


Round-arm bowling challenges cricket’s norm

Updated 9 sec ago
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Round-arm bowling challenges cricket’s norm

  • The action is defined as the hand being between shoulder and waist height and is different to the delivery mode adopted by most bowlers

Following last week’s consideration of the most significant of the 73 recently announced changes to the Laws of Cricket, a new challenge to an old law has surfaced.

This focuses on what constitutes a fair delivery and the spotlight has fallen on Pakistan’s spinner, Usman Tariq. At first sight, one might assume Tariq’s 1.93-meter height would make it likely he would be a fast bowler. He used to be, but an injury restricted his movement and he turned to spin. After some success he decided to stick with it, although now aged 28, it has taken him at least six years to hit the heights.

There is little doubt Tariq has a distinctive action. He starts with a shuffle, takes a skip, then three short steps to arrive alongside the crease. He enters with a sideways step on one foot, pausing in his delivery stride, knee raised, looking at the batter, before delivering the ball in a slinging, round-arm action. This is defined as the hand being between shoulder and waist height and is different to the delivery mode long adopted by most bowlers, who have a high arm action.

Attempts to introduce round-arm bowling in the first quarter of the 19th century met with fierce resistance to the point where the Marylebone Cricket Club introduced a law in 1816 to prohibit its practice. Gradually, however, attitudes changed and by 1835 its use was legitimized. It was not long before bowlers raised their hands above the shoulder during delivery. This led to years of confrontation between bowlers, umpires and law makers, which ended when the MCC changed Law 10 in 1864. Bowlers were allowed to bring their arm through at any height providing it was straight and the ball was not thrown.

Under the current code, Law 21, No Ball, defines a fair delivery. It states that “a ball is fairly delivered in respect of the arm if, once the bowler’s arm has reached the level of the shoulder in the delivery swing, the elbow joint is not straightened partially or completely from that instant until the ball has left the hand.”

The International Cricket Council has underpinned this definition by stating: “An illegal bowling action is a bowling action where the player's elbow extension exceeds 15 degrees between their arm reaching the horizontal and the ball being released.” The precision of this specification cannot be measured accurately by the human eye. If an umpire has a suspicion that the action is illegal, the bowler can be reported and sent for testing at an ICC bowling action testing center.

In March 2024, Tariq was reported by the umpires when bowling for Quetta Gladiators in the Pakistan Super League. Five days later, his action was cleared by the ICC-accredited biomechanics laboratory at the National Cricket Academy in Lahore.

In April 2025, he was reported again when playing in the PSL and was cleared for a second time. Most observers support this judgement, agreeing that Tariq’s arm does not straighten anywhere near the 15-degree threshold required for an action to be ruled illegal.

Buoyed by this second clearance, Tariq played with distinction in the Caribbean Premier League in September 2025, claiming 20 wickets, forming close bonds with senior West Indian players. A month later, Tariq made his T20 debut for Pakistan against South Africa in Lahore.

My first sighting of Tariq was during the latter stages of the DP World ILT20 in December 2025/January 2026, when he played a key role in the Desert Vipers’ success. In the first qualifier against the MI Emirates, one batter, Tom Banton of England, made a throwing motion when Tariq dismissed him. This served to further raise Tariq’s profile and gain the attention of a wider cricket world.

In franchise leagues, he has claimed 37 wickets in 22 matches, conceding around seven runs per over. When Pakistan hosted Australia in January prior to the T20 World Cup, more controversy erupted. In the second of three T20Is, Tariq dismissed Cameron Green, who made a throwing gesture as he walked off the field. Green later apologized, but his action fueled social media hysteria in the build up to the World Cup and Pakistan’s match against India, with exaggerated imitations appearing on-line.

Several ex-players have been outspoken in condemning Tariq’s action. One suggested that his act of stopping in his delivery swing was in breach of the laws, claiming it is not allowed to stop and look at the position of the batter before delivering the ball. In practice, it is not unusual for finger spinners to pause slightly at the crease, as their braced front leg is important in the act of imparting spin to the ball. There appears to be nothing in the laws which prohibits this pause.

The fallback position for those who do not approve of it is Law 41, Unfair Play, and clause 41.5, which covers the “deliberate distraction or deception of the batter.” It states: “It is unfair for any fielder willfully to attempt, by word or action, to distract, deceive or obstruct either batter after the striker has received the ball.” Clearly, this discounts before the striker receives the ball, although this should be considered equally important.

There is another part of Law 41 that gives umpires power. In 41.2.1, the umpires “shall be the sole judges of fair and unfair play. If an umpire considers that any action by a player, not covered in the Laws, is unfair, he/she shall call and signal Dead ball.”

In this T20 World Cup, another bowler has adopted a round-arm action. Gerhard Erasmus, the captain of Namibia, fell foul of umpire Rod Tucker in a match against India. As part of his bowling repertoire, Erasmus has developed a delivery from behind the crease. Tucker objected to this, calling “dead ball,” presumably invoking Law 41.2.1. An altercation ensued, after which Erasmus was allowed to continue bowling in the same way. He claimed four key wickets, conceding only 20 runs. It may be assumed that the Indian batters were not best pleased.

In an era of T20 cricket where everyone agrees that the balance of power lies with batters, it is understandable that bowlers will try and introduce ways to alter the balance. Tariq and Erasmus are attempting to do this with actions out of the norm.

Batters and their supporters are seeking to negate their impact by questioning their legitimacy. Reasoned voices within the game point out that Tariq’s pause is a part of his regular action, delivered consistently. He does not throw the ball, and his action should be considered legal.

In a fascinating interview with Brain Murgatroyd for the Desert Vipers, Tariq revealed that he has “two corners” in his elbow, whilst the pause came about because one coach told him his run up was too fast.

Batters may feel that the pause is off-putting, but they cannot say they do not have an opportunity to prepare, since Tariq is now a known quantity. On Wednesday, Pakistan played Namibia in Colombo, where both Erasmus and Tariq were on show. I watched Tariq’s bowling very closely in the warm-ups and the match, in which he claimed four wickets. His action never varied, but his speed and type of delivery did in a guileful manner. This is where his real deception exists. It is up to batters to deal with it rather than question the legalities.