West Finals Schedule

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WESTERN CONFERENCE FINALS

1. San Antonio Spurs vs. 2. Oklahoma City Thunder

Series tied 0-0

Game 1: Oklahoma City at San Antonio, Monday, May 19, 9 p.m., TNT

Game 2: Oklahoma City at San Antonio, Wednesday, May 21, 9 p.m., TNT

Game 3: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, Sunday, May 25, 8:30 p.m., TNT

Game 4: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, Tuesday, May 27, 9 p.m., TNT

Game 5*: Oklahoma City at San Antonio, Thursday, May 29, 9 p.m., TNT

Game 6*: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, Satufday, May 31, 8:30 p.m., TNT

Game 7*: Oklahoma City at San Antonio, Monday, June 2, 9 p.m., TNT

 

East Finals Schedule

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EASTERN CONFERENCE FINALS

1. Indiana Pacers vs. 2. Miami Heat

Series tied 0-0

Game 1: Miami at Indiana, Sunday, May 18, 3:30 p.m., ABC

Game 2: Miami at Indiana, Tuesday, May 20, 8:30 p.m., ESPN

Game 3: Indiana at Miami, Saturday, May 24, 8:30 p.m., ESPN

Game 4: Indiana at Miami, Monday, May 26, 8:30 p.m., ESPN

Game 5*: Miami at Indiana, Wednesday, May 28, 8:30 p.m., ESPN

Game 6*: Indiana at Miami, Friday, May 30, 8:30 p.m., ESPN

Game 7*: Miami at Indiana, Sunday, June 1, 8:30 p.m., ESPN

Thunder Advance

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Kevin Durant had 39 points and 16 rebounds, and the Oklahoma City Thunder advanced to the Western Conference finals with a 104-98 victory over the Los Angeles Clippers in Game 6 on Thursday night.

Russell Westbrook overcame a slow start to finish with 19 points and 12 assists as the Thunder reached the conference finals for the third time in four years, closing out Los Angeles with two straight wins.

Two days after the Thunder erased a late 13-point deficit to win Game 5, the Thunder rallied from an early 16-point deficit and maintained their lead throughout the fourth quarter, shaking off any memories of their Game 4 collapse.

Chris Paul had 25 points and 11 assists, and Blake Griffin scored 22 points as the Clippers’ exhausting postseason ended in disappointment.

Durant hit five 3-pointers and Reggie Jackson added 14 points for Oklahoma City, which will face the Spurs in a rematch of the West’s last two champions. The series begins Monday night in San Antonio.

J.J. Redick scored 16 points for the Clippers, who followed their epic collapse in Game 5 with a disappointing second half at home. Despite a raucous home crowd, Los Angeles won’t play for its first trip to a conference finals.

Perhaps the cumulative pressure of two playoff series amid the distractions of owner Donald Sterling’s lifetime ban finally cost the Clippers, who couldn’t keep up late.

Or perhaps Durant is just that good.

Pacers Advance

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For all their mysterious slumps and chemistry curiosities, the Indiana Pacers are back where they were last season – in the Eastern Conference finals.

David West scored 29 points Thursday night, and the Pacers blew a 16-point second-half lead before pulling away late in a 93-80 win that ousted the Washington Wizards in six games.

Next up, a rematch with the Miami Heat.

Lance Stephenson added 17 points and eight assists for the Pacers, who earned a Game 1 at home against the two-time defending NBA champions on Sunday. Indiana took Miami to seven games in the conference finals a year ago.

“We’ve been through it all this season,” Stephenson said. “And I feel like everything that we went through made us stronger.”

Marcin Gortat scored 19 points, and John Wall had 12 points and nine assists for the Wizards, who ended their best playoff run in decades. Washington won a playoff series for the first time since 2005 and a second-round game for the first time since 1982. But the team was ultimately undone by an inability to win at home, going just 1-4 at the Verizon Center and 5-1 on the road in the playoffs.

“I think we all felt we had an opportunity here to do more than we did, and that’s a good feeling for those guys,” Washington coach Randy Wittman said. “They’re hurting in there, and when you hurt, that means you care.”

The Wizards appeared to have a fix on the home-court demons when Bradley Beal stole a rebound from Roy Hibbert, then hit a 3-pointer at the other end to put the Wizards up 74-73 with 8 1/2 minutes to play.

But that was Washington’s only lead of the second half. West answered with a pair of jumpers, including a tough fade-away, and Stephenson added a layup to start a decisive 20-6 run that included three Wizards turnovers in four possessions. Washington went five minutes without a point and scored only two field goals after Beal’s go-ahead 3.