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For LeBron and Steph, it will be ultimate Game 7

LeBron James, a two-time champion, and Steph Curry, the two-time reigning MVP with the defending championWarriors, will put it all on the line in Game 7 Sunday.

CLEVELAND — It's the two-time reigning MVP who is trying to finish off a record setting season with a second straight title, against a two-time champion who is tantalizingly close to finally ending Cleveland's 52-year title drought.

Steph vs. LeBron.

Warriors vs. Cavaliers.

Game 7 awaits on Sunday night to decide these NBA Finals, decide the legacy of the season that has been put together by Stephen Curry and Golden State, and maybe even decide a big chunk of LeBron James' legacy of his second time around in Cleveland as well.

“I'll take it,” James said.

“Forty-eight minutes left,” Curry said.

This series is still going because James had his second consecutive 41-point game in Cleveland's 115-101 victory Thursday night with the Cavaliers facing elimination again. He's the fifth player in NBA Finals history to post back-to-back games of 40 or more, a club whose only other members are Jerry West, Shaquille O'Neal, Rick Barry and Michael Jordan.

He has answered the call when his team has needed him most. He even let Curry know how he felt with a little trash-talking after blocking a layup late in Game 6.

“At the end of the day my whole mindset is how I can put myself in position to help these guys be successful and I could be successful as well,” James said. “I don't really get caught up in what everybody else talks about.”

And now it's on Curry to answer. He had 30 points in Game 6, but got into foul trouble again — the Warriors said some of the calls were flat wrong, and that will surely earn coach Steve Kerr a fine before Game 7 after he offered a very clear, impassioned plea that Curry wasn't getting the sort of whistle that an MVP merits.

Curry got ejected after fouling out, throwing his mouthpiece and hitting a fan. He was trying to throw it at the scorer's table and missed, which strangely fit a night where the Warriors shot only 40 percent.

It won't be 1-on-1 Sunday night. But if the former MVP — who still very well may be the best player in the world — outduels the current MVP, the Larry O'Brien Trophy may be taking up occupancy in Cleveland for the first time.

“He's had two great games to keep his team alive,” Curry said. “You know, that's what he's supposed to do. I'm out there trying to do the same for my team. We don't go 1-on-1 at each other a lot, but it's a pretty competitive feeling out there with the situation of playing in The Finals and playing for something special.”

It has been a series laden with epic swings in momentum, laden with blowouts and drama.

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