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NBA closes with a bang

Los Angeles Lakers forward Kobe Bryant waves to fans as he is taken out of the NBA basketball game in the closing seconds, against the Utah Jazz Wednesday night. Bryant scored 60 points in his final NBA game as the Lakers won 101-96.
Warriors win record No. 73, Bryant hits for 60 in finale

The stars did not disappoint.

And the most-celebrated closing night in NBA regular-season history not only lived up to expectations, it might have exceeded them with a pair of performances that will be talked about for years to come.

Golden State became the first team to win 73 games in a season, Warriors guard Stephen Curry scored 46 points and topped the 400 3-pointer mark to cap what will almost certainly be his second straight MVP campaign. Kobe Bryant’s career with the Los Angeles Lakers ended in most surprising fashion — a 60-point game, the first time he’s gotten to that plateau since 2009.

“I think this has been an amazing day for sports fans, basketball fans in particular,” Bryant said as he wore his Lakers’ uniform about an hour after the game, not quite willing to take it off for the final time. “It’s been a great day with them setting such an unbelievable record — you think about that, 73 wins, that’s ridiculous. And then obviously what happened here tonight, it’s been a great night in basketball history.”

That most everyone can agree on, including President Barack Obama, Michael Jordan and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver.

The Warriors beat the Memphis Grizzlies 125-104, finishing the season 73-9 and breaking the 72-10 mark that was put together by Jordan and the Chicago Bulls and lasted 20 years as the NBA’s all-time single-season standard. Steve Kerr played for that Bulls team, and was the one who went on to coach these Warriors to a level not even that club could reach.

Jordan congratulated the Warriors in a statement released after the game. He also said, “The Warriors have been a lot of fun to watch and I look forward to seeing what they do in the playoffs.”

In other words, Jordan was saying `now go win the title.’ When the Bulls won 72 games, they capped that season with a championship.

Curry made 10 3’s to get to 402 for the season, officially wrapped up the NBA scoring title, and sent a message to the rest of the league going into the postseason — that the Warriors are far from satisfied, with Curry saying he was happy that all the team needs to worry about now is getting 16 postseason wins.

“I just try to keep getting better,” said Curry, who was the MVP last year at 23.8 points per game — and went to 30.1 points per game this season. “I just want to keep pushing myself.”

Somehow, the Warriors’ 73-win record — “the new Golden Standard,” the team called it — almost seemed overshadowed.

“Nobody really cares about the 73 wins it was all about Kobe today,” Indiana guard C.J. Watson wrote on Twitter.

That’s how impressive Bryant’s last game was.

“There’s no way I could possibly imagine this happening,” Bryant said.

Who could?

Bryant scored 60 points and took 50 shots, the most of any game in his career — a total that came with the blessing of teammates who just wanted him to score as much as possible one final time.

“Felt good to be able to do that,” Bryant said, “one last time.”

Fans who had to resort to the secondary resale markets paid more than $1,000 for tickets — or much more in some cases — just to get a seat to see the Warriors chase history or Bryant play one final time.

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