Golden State Warriors
Series Flow
4
Wins
2
Losses
Regular Season
67–15
Win–Loss
Playoff Record
16–5
Win–Loss
Finals
4–2
vs Cleveland Cavaliers
Finals MVP
Iguodala
Andre
Golden State Warriors
67–15Cleveland Cavaliers
53–29The Cavaliers entered the Finals missing Kevin Love (shoulder) and with a diminished Kyrie Irving dealing with a knee injury — a circumstance that made LeBron James's individual statistics across the series even more remarkable. Despite LeBron's superhuman effort — 35.8 PPG, 13.3 RPG, 8.8 APG — Cleveland lacked the supporting cast needed to overcome Golden State's depth and defensive sophistication.

Finals MVP
Andre Iguodala
#9 · Small Forward
25.4
PPG
4.8
RPG
3.6
APG
2.3
SPG
52.0
FG%
Andre Iguodala became the first player in NBA Finals history to win Finals MVP without starting a single game during the regular season — a decision validated completely by his extraordinary performance. Used as a tactical response to LeBron James's dominance, Iguodala's insertion into the starting lineup for Games 4-6 transformed the Warriors' defensive approach. He held LeBron — who averaged 35.8 PPG in the series — to substantially lower efficiency in the crunch moments, scored a decisive 25 points in Game 6, and gave Golden State the defensive piece needed to close out a championship against one of the greatest players in history.
First Finals MVP in NBA history who did not start during the regular season
Held LeBron James — who averaged 35.8 PPG in the series — to reduced efficiency in crunch-time situations
Scored 25 points in the championship-clinching Game 6 while also directing the Warriors' LeBron containment scheme
His tactical insertion into the starting lineup for Games 4-6 is one of the great mid-series coaching adjustments in Finals history
108
GSW
100
CLE
The Warriors opened the Finals at Oracle with a dominant first half that established Golden State's tempo — fast, precise, and unrelenting. Stephen Curry attacked Cleveland's defense from the opening tip, Klay Thompson moved off the ball to create open looks, and Draymond Green's defensive positioning took away the Cavaliers' easiest scoring opportunities. LeBron James was magnificent but received limited support from a short-handed Cleveland roster missing Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love.
Golden State Warriors
Stephen Curry
26 pts · 8 ast · 6 rebControlled the pace throughout, attacking in transition and distributing expertly when the Cavaliers doubled him in the half-court.
Klay Thompson
21 pts · 4 rebMoved without the ball beautifully, creating open three-pointers and finishing off drives that Cleveland's defense could not prevent.
CLE
LeBron James
44 pts · 8 reb · 6 astA superhuman effort from the Cavaliers' leader — 44 points in a road loss against the league's best team was a statement that this series would be no coronation.
93
GSW
95
CLE
The Cavaliers stunned Oracle Arena in overtime, with Kyrie Irving returning from an injury concern to score 39 points in one of the great individual Finals performances of the decade. The Warriors had led in regulation but Irving's clutch shooting — including critical three-pointers over tight Curry defense — gave Cleveland life and proved that the series would require more than the Warriors' regular-season dominance to close out.
Golden State Warriors
Stephen Curry
19 pts · 7 astGuarded Irving for much of the overtime period but could not match Cleveland's collective offensive brilliance on this night.
CLE
Kyrie Irving
39 pts · 6 astDelivered a virtuoso overtime performance — his pull-up jumpers over Curry in the final minutes of regulation and overtime silenced Oracle Arena.
LeBron James
39 pts · 16 reb · 11 astProduced a triple-double that defied comprehension — the greatest individual game in a losing effort by any Finals player in modern memory.
96
GSW
91
CLE
The Warriors silenced the Cleveland crowd with a disciplined road victory that restored Golden State's series lead. Curry was the offensive conductor, Iguodala began showing the two-way impact that would win him the Finals MVP, and the Warriors' defense held a Cleveland offense that lacked Irving and Love to below 100 points for the second time in three games. The 2-1 series lead gave the Warriors the structural advantage that their depth had always suggested would come.
Golden State Warriors
Stephen Curry
27 pts · 6 ast · 4 rebCarried the offensive load in a tight road game, making critical three-pointers when Cleveland threatened to take control of the game's momentum.
Andre Iguodala
11 pts · 6 reb · 4 ast · 2 stlShowed the defensive and offensive versatility that would make him the Finals MVP — his coverage of LeBron in the second half limited Cleveland's most dangerous weapon.
CLE
LeBron James
40 pts · 12 reb · 8 astAnother extraordinary performance from the Cavaliers' franchise player — forcing his team to the edge of every quarter through sheer individual brilliance.
103
GSW
82
CLE
The Warriors produced their most dominant game of the series — a 21-point road blowout that gave Golden State a commanding 3-1 lead and brought them within one game of the championship. Steve Kerr inserted Iguodala into the starting lineup for the first time in the Finals, and the tactical adjustment was immediate and transformative: LeBron's scoring efficiency dropped and Cleveland's offensive scheme was disrupted. The Golden State defense held the Cavaliers to their lowest point total of the series.
Golden State Warriors
Andre Iguodala
22 pts · 7 reb · 5 ast · 3 stlThe starting lineup adjustment paid immediate dividends — Iguodala's defense on LeBron and offensive contribution gave the Warriors a complete two-way performance that Cleveland had no blueprint to counter.
Draymond Green
17 pts · 9 reb · 8 astNear triple-double that orchestrated the Warriors' offensive rhythm — his passing from the elbow and short roll found open shooters all game.
CLE
LeBron James
20 pts · 9 reb · 8 astThe star's least efficient game of the series — a testament to Iguodala's defensive adjustment and the Warriors' collective scheme to limit his impact.
97
GSW
112
CLE
Cleveland refused to end the series at home, delivering a statement performance at Oracle Arena that forced the Finals back to Cleveland. LeBron James and Kyrie Irving combined for 71 points in what would be their final game together as an effective Finals partnership in this series — a performance that required the Warriors to travel back to Cleveland knowing they would need to close things out on the road.
Golden State Warriors
Klay Thompson
27 pts · 4 rebFought hard on the offensive end but could not overcome the combined LeBron-Kyrie onslaught on a night when Cleveland's stars were supernatural.
CLE
LeBron James
40 pts · 14 reb · 11 astA championship-level triple-double in a must-win game — the greatest player of his generation refusing to let his team's season end.
Kyrie Irving
31 pts · 3 astPaired with LeBron's historic effort to deliver the offensive fireworks needed to survive in Oakland and force a Game 6.
105
GSW
97
CLE
The Golden State Warriors were crowned NBA champions on the road in Cleveland, with Andre Iguodala delivering his most complete performance of the series to seal the title. Iguodala's 25 points led all scorers, his defensive assignment on LeBron was executed at the highest level, and when the final buzzer sounded — Warriors 105, Cavaliers 97 — a new dynasty had been formally announced. Stephen Curry wept on the court. Draymond Green was everywhere. And Steve Kerr, coaching his first Finals in his first year, held the Larry O'Brien Trophy that 40 years of Warriors basketball had been building toward.
Golden State Warriors
Andre Iguodala
25 pts · 5 reb · 4 ast · 2 stlFinals MVP performance in the most important game — his offensive explosion and LeBron containment gave the Warriors the perfect championship-clinching effort.
Stephen Curry
25 pts · 8 ast · 6 rebThe MVP played his finest Finals game in the title-clincher, directing the offense with precision and providing the gravitational force that freed Iguodala and Thompson all night.
CLE
LeBron James
32 pts · 18 reb · 9 astA magnificent effort in defeat from the game's best player — his triple-double-adjacent performance was not enough against a Warriors team that matched his brilliance with depth.

26.0
PPG
6.3
APG
4.7
RPG
3.5
3PM
44.3
FG%
The MVP's Finals performance was brilliant against a defense that was often double-teaming him — 26 points per game with exceptional playmaking. His three-point shooting kept Cleveland's defense scrambling throughout, and his leadership as a first-time champion defined a new era in Warriors basketball.
Won his first NBA Championship as the team's primary star
Set the tone for the Warriors' championship era with 26 PPG and 6.3 APG in the Finals
His three-point shooting — 3.5 made per game — established the range that Cleveland's defense had to respect throughout

22.3
PPG
3.5
RPG
3.2
3PM
45.0
FG%
Thompson's off-ball movement and three-point shooting created the second option that Cleveland's defense could not ignore. His defensive assignment on Kyrie Irving in the final games of the series was as important as his scoring.
Averaged 22.3 PPG in his first championship Finals
His defensive assignment against Kyrie Irving contributed directly to limiting Cleveland's offensive output in Games 5 and 6

11.0
PPG
9.2
RPG
7.8
APG
2.5
SPG
1.3
BPG
Green's near-triple-double average across the series captured his complete impact: he was the defensive backbone, offensive quarterback, and emotional engine of a Warriors team that imposed its pace and scheme on Cleveland at every turn.
Averaged 11-9-8 across the Finals — one of the most complete support performances in championship history
His defensive switching on Cleveland's pick-and-roll actions neutralized a primary offensive weapon
The Cavaliers entered the Finals missing Kevin Love (shoulder) and with a diminished Kyrie Irving dealing with a knee injury — a circumstance that made LeBron James's individual statistics across the series even more remarkable. Despite LeBron's superhuman effort — 35.8 PPG, 13.3 RPG, 8.8 APG — Cleveland lacked the supporting cast needed to overcome Golden State's depth and defensive sophistication.

LeBron James
#23 · Small Forward
35.8
PPG
13.3
RPG
8.8
APG
Averaged 35.8 points, 13.3 rebounds, and 8.8 assists in the series — the greatest individual Finals performance in a losing effort in the modern era. No Finals loser has ever contributed this much.

Kyrie Irving
#2 · Point Guard
20.8
PPG
3.5
APG
Brilliant in Games 2 and 5 but limited by injury. His partnership with LeBron showed what Cleveland could be when both were healthy — a preview of 2016.
Andre Iguodala
First player in NBA history to win Finals MVP without starting a game during the regular season.
Golden State Warriors
First Warriors championship in 40 years — ending a drought that had lasted since the 1975 sweep of Washington.
Steve Kerr
Won an NBA championship in his first season as an NBA head coach — the first rookie coach to win a title since Pat Riley in 1982.
LeBron James
His 35.8 PPG, 13.3 RPG, 8.8 APG series average represents the greatest individual Finals performance in a losing effort in NBA history.
Stephen Curry
Became an NBA champion in the same season he was named league MVP — only the 14th player in NBA history to achieve both in the same year.
Steve Kerr's first season as a head coach produced one of the most celebrated championship runs in recent NBA history — a 67-win regular season followed by a 16-5 playoff run that felt inevitable in retrospect but was anything but in execution. Kerr's decision to start Iguodala over Andrew Bogut for Games 4-6 was a tactical masterstroke that defined the series.
LeBron James's individual performance across the six-game series is one of the most remarkable in Finals history — carrying a short-handed team without Kyrie Irving (limited) and Kevin Love (shoulder injury) to within one game of defeating the best team of the regular season. His 35.8 PPG remains the highest average by a player on the losing team in Finals history.
The 2015 championship marked the beginning of a dynasty — but it also established the rivalry with LeBron James's Cavaliers that would define the next three Finals. Cleveland would win in 2016 before the Warriors dominated in 2017 and 2018. The 2015 championship is chapter one of a four-year basketball story that basketball fans will study for generations.
The 2015 Golden State Warriors were the most celebrated regular-season team since the 2007-08 Boston Celtics — 67 wins, the MVP in Stephen Curry, the league's best defense, and the Splash Brothers shooting the sport into territory it had never seen. But regular seasons do not make dynasties. Finals do.
Cleveland presented the ultimate test: LeBron James at the peak of his powers, playing without his two best supporting players, willing his team through sheer individual brilliance. His 35.8-point, 13.3-rebound, 8.8-assist series average is one of the most extraordinary performance lines in Finals history — on the losing side.
Steve Kerr's tactical genius shaped the series. His decision to start Andre Iguodala over Andrew Bogut for Games 4-6 — the first time Iguodala had started a game in the entire season — was one of the great mid-series adjustments in championship history. With Iguodala's athleticism deployed as a primary defensive matchup for James, the Warriors' scheme suddenly had an answer for the Cavaliers' most dangerous weapon.
Game 6 in Cleveland was the coronation. Iguodala's 25 points. Curry's final-quarter excellence. Draymond Green's orchestration. When the final buzzer sounded, Golden State had its first championship in 40 years, and Steve Kerr — the first-year coach, the former Curry franchise counterpart — raised the Larry O'Brien Trophy with tears in his eyes. A dynasty had formally begun.
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