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National Basketball Association fines Steph Curry for throwing mouthguard, Steve Kerr for slamming refs

The wife of NBA MVP Stephen Curry has sensationally claimed the NBA Finals are rigged after the Warriors lost game six.

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The biggest challenge does, too. He led the team with 30 points, while fellow guard Klay Thompson added 25. “The playoffs haven’t been easy”.

The Warriors will return to Oakland with the series tied 3-3, but can find comfort in knowing they have home-court advantage at Oracle Arena, where they have only lost four times in the regular season and postseason.

A league official told ESPN’s The Undefeated that National Basketball Association security was on alert during Game 6 on Thursday night to find David Aminzadeh, who previously had sneaked in to many major sporting events.

Questions like those seem a bit more valid now. Game 5: Warriors 97 – Cavaliers 112 With Draymond Green suspended, LeBron James and Kyrie Irving each scored 41 points making NBA Finals history by becoming the first teammates to score over 40 points in the same game.

Curry was fined for throwing his mouthpiece into the crowd – for which he was automatically ejected – with 4:22 left in the fourth quarter Thursday night after being called for his disqualifying sixth foul. “Definitely didn’t mean to throw it at a fan”, Curry said after the game.

The grind of March and April has nothing to do with any of that.

Kerr said that while Cleveland deserved to win the game, the fouls should never have been called. “So I can’t wait for Sunday”. “But I want to give everything I’ve got and we’ll see what happens”. “We’ll get everybody ready for Game 7”. But I’m confident we will.

It was a rough Thursday night for Steph Curry and his Golden State Warriors in Game Six of the NBA Finals.

Ayesha tweeted the accusation after Steph fouled out during the fourth quarter of the Warriors game against the Cleveland Cavaliers, who eventually won 115-101.

“He’s doing things that are game-changing”, Curry said, per ESPN.com’s J.A. Adande.

Their problems go deeper than officiating issues, though.

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Cleveland saved its season for the second time in four days and will head back to Oakland’s Oracle Arena for Sunday’s climactic game with a chance to become the first team to overcome a 3-1 deficit in the NBA Finals, and give this title-starved city its first major sports championship since December 27, 1964.

Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry sits on the bench against the Cleveland Cavaliers during the second half of Game 6 of basketball's NBA Finals in Cleveland Thursday