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Warriors’ rally forces Game 7
By Janie McCauley
Associated Press

OAKLAND, Calif. — Klay Thompson hit nine 3-pointers and scored 35 points, the Warriors held James Harden down in the second half, and Golden State rallied from an early 17-point deficit to stave off elimination with a 115-86 victory over the Houston Rockets on Saturday night to force a deciding Game 7 in the Western Conference finals.

Stephen Curry added 29 points and five 3-pointers on a night Harden dazzled for long stretches with 32 points, 9 assists, and 7 rebounds while backcourt mate Chris Paul sat out sidelined by a strained right hamstring.

Kevin Durant struggled with his stroke at 6 for 17 but still scored 23 points as the defending champions kept their repeat quest alive by thoroughly outplaying Houston in the second half.

The Warriors outscored the Rockets, 55-20, in the second half before both coaches subbed out their key players with 4:28 left.

A dynamic, star-studded series projected to be as captivating and compelling as the actual NBA Finals is going the distance. Game 7 is Monday night back in Houston.

Golden State stymied Harden on consecutive possessions early in the fourth with smothering defense led by Nick Young and several helpers, then Thompson hit a 3-pointer from the left wing at 9:40 for an 89-77 lead. And roaring Oracle Arena went crazy with hopes of even more home games to come if Golden State can get to a fourth straight Finals.

Thompson came through with his best performance of these playoffs with the season on the line, just as he did in a 2016 Game 6 of the Western Conference finals at Oklahoma City when he went off for 41 points against Durant and the Thunder to force Game 7.

‘‘I don’t want to go home,’’ Thompson said. ‘‘We worked too hard this season to go home. This is what we play for.’’

The Warriors used another of their signature third quarters to take an 84-77 advantage going into the final 12 minutes, then maintained that dominant level this time down the stretch, unlike their last home game at roaring Oracle Arena when they blew it in Game 4 on Tuesday.

Both teams let it fly from every corner of the court — Golden State hitting 16 3-pointers and Houston 15.

Paul is receiving treatment ‘‘around the clock’’ on his injured right hamstring and coach Mike D'Antoni hopes it will only be a matter of days before he is healthy enough to play again.

The timeline remained unclear whether Paul might be fine to play.

‘‘I think he'll play as soon as he can,’’ D'Antoni said before Saturday’s game. ‘‘It’s just not a question of trying to outsmart. He’s going to play. As soon as he’s able to walk and run, he'll do it. There was no shot at it today.’’

Golden State forward Andre Iguodala missed a third straight game this series after he sustained a bone bruise in his left knee during Game 3.

Coach Steve Kerr said Iguodala continues to have pain when running, so he’s still listed as day to day.

‘‘It’s a bone bruise, and those are hard to predict,’’ Kerr said. ‘‘Until he’s able to really run without pain, then he can’t play.’’