Warriors' Klay Thompson scores 60 points as Pacers fall 142-106
OAKLAND, Calif. -- Klay Thompson wanted one more quarter. He wanted to score 80, and thinks he absolutely could have.
Hard to argue that one: He went off for 60 points in 29 head-shaking, jaw-dropping, defense-breaking minutes.
"Who knows? I know he would have kept shooting," coach Steve Kerr said. "Klay's never going to stop shooting."
Thompson had an NBA season-high and career-best performance for the highest-scoring output by a Golden State player in more than 42 years, and the Warriors whipped the Indiana Pacers 142-106 on Monday night. At one point, Pacers coach Nate McMillan looked downright speechless during a quiet timeout on his bench.
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Thompson raised his arms to encourage more of those steady "KLAY! KLAY! KLAY!" chants then let it fly again and again. He had 60 through three and called it a night, sitting down with 1:22 left in the period as fans jumped to their feet for an extended standing ovation.
"It's just unfortunate two times I got my career high I didn't get to play the fourth quarter," Thompson said.
He scored 40 by halftime in just 18-plus minutes. Nearly two years ago, Thompson had a 37-point quarter on the way to 52 points against Sacramento.
Thompson joined Hall of Famers Wilt Chamberlain, Rick Barry and Joe Fulks as the only Warriors to score 60 points. Barry was the last to do so, going off for 64 on March 26, 1974, against Portland.
.@Pacers' Nate McMillan on loss to @Warriors: "They hurt us in every way you could during this game. We move on." #GoPacers pic.twitter.com/scP64TZl4H
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Now, Thompson hopes he gets a chance to go for more.
"Maybe. I think I could have, maybe one day I'll have the opportunity," he said, "But 60 in 29 minutes is not too bad."
Thompson shot 21 for 33 and 8 of 14 on 3-pointers -- 15 of 22 with five 3s in the first two quarters -- and converted 10 of 11 free throws in 29 minutes. When he knocked down a turnaround baseline 3 under pressure midway through the second quarter right in front of a resting Curry on the bench, the shot sent the MVP into a tunnel-dashing frenzy of delight.
"That's a feat that I put money on will probably never be touched ever again in the history of basketball," Curry said.
Previously this season the highest scorers were Oklahoma City's Russell Westbrook with 51 in an overtime game and Anthony Davis with 50 in regulation for the Pelicans.
"I felt every shot I took was a good shot," Thompson said.
Kevin Durant added 20 points, eight rebounds, four assists and two blocks for Golden State in another display of impressive passing. The Warriors' 15 first-quarter assists matched a franchise record done twice previously and they wound up with 45 total -- two off the franchise record they set Nov. 24 against the Lakers.
In one sensational third-quarter play worthy of the highlight reel, Thompson had no part: Off a jump ball, Draymond Green hit Curry with a long heave and Curry made a leaping, one-touch pass to Durant for the dazzling alley-oop. Curry had 13 points and 11 assists.
Thompson scored 17 points in just under 9 minutes to begin the game and Golden State had 15 assists on its initial 17 baskets and led 38-27 after the first.
"A guy like that, the best defense is not to allow him to catch," McMillan said.
Paul George had 21 points and 10 rebounds a night after playing nearly 34 minutes and much of that with tissue in his bloody nose.
TIP-INS
Pacers: The Pacers own a 2-7 road record. They have lost eight of 10 on Golden State's home floor.
Warriors: The Warriors notched their second game with 40 or more assists, the first team since Cleveland in 1992-93 with more than one 40-assist game. ... They recognized the AFC-leading Oakland Raiders, with quarterback Derek Carr and others in attendance. ... Golden State is 6-0 against the Eastern Conference.
SELLOUT MILESTONE
The Warriors reached 200 straight sellouts over the regular season and playoffs, to which Warriors coach Steve Kerr joked, "If I had to do the math, I haven't even been here for half of those."
It's long been a daunting road venue for opponents.
"You've got to bring your best to play here," Pacers coach Nate McMillan said. "You've got to come here and you've got to hoop. Certainly if you don't, you don't come out of here with a win. Great atmosphere."
UP NEXT
Pacers: Continue their five-game road trip with the second-to-last game Wednesday at Phoenix, where the Pacers have lost eight of the last 11 meetings.
Warriors: Begin a five-game road trip over seven days at the Clippers on Wednesday night. "Five in seven, that's rough, that's tough," Kerr said.