OAKLAND — David Lee had 22 points and 11 rebounds, Andrew Bogut grabbed 17 boards and the Golden State Warriors whipped the Los Angeles Clippers, 111-92, on Thursday night.
Stephen Curry scored 22 points and handed out seven assists, and Bogut had 14 points and three blocked shots to highlight Golden State’s dominating performance down low.
The Warriors outrebounded the Clippers, 53-34, and outscored them in the paint, 66-22.
Blake Griffin finished with 27 points, Darren Collison added 22 and DeAndre Jordan grabbed 20 rebounds for Los Angeles, which had won four straight.
The Clippers looked worn out after beating Washington on Wednesday night in Los Angeles, dropping to 10-4 since All-Star point guard Chris Paul has been sidelined with a separated right shoulder.
The Warriors outscored the Clippers 26-11 in the third quarter to go ahead by 23 points. Los Angeles went just 1 for 15 from the floor in the period.
Golden State improved to 2-1 against the Clippers this season, with the home team winning each time. The Warriors (28-19) also moved to within four games of the Clippers (33-16) and percentage points of Phoenix (28-18) in the Pacific Division.
The Warriors had lost six of their last nine games entering play Thursday after previously winning 10 in a row. Warriors Coach Mark Jackson had called out his team for playing down to its competition too often after a lackluster loss to the Washington Wizards on Tuesday night.
Playing the Clippers was one matchup where Jackson didn’t have to worry about his team’s focus.
The series has grown increasingly testy the loast two seasons as both franchises have transformed from perennial losers into Western Conference contenders. That included Golden State’s win in Oakland on Christmas night, which featured two ejections, two flagrant fouls and three technical fouls.
Emotions never escalated in the rematch.
The Warriors took control before most of the announced sellout crowd 19,596 had even settled into their seats. Bogut beat Griffin for a baseline alley-oop in the opening minutes, and Harrison Barnes soared for two driving dunks during a run propelled by the second unit that put the Warriors ahead 48-29 with 8:25 remaining in the half.
Los Angeles answered behind defense and dunks — most by Griffin — in its lone run of the game. The Clippers cut Golden State’s lead to 64-56 at the half, leaving most fans stunned and silent, but only for a moment.
The Warriors showed incredible ball movement and rebounding prowess to begin the third quarter on a 16-2 run that had all kinds of highlights.
None of the big plays during the spurt received more roars than Bogut’s 20-foot jumper over Jordan with the shot clock about to expire. The Warriors’ big man shrugged and smiled at Jordan while backpedaling to the other end, part of a run that also turned the game into a laugher.
Golden State led 90-67 entering the fourth quarter and forced Clippers coach Doc Rivers to substitute his starters with 3:40 remaining and the game well out of reach.