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LeBron James summarized the Warriors' devastating offense as simply as possible after a Game 1 rout

The biggest difference between these Warriors and last year's Warriors is Kevin Durant, and it showed in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Thursday night.

1st half total under 116 points (-105)

The Golden State Warriors routed the Cleveland Cavaliers 113-91 in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Thursday.

In the process, the Warriors took a step closer to confirming what many people feared going into these Finals: They simply have too much firepower for any team to contain, even a team sporting LeBron James.

After the game, James was asked about the biggest difference between these Warriors and the 73-win team he overcame in last year's Finals. His answer was simple: "KD."

Kevin Durant was the star of the show in Game 1, scoring 38 points on 14-of-26 shooting and adding eight rebounds and eight assists.

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What makes Durant's addition even more devastating is the "gravity" he shares with Golden State's other stars: Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson, and Draymond Green. Previously, the league's teams, including the Cavs, would pick their poison against the Warriors, opting to leave Green or players like Harrison Barnes or Andre Iguodala slightly more open to contain Curry and Thompson.

Now the Cavs don't have that luxury, with Durant taking Barnes' place. Durant and Curry command so much attention on offense that the Warriors can poke holes in an overreacting defense.

Throughout the night, the Cavs were spooked by the Warriors shooters, sticking closely to Curry and others to prevent open threes. Cavs coach Tyronn Lue said after the game that the Cavs got their coverage wrong, as it often led to a wide-open Durant streaking down the lane.

The Cavs' transition defense was poor all night, as evidenced by Kyrie Irving sliding out of Durant's way near half-court. But what's also notable is James staying attached to Curry then committing a half-hearted help effort on Durant while the Cavs' Kyle Korver stayed attached to Ian Clark.

One of the more egregious examples was when JR Smith, forced to choose between stopping Durant or covering Curry, ducked out of Durant's way to cover Curry, leaving Durant with an open path to the basket.

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Stopping the ball is the No. 1 priority, but Smith's decision-making isn't completely illogical either. The Warriors thrive on big threes. If Smith had thought someone else was there to deter Durant, it would make sense to run out to Curry. Still, it was the wrong decision.

The Warriors offense simply spooked the Cavs all night. In the play below, Curry went to set a pin-down screen for Durant. James and Irving anticipated it so intensely that Durant just slipped backdoor for a wide-open alley-oop.

After the game, James stated the obvious of how much harder the Warriors now are to guard:

"I mean, you take one of the best teams that we had ever assembled last year, that we saw in the regular season and the postseason, and then in the offseason you add a high-powered offensive talent like that and a great basketball IQ like that, that's what stands out."

There are a few things the Cavs can't do if they hope to beat the Warriors: turn the ball over more, give up fast-break points, and allow second-chance opportunities, all of which they did in Game 1. Add some poor defensive execution and poor effort, and they'd have no chance.

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Lue is correct in saying the Cavs can play better in Game 2, on Sunday, and give themselves a better chance to hang with the Warriors. They'll adjust their schemes and game plan to try to at least get rid of some of the easy opportunities they gave the Warriors.

But even with better execution and effort, the Warriors may simply have too much for the Cavs to handle — and it starts with KD.

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