
Golden State Warriors Parade 2015: TV Schedule, Live Stream, Start Time and More
Following a 40-year wait, the Golden State Warriors are once again NBA champions.
With a 105-97 Game 6 closeout win over the Cleveland Cavaliers in the bag, the Larry O'Brien Trophy recipients are set to continue their celebration Friday with Warriors faithful throughout the streets of Oakland.
Here's everything you need to know about the festivities.
The Details
Date: Friday, June 19
Time: 10 a.m. PT
TV Info: KPIX 5 (CBS Local)
Live Stream: CBSSF.com/live
According to the Warriors' official website, "the parade will begin on Broadway at 11th Street, turning right on Grand Avenue, and right on Harrison to Lakeside Drive, ending on Oak and proceeding to the Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center for the Rally."
The team adds that fans will be able to start lining the streets as early as 5 a.m. at the intersection of Lakeshore and 12th Street.
CBS Sports' John Breech provided an overview of the parade route:
After basking in the glow of their momentous achievement Tuesday night, the Warriors will get a chance to share the experience with the diehards who packed Oracle Arena all season long.
"The party churned past 5 a.m.," Sports Illustrated's Lee Jenkins wrote of Golden State's celebration in Cleveland. "[Stephen] Curry was among the last to leave."
If that night was any indication, the boisterous Bay Area natives clad in blue and gold should be prepping for an epic ceremony.
According to Warriors World's Alex Torres, the league MVP is prepping for some serious revelry:
Led by Stephen Curry and NBA Finals MVP Andre Iguodala, the Warriors proved to be too deep and too versatile for the shorthanded Cavaliers. While LeBron James was simply sensational—averaging 35.8 points, 13.3 rebounds and 8.8 assists over the course of the championship showdown—Golden State squashed his hero-ball efforts.
"It takes more than one person," Warriors general manager Bob Myers said, per Bleacher Report's Howard Beck. "And they had the best one person in the world. We needed a group of people to win this championship."
Iguodala should earn his fair share of cheers throughout the day after limiting James to 39.8 percent shooting from the field throughout the series, but Curry, who tallied 26.0 points and 6.3 assists a night while drilling 38.5 percent of his threes in the Finals, remains the toast of the town.
According to Bleacher Report, Curry became the first player in league history to defeat the other four members of the All-NBA First Team—New Orleans' Anthony Davis, Memphis' Marc Gasol, Houston's James Harden and LeBron—over the course of a single postseason.
With a historic year in the books, it's time for the Warriors to celebrate in style before shifting their focus to an offseason loaded with question marks.
From rumblings of a potential David Lee trade, according to ESPN.com's Marc Stein, to combo-forward Draymond Green's status as a restricted free agent, Golden State's front office should be kept busy throughout the summer.
But with one title under their belts, the Warriors may just be getting started as they seek to maintain elite status atop the NBA power structure.





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