Marc Gasol had 34 points and 14 rebounds, and the Memphis Grizzlies built a 19-point third-quarter lead over Golden State before holding on to beat the defending champion Warriors 111-101 on Saturday night.

Stephen Curry led the Warriors with 37 points, and Kevin Durant added 29 and 13 rebounds. But both were ejected with 43.6 seconds left after arguing with officials Curry first after throwing his mouthpiece, and then Durant as he followed Curry’s argument.

Anthony Slater (@anthonyVslater) Here's video of the Steph Curry mouthguard throw via @World_Wide_Wob pic.twitter.com/fEvxRlqtHT

Curry later denied he had tried to hit any officials with his mouthguard. “I didn’t throw my mouthpiece at the ref. I got better aim than that. I threw it out of frustration,” he told ESPN.

The two-time league MVP did, however, admit he was in the wrong. “That last play, I thought I got fouled, and my frustration boiled over,” he said. “I did something stupid. I deserved to get kicked out, and that’s what happened. Obviously, I’ll learn from it and try not to do it again.”

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Curry may find himself in further trouble: he was ejected after throwing his mouthguard in the 2016 NBA Finals. After the game his coach, Steve Kerr, joked Curry should be punished harshly. “I think he should be suspended eight, maybe 10 games for that,” Kerr joked. “It was egregious. It was awful. It endangered thousands of people in the stands.”

As Durant, left the court following his ejection he was seen talking to heckling Memphis fans. He also showed them his ring finger – a reference to the ring he won along with the NBA title last season. “I did the ring finger,” he said. “I’m sure everybody thinks I’m the angry black athlete, so I got to put my middle finger up. But nah, I put the ring finger up.”

On the court, Klay Thompson finished with 14 points on 5 of 16 shooting, including 2 of 8 from outside the arc. James Ennis III added 13 points, and Tyreke Evans scored 12 as Memphis shot 47% compared to 39% for Golden State. The Warriors shot 12 of 38 from three-point range.

The Warriors trailed by 19 late in the third quarter and Curry was saddled with five fouls. Consecutive three-pointers from Durant and an unintended tip-in by the Grizzlies, credited to David West, cut the deficit to single digits with just under nine minutes left. But Golden State never got close enough to catch the Grizzlies down the stretch.

The major burst for Memphis came early in the third quarter. The Grizzlies turned up their defense, forcing a trio of turnovers and scoring 15 straight points to stretch the lead to 18. The Warriors connected on only 6 of 22 shots in the third, while Memphis went 10 of 18.



