05/01/25 08:24:00
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05/01 08:22 CDT Warriors return home to Chase Center with another chance to
close out 1st-round series with Rockets
Warriors return home to Chase Center with another chance to close out 1st-round
series with Rockets
By JANIE McCAULEY
AP Sports Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --- With his team trailing by 27 points to the red-hot
Houston Rockets at halftime, coach Steve Kerr pulled Golden State emotional
leader Draymond Green aside for a quick chat and to ask his opinion.
Should the Warriors plan to save their starters for what looked like an
inevitable Game 6 in two days if things became any more out of hand after
intermission? Green suggested Kerr should give the group five more minutes to
see what could be done on the deficit.
It only got worse. And Kerr sent in the backups with 5:50 left in the third
quarter of an embarrassing 131-116 loss Wednesday night so his Warriors can
turn their attention at trying again to close out the first-round series back
home Friday night.
"I wasn't going to chase this game obviously with Game 6 coming up in 48
hours," Kerr said. "So I talked to Draymond. I said, ?What do you think?' He
said five minutes, so we gave the starting group the first five or six minutes
and unless we had made a huge run kind of had it in mind that we would pull the
plug."
The Warriors missed a chance to clinch the best-of-seven series on the road,
and they gave some momentum right back to the Rockets. Golden State leads 3-2.
Jimmy Butler, Stephen Curry and Green will need to forget their Game 5 blowout
fast and now count on their experience in big games as they return to Chase
Center to get past second-seeded Houston, which staved off elimination with a
dominant performance.
"We're fine. Our confidence isn't going to waiver," Butler said. "We're going
to start out better and play a better overall game."
The Minnesota Timberwolves are waiting for the winner to begin the Western
Conference semifinals. While the Warriors couldn't close their series on the
road with a 3-1 lead, Rudy Gobert led the way as Minneapolis ended the season
for LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers 103-96.
And given the blowout, the Golden State starters should be plenty fresh ---
Rockets coach Ime Udoka re-inserted his core group with the lead dwindling.
Curry played 23 minutes, Butler 25 and Green nearly 18. Fred VanVleet scored 26
points on 8-for-13 shooting with four 3-pointers playing 33 minutes to lead
Houston as all five starters reached double figures.
The Rockets jumped to a big lead from the opening tip for a runaway win. Their
131 points were their most ever in a playoff game against Golden State.
Houston had averaged 98 points per game through the first four of the series,
then went off in the win that included an early 18-0 run and a 31-point lead in
the second half before the Warriors' second unit chipped away.
"Loved our bench group, they came in and they forced Houston to bring their
starters back in. They set a tone that we're going to need for Game 6," Kerr
said. "Even though we lost the game I thought it was crucial that we fought the
way we did in the fourth quarter."
The past two games became testy, with Golden State's reserves getting involved
during Game 5 when Pat Spencer got ejected for head-butting Alperen Sengun
before Trace Jackson-Davis shoved the Rockets big man.
It was Curry, Green and Dillon Brooks in Game 4, yet Brooks believes Houston's
youngsters are learning with each experience on the big NBA stage.
"They're sticking to the details of the playoffs," Brooks said. "Every
possession matters, every loose ball, rebound, shot we take, it matters. And
there's nothing to get worked up or get tight about. It's just understanding
that you can't turn the ball over and you need possessions, we need good
possessions. And I feel like the young guys are learning how to leave their
imprint on the game."
Houston Rockets at Golden State Warriors
When/Where to Watch: Game 6, Friday, 9 p.m. EDT (ESPN)
Series: Warriors lead 3-2.
BetMGM Sportsbook: Warriors by 4.5.
What to Know: Foul trouble and free-throw differential have been common themes
in this series, with Golden State the culprit in Game 5. The Warriors had 27
fouls and the Rockets converted 32 of 38 free throws --- 8 of 8 by Brooks, 6 of
6 by VanVleet, and 8 of 9 for Amen Thompson. The Rockets also played a clean
game with just 12 turnovers while Kerr has stressed taking care of the ball so
many time this season and the Warriors committed 15 turnovers for 20 Houston
points. And Golden State's defense will have to do something different against
VanVleet, who along with his fellow starters had to return to the game when the
Warriors reserves made a run and finished with a playoff franchise-record 76
bench points. Kerr chose to keep his veteran stars of Butler, Curry and Green
on the bench to end the game and get them ready for Friday.
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