Why Warriors must lean on more than experience in Game 7 vs. Rockets

Why Warriors must lean on more than experience in Game 7 vs. Rockets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – Experience was supposed to be the Warriors’ winning factor going into the first round of the NBA playoffs against the much-younger Houston Rockets, and it was the theme Friday night following their 115-107 Game 6 loss at Chase Center. 

The Warriors had two straight chances at closing out the series after taking a three-games-to-one lead, and let both opportunities slip away. Now they’ll enter Sunday’s Game 7 in Houston with all the momentum gone, but history on their side.

It’s easy to assume everything feels faster in a Game 7. Heartbeats speed up and adrenaline is begging to burst. There’s truth to that in these pressure-packed situations, but the whole vibe is different than any player or coach can describe. The Rockets have home-court advantage, which also can produce 48 minutes of tense anticipation from a crowd witnessing a rock fight between two teams whose dislike for each other isn’t a secret.

Having gone through all those emotions multiple times, the Warriors trust they’ll be able to meet the moment. 

“Just confidence, belief,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “I know our guys believe and they’ll be ready to go.”

Those same sentiments were shared by Kerr’s biggest stars.

The frustration of their Game 6 loss wasn’t gone. It just had to be flushed right away, shifting the focus to what could be their last game as a team together if they don’t rip Houston’s hearts out as they have done in the past. 

“A Game 7 is a Game 7,” Draymond Green said. “I think anytime you have the opportunity to play in Game 7, it’s fun, it’s exciting. It’s for all the marbles, so move on. We’ve moved on. 

“Learn from what we did wrong. It’s kind of obvious what we did wrong. Get ready for the game. I think Game 7s are fun.”

When the Warriors were last tasked with a Game 7, Steph Curry gave an impassioned speech to his teammates and dropped 50 points on the Sacramento Kings. Curry always has the ability to explode for a historic night under the bright lights. Not too high, not too low, he just wants the Warriors able to withstand anything back in Houston. 

“We need to be able to manage the emotions of the next 48 hours,” Curry said. “Again, not panic, but have a sense of urgency on the adjustments we need to make going into the Game 7. How to deal with a hostile environment. I think we’ve had one in that building before. You understand the crowd is going to be into it.

“How we start the game is going to matter. It’s going to be a long 48 minutes. Just stick with it and come with a level of aggressiveness, attention to detail, just the idea that it’s going to be a game of runs. You got to just embrace it, have fun with it, show up with kind of a killer instinct. Everybody got to be like that.”

Curry and Green have played five Game 7s together and are 3-2. Jimmy Butler has played four Game 7s in his career and is 2-2. On the other side, the Rockets have four players who have combined to play 10 Game 7s, with the rest of the roster never having been there before.

The past also can’t be the Warriors’ saving grace. If experience is what the series was going to come down to, the Warriors would have met the moment of Game 5 and slammed the door shut the last time they were in Houston. Instead, they played like they had a game to mess around with and trailed by as much as 31 points. Just three minutes into Game 6, Green was given a Flagrant 1 foul that the Rockets scored four points from. 

The Rockets, not the Warriors, were the more composed team Friday night. Curry had three turnovers in the first quarter, four in the first half and five overall in the loss. He now has 24 through six games, making up for them by averaging 24.3 points on 46.7 percent shooting and 39.1 percent from three, with 5.2 rebounds and 5.5 assists per game. His longtime teammate has been nearly as careless with the ball. 

Green racked up four turnovers Friday night and is at 19 in the series. Offense is secondary for Draymond, but he has four more turnovers than made shots, and the Warriors will need a defensive masterclass out of him to help negate Alperen Sengun and Steven Adams. 

Jimmy Butler (27 points, nine rebounds and eight assists) easily was the Warriors’ best player in Game 6. As he continues playing through his pelvic contusion, the Warriors can’t ask for much more. But what about everybody else around their stars? 

“Make shots,” Curry said. “That’s me. That’s Jimmy. That’s everybody.”

Buddy Hield remained in the starting lineup for Game 6 and was a dud for the Dubs, going scoreless in 17 minutes. Hield scored 32 points between the Warriors’ wins in Games 3 and 4, but he has scored only 11 points the other four games. Brandin Podziemski and Moses Moody both have low overall field goal percentages for the series but are shooting in the high 30s from deep. They’ll be left open, and they’ll have to make the Rockets pay, as Podziemski did in Game 4 and Moody has in the clutch earlier in the series. 

Kerr needed 17 minutes from 7-footer Quinten Post in Game 6, but he only had one rebound while being picked apart defensively, was whistled for five fouls and made one of his four 3-point attempts. The Warriors are shooting 22 percent from three when the Rockets use their two-big lineup of Adams and Sengun. 

Pairing Butler alongside Curry had Green guaranteeing a championship on national TV at the All-Star break. The Warriors always are confident when those three lead them to battle. They themselves have to rise to their latest Game 7 challenge, and those behind them can’t crumble under the pressure.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Steph hopes to repeat his epic 50-point Game 7 performance vs. Rockets

Steph hopes to repeat his epic 50-point Game 7 performance vs. Rockets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

After the Warriors fumbled a 3-1 series lead against the Houston Rockets, they will play a do-or-die Game 7 in a hostile road environment Sunday at Toyota Center.

But Steph Curry has been here before, and if history repeats itself, Golden State should be in good shape.

The last time the Warriors played in a Game 7 was two seasons ago against the Sacramento Kings in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs. Similarly, the Warriors played the win-or-go-home Game 7 contest on the “road” 80 miles northeast at Golden 1 Center. Curry erupted for a then-historic 50-point flurry with seven made 3s to secure the victory and advance to the second round.

“That was just a great game overall,” Curry told reporters Friday as he recalled that historic night in Sacramento. “Hopefully, I can repeat that.”

Golden State had a 3-1 series lead over Houston after winning its first two games of the series at home, with a chance to close it out and send the Rockets packing in their house in Game 5. But a wonky start was too much to overcome as the Warriors fell 131-116.

The Warriors had yet another opportunity to advance to the Western Conference semifinals in front of their home Chase Center crowd Friday night, but the lack of consistent contributions from players not named Curry or Jimmy Butler affected their chances as they fell 115-107.

Curry and Butler combined for 56 points. The rest of the starters — Draymond Green, Gary Payton II and Buddy Hield — combined for 13.

But Curry and the Warriors know the focus immediately must shift to Sunday, when Curry expects the nerves to kick in under the bright lights but is looking forward to fully embracing it.

“It’s just the nerves and the adrenaline, and you understand the stakes,” Curry said. “If you don’t play your best game, you don’t figure out a way to win, you’re going home. But it’s also exhilarating because when you do, it brings the best out of you. There’s no better feeling of closing out a series with just the whole Game 7 vibe.

” … It’s what this league is about. It’s a great opportunity to show up when it matters most. And have an opportunity to move on. You don’t really do anything different. But you have to embrace the nerves and the adrenaline of it.”

The winner of Sunday’s Game 7 will advance to a second-round matchup with Anthony Edwards and the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Rockets beat Warriors to set up game seven decider

Fred VanVleet high-fives Amen Thompson during Houston Rockets' game against Golden State Warriors.
Fred VanVleet led the scoring for the Houston Rockets with 29 points. [Getty Images]

Fred VanVleet scored 29 points as the Houston Rockets beat the Golden State Warriors 115-107 to level their NBA play-off first-round series at 3-3 and force a deciding game seven.

Experienced point guard VanVleet starred for the Rockets, adding eight assists and eight rebounds to his points haul, while Alperen Sengun recorded a double-double with 21 points and 14 rebounds.

The Warriors held a commanding 3-1 lead in the series but have twice failed to close it out, losing to the Rockets in game five on Wednesday and again in game six on Friday.

Rockets head coach Ime Udoka said of VanVleet: "He's had some really good stretches lately.

"He knows what it is. He's been a champion. Been there, done that. So I wouldn't expect anything less than that from him."

Warriors coach Steve Kerr added: "I thought we got some good looks against the zone but then, once they pulled away by 10 or 12, it was easier for them to run us off the line."

The Rockets will host game seven on Sunday, with the winning team to face the Minnesota Timberwolves who clinched a 4-1 win against the Los Angeles Lakers.

News from the NBA

Fred VanVleet and the Rockets force a deciding Game 7 by beating the Warriors 115-107 in Game 6

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Stephen Curry had just produced one of his fantastic flurries to get Golden State right back in the game when Fred VanVleet started the fourth quarter with a four-point play that stole the momentum right back.

VanVleet had 29 points, eight assists and eight rebounds, Alperen Sengun contributed 21 points and 14 rebounds, and the Houston Rockets kept their season alive by beating the Golden State Warriors 115-107 on Friday night and forcing a deciding Game 7 in their first-round playoff series.

Golden State went cold when it mattered most: The Warriors missed 13 straight shots between Draymond Green’s basket with 10:12 left and a 3-pointer by Curry at the 3:35 mark.

Now, everybody will get back on an airplane and head to Houston for Game 7 on Sunday for a chance to meet well-rested Minnesota in the Western Conference semifinals. That’s exactly what the Warriors were hoping to avoid with a chance to clinch at home in Chase Center.

“I think we just know how important it is, they do too,” Warriors forward Jimmy Butler said.

Curry scored 29 points but shot 9 of 23, going 6 for 16 from deep. Butler added 27 points, nine rebounds and eight assists.

Houston coach Ime Udoka improved to 5-1 when facing elimination. Golden State’s Steve Kerr, meanwhile, is 7-0 in first-round playoff series.

VanVleet converted the four-point play after the Warriors had pulled within two with Curry’s flurry to end the third. Jalen Green scored the next time down on a putback of his own miss. Then, VanVleet’s 3 from the top with 6:47 remaining put Houston up 101-89.

“We can’t give up a four-point play in a two-point game,” Draymond Green said.

Curry’s driving layup with 39 seconds left in the third made it a four-point game, firing up the home crowd in bright yellow playoff shirts with matching rally towels. He then made two free throws as the Warriors pulled within 86-84.

But the Warriors couldn’t keep it going. With a balanced effort on both ends — including 17 points and hustle plays by big man Steven Adams off the bench — Houston had an answer nearly every time Golden State threatened or made a big play.

The Warriors led 3-1 in the series but fell behind in a hurry in a 131-116 Game 5 loss Wednesday night as Houston’s offense rolled after averaging 98 points through the first four games of the series.

VanVleet was brilliant again. He shot 7 for 13 from the floor after consecutive games going 8 for 13, and he converted all nine of his free throws — he’s a perfect 22 of 22 at the line over the series. And from 3-point range the past three games, he’s 18 for 27.

That’s why Kerr went to defensive specialist Gary Payton II in the starting lineup in place of Brandin Podziemski.

Draymond Green picked up an offensive foul at the 8:53 mark of the first quarter for shoving Jalen Green. The play went to review and the foul was determined to be a flagrant-1. But after two straight games with dustups, both teams stayed poised.

“It was a mantra going into the series: Play through everything,” Udoka said. “It’s going to be a physical game. Don’t ask for anything. We want to be physical. So if the refs allow it or that’s how the style of game is played, that favors us more often than not.”

Former Arizona State guard Adam Miller transferring to Gonzaga

Former Arizona State forward Adam Miller is transferring to Gonzaga. The university announced the move Friday, saying Miller has signed a financial aid agreement. Gonzaga will be the fourth school for Miller, an Illinois native who has scored 1,206 points in 117 games for Arizona State, LSU and Illinois.

Becky Hammon on mentor Gregg Popovich stepping down as Spurs head coach: 'My heart's a little heavy for him'

Las Vegas Aces head coach Becky Hammon praised Gregg Popovich after he stepped down from coaching the San Antonio Spurs to become their full-time president.

Popovich suffered a mild stroke in November that kept him from calling plays for the team the rest of the season, and he retires from coaching after 29 years on the job. Assistant coach Mitch Johnson, who served as interim head coach for the rest of the season, will take over permanently.

Before the Aces' preseason matchup against the Dallas Wings on Friday night, Hammon applauded Popovich, who took her under his wing in the years leading up to her tenure in Las Vegas.

Mar 11, 2022; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich talks with assistant coach Becky Hammon during the first half against the Utah Jazz at AT&T Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-USA TODAY Sports
Becky Hammon coached on Gregg Popovich's Spurs staff before transitioning to the WNBA. (Scott Wachter/USA TODAY Sports)
USA TODAY Sports / Reuters

"That's who mentored me, that's who spent literally thousands of hours with me," Hammon said. "Watching him, I was there eight years. It's a lot of games, it's a lot of practices, it's a lot of coaches' meetings. So yeah, my heart's a little heavy for him because I know how much he loves it, but I'm sure he'll crush this role just as much."

Hammon was part of Popovich's coaching staff from 2014 to 2021 and was the first woman to lead an NBA team after Popovich was ejected in a loss to the Los Angeles Lakers in 2020. The former New York Liberty guard was also the first woman to serve as a head coach in the NBA Summer League and interviewed for the Portland Trail Blazers' head coaching vacancy in 2021 before being hired by the Aces.

She became the first WNBA coach to win a championship as a rookie and secured another title in 2022. Despite her ties to the Spurs and fans calling for her to replace Popovich, the 48-year-old insisted she is happy with her role in Las Vegas.

"I'm super happy where I am," Hammon said. "This opportunity for me, I couldn't pass on it. I bet on myself instead of, maybe waiting it out for a maybe [in the NBA]. I've enjoyed being back on the women's side. You guys know I'm effusive about my love for this team and being back in the women's game."

"If I were to ever make that jump again, you know it just has to be the right fit, right time, in front of the right people, with the right team," she added.

Watch Steph Curry console heartbroken son after Warriors' Game 6 loss vs. Rockets

Watch Steph Curry console heartbroken son after Warriors' Game 6 loss vs. Rockets originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Like the rest of Dub Nation, Steph Curry’s young son Canon hoped the Warriors would eliminate the Houston Rockets on Friday night at Chase Center.

But after Golden State’s 115-107 loss in Game 6 of the first-round NBA playoff series, Canon wasn’t up for much talking.

After Curry tried talking to Canon, the 6-year-old buried his head in his mom Ayesha’s chest as his grandma, Sonya, looked on with an understanding smile.

Canon’s dad played 42 minutes in the Warriors’ tough postseason loss, scoring 29 points on 9-of-23 shooting from the field and 6 of 16 shooting from deep with seven rebounds, two assists and five turnovers.

It might take a while for Canon to cheer up after watching Curry and Co. drop the ball, allowing the Rockets to even the series at three games apiece after the Warriors held a 3-1 lead. But he doesn’t have much time to sulk — Golden State and Houston face off in a winner-take-all Game 7 on Sunday at Toyota Center.

Warriors face daunting, ominous Game 7 in Houston after fumbling 3-1 series lead

Warriors face daunting, ominous Game 7 in Houston after fumbling 3-1 series lead originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – Sections of the sellout crowd, hearts heavy and chins drooping, went streaming toward Chase Center exits with four minutes remaining, their beloved Warriors trailing by 17 and offering nothing to inspire faith in a comeback.

It didn’t materialize in Game 6 of this first-round Western Conference series, which ended Friday night with a 115-107 loss to the Rockets, evening matters at three games apiece.

And it only gets harder for Game 7 Sunday in Houston. Going on the road to do what couldn’t be done at home results in an adverse shift of the odds.

Not that the Warriors would even consider acknowledging that.

“We’ll be all right,” Jimmy Butler III said.

“We’re packing for a week,” Stephen Curry said. “Getting on this plane to go to Texas and, hopefully, go to Minnesota right after.”

Confidence in the face of a harsh wind can border on delusion. There’s no doubt that this, Game 6, on their floor, is a fumbling of favorable conditions. The anticipation was that the Warriors would have a spirited response to being thrashed in Game 5 Wednesday in Houston. Come home, ride the energy of a roaring crowd, close out this series and start preparing for the conference semifinals against the Timberwolves.

The Rockets took all of that away. They shot better, overall and from distance. They rebounded better, forced more turnovers, pulled more loose balls and had a sharp reply to every Golden State surge. They were vastly superior in their building and appreciably better in Game 6 in a hostile environment.

“They probably had 20 points off of broken plays and getting loose balls and kicking out for 3s,” Draymond Green said. “Get loose balls and we’ll defend them way better. To beat this team, you’ve got to make second and third efforts. Last two games we have not done that.”

Which is to say the Warriors, after taking a 3-1 series lead, tailed off their intensity in Games 5 and 6. This, folks, is not a winning mentality.

And yet, after a surprisingly sloppy first half, they trailed by only five (53-48) at halftime. A third-quarter awakening allowed them to enter the fourth quarter trailing by two points, 86-84, against a team with just enough young players to breed optimism among the Warriors.

Instead, the Rockets owned the fourth from the start. Fred VanVleet, coming off a mediocre regular season and an atrocious first three games, continued his torrid shooting, getting open against a disorganized defense to drain a 3-pointer while being fouled on a scrambling closeout by Gary Payton II.

“That’s on us as a staff,” coach Steve Kerr said. “We’ve got to make sure they’re matched up. They just threw it, and we didn’t guard Van Vleet when they threw it up the floor. He knocks it down, gets the free throw.

“Felt like a game-changing play because it was a two-point game, we’re right where we need to be despite having not played well and turning it over quite a bit.”

Six seconds into the fourth, the Warriors were down six. Five minutes in, they were trailing by 12. With 4:40 remaining and having missed 10 of their first 11 shots in the quarter, they were on the ugly end of a 106-89 score.

“We struggled that first six minutes,” Curry said of the final quarter. “You have to resist the temptation to rush and force shots, if it’s me or Jimmy trying to get good looks. But use the attention they’re going to throw at us, whether it’s me running around or Jimmy driving it, to make the defense collapse and swing and find open looks.

“For the most part, we got a lot of pretty good looks in the fourth. We just didn’t make ’em.”

Curry scored 29 points, matching VanVleet for game highs. Butler scored 27 points. They didn’t get much help from their teammates. Buddy Hield, Brandin Podziemski, Moses Moody and Quinten Post – all capable shooters – finished a combined 11-of-32 from the field, including 6-of-19 from beyond the arc.

The Rockets had squelched the Warriors, silenced the crowd and taken the air out of the building. Their zone defense is stifling Golden State’s offense, and their size and athleticism aren’t going to go away.

That’s why Game 7 is more daunting than Games 5 and 6. After seeing Houston five times in the regular season and six times in this series, the Warriors still are searching for adequate solutions.

“We’ve got to stop focusing so much on them and focus on us,” Butler said. “If we do that, then we’re going to be fine. We’re not going to sit here and act like we’ve been playing our best version of basketball because we haven’t. They’ve been doing OK, but they haven’t played their best version of basketball either.”

That, for the Warriors and their fans, is particularly ominous.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Butler declares Warriors' confidence at ‘all-time high' for Game 7

Butler declares Warriors' confidence at ‘all-time high' for Game 7 originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

After Friday’s 115-107 Game 6 loss to the Houston Rockets, the Warriors’ 3-1 series lead is gone.

A lot of teams and players might start to panic in this situation — as well as Canon Curry.

But, as a new leader on an experienced Golden State roster, veteran star Jimmy Butler says he isn’t worried whatsoever.

After Wednesday’s Game 5 loss, Butler asserted, “We’re fine. Our confidence isn’t going to waver any.”

And despite another defeat Friday to force a decisive Game 7, Butler took it one step further — no matter how many 3-1 jokes the internet will prepare over the next 48 hours.

“[It’s] at an all-time high,” Butler told reporters when asked about the Warriors’ current confidence level. “It’s now, out of all times. It’s win or go home. It’s not wavering. We know how good of a team we are. …

“A couple of us have been here before multiple times. So, it’s on us to make sure we get it done.”

Likewise, Golden State forward Draymond Green, who has a 3-2 career record in Game 7s, displayed a calm assurance after another disappointing loss.

“It’s a little frustrating,” Green explained in his postgame presser. “Nonetheless, it’s a seven-game series. We know we can win there. Got to go get the win.”

Against a much less experienced Rockets squad, that mindset could be the difference in Sunday’s winner-take-all matchup. But the Warriors will need a better performance on the floor if they want that mental advantage to matter.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Warriors pestered by Rockets' zone defense in frustrating Game 6 loss

Warriors pestered by Rockets' zone defense in frustrating Game 6 loss originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors, when they needed them most, couldn’t get shots to fall to save their lives. Both metaphorically and potentially in the series.

Despite falling behind to the Houston Rockets early and staying behind for nearly the entire game, Golden State trailed by just two points (86-84) to begin the fourth quarter. A series win was well within reach before the Warriors went on to miss 14 of their next 15 field-goal attempts in the fourth quarter preceding an eventual 115-107 lifeless Game 6 loss on Friday at Chase Center.

Warriors coach Steve Kerr was asked postgame what happened offensively in the fourth after Golden State’s impressive 36 points in the third and credited Houston’s pesky defensive scheme.

“They were in a zone,” Kerr said. “They played [Steven] Adams quite a bit. He’s at the center of that zone, kind of a 2-1-2. I thought we got some good looks against the zone. But then once they pulled away by 10 or 12 [points], it was easier for them to run us off the line.

“We had a lot of openings, but they were using their length to run us off the 3-point line, knowing we had to make threes to get back in it. I thought they did a good job of kind of running us off the line and keeping us from knocking down threes to get us back in the game.”

Opposing teams don’t often have much success in a zone defense when Warriors superstar Steph Curry, the greatest shooter in NBA history who is capable of igniting an offense in an instant with his 3-point shooting alone, is on the floor.

There is risk to deploying the defensive scheme, but the Rockets executed it almost to perfection in the fourth quarter.

“The communication is probably even better in our zone than in man-to-man,” Rockets coach Ime Udoka said postgame. “Obviously, we’re dominant with our size. We put Jabari [Smith Jr.] in the three in the bigger lineup there. Don’t have a lot of cross-matches or mismatches, and have gone to it and saw that it worked.”

One of the big reasons for Houston’s success in zone on Friday night was veteran big man Steven Adams, who played a series-high 31 minutes in Game 6 and scored 17 points with five rebounds and three blocks. Adams has been a pest for the Warriors all series, especially on the glass, but it was the size of Houston’s two-big lineup with him and Alperen Şengün at times that made the Rockets’ zone defense so effective.

“The thing with the zone is that there are windows to attack, weak spots, obviously,” Adams explained postgame. “We just managed to scramble and get to those spots like pretty good, you know what I mean. So the window for error, we keep it very tight.

“We do a good job rebounding and keeping them to one shot, you know what I mean. That’s a key weakness with the zone. Because usually you’re out of place to rebound. It’s good. It’s a weird zone … It’s just like a bizarre one but it works.”

Warriors forward Draymond Green, whose stellar defense played a pivotal role in Golden State initially jumping out to a 3-1 series lead, gave Adams his flowers.

“He’s having a great impact,” Green said of Adams. “He’s doing a great job on the offensive glass. He’s doing a great job defensively.

“I just wish we could get a three-second call. You stand in the paint, whole possession, it’s hard to box out. He’s strong as hell, so… Being outweighed by, what, 40, 50 pounds, six inches, standing in the paint, it’s tough to box him out, so…”

Houston, now with back-to-back decisive victories to even the series, might have the Warriors figured out, both schematically and personnel-wise.

Golden State will need more than just whistles to counteract the Rockets’ stout defense, which only will feed off the energy from the home crowd in Game 7 on Sunday at Toyota Center.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Amen Thompson enjoyed silencing ‘annoying' Warriors fans in Rockets' Game 6 win

Amen Thompson enjoyed silencing ‘annoying' Warriors fans in Rockets' Game 6 win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors didn’t give the Chase Center crowd much to cheer about during their 115-107 Game 6 loss Friday night, and Houston Rockets wing Amen Thompson liked it that way.

The second-year NBA pro, who was born in Oakland, attended Warriors games as a kid and participated in Steph Curry’s basketball camps, didn’t mind quieting Dub Nation.

“It meant a lot,” Thompson told Space City Home Network’s Vanessa Richardson moments after the Rockets forced a winner-take-all Game 7 of the first-round NBA playoff series. “This crowd be annoying. So just silenced them, obviously. Hometown, it feels good. I got my family.”

Thompson finished with 14 points, seven rebounds, two assists and was a plus-10 in 36 minutes Friday night.

The Rockets did a good job keeping Warriors fans from getting loud throughout the game, and now, Houston gets to go home and host a Game 7 with their fans creating a hostile environment for Curry and Co.

But the best revenge for Curry would be to silence Rockets fans on Sunday at Toyota Center.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Watch Steph console heartbroken son Canon after Warriors' Game 6 loss

Watch Steph console heartbroken son Canon after Warriors' Game 6 loss originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Like the rest of Dub Nation, Steph Curry’s young son Canon hoped the Warriors would eliminate the Houston Rockets on Friday night at Chase Center.

But after Golden State’s 115-107 loss in Game 6 of the first-round NBA playoff series, Canon wasn’t up for much talking.

After Curry tried talking to Canon, the 6-year-old buried his head in his mom Ayesha’s chest as his grandma, Sonya, looked on with an understanding smile.

Canon’s dad played 42 minutes in the Warriors’ tough postseason loss, scoring 29 points on 9-of-23 shooting from the field and 6 of 16 shooting from deep with seven rebounds, two assists and five turnovers.

It might take a while for Canon to cheer up after watching Curry and Co. drop the ball, allowing the Rockets to even the series at three games apiece after the Warriors held a 3-1 lead. But he doesn’t have much time to sulk — Golden State and Houston face off in a winner-take-all Game 7 on Sunday at Toyota Center.

What we learned as Warriors lose Game 6 to Rockets, face winner-take-all Game 7

What we learned as Warriors lose Game 6 to Rockets, face winner-take-all Game 7 originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

SAN FRANCISCO – After holding a three-games-to-one lead, the Warriors now will board a plane and fly back to Houston for Game 7 after dropping a second straight game to the Rockets in the first round of the NBA playoffs. 

The Warriors were blown out in Houston on Wednesday, only to return home and lose Game 6 on Friday night at Chase Center 115-107.

Steph Curry scored an inefficient 29 points and made six 3-pointers. Jimmy Butler also didn’t have his best game but finished right behind Curry with 27 points. They didn’t receive any help from the rest of the Warriors.

The remainder of the starting five scored 13 points.

All the flaws of the Warriors were seen on their home floor. Their age, lack of size and shooting crushed them. The Rockets played like both the better and more experienced team, erasing the Warriors’ pedigree and putting Golden State on the ropes as this series moves to a win-or-go-home game on Houston’s home floor.

Here are three takeaways from the Warriors’ Game 6 loss.

Good And Bad Of Game 6 Steph

Between poor decisions and bad passes, Curry looked extremely frustrated with himself during the first half. At one point, he had twice as many turnovers (four) as made shots (two) while also being whistled for two fouls. Once Curry picked up his third foul when there were a little under four minutes left in the second quarter, Steve Kerr had no choice but to keep him in.

An Amen Thompson free throw off Curry’s foul made it an 11-point game, and it felt worse than that. But Steph found a spark. He stopped waiting for a screen and took over, going on an 11-0 run of his own to tie the game at 46 points apiece.

Curry, because of his second-quarter flurry, was up to a game-high 16 points at halftime, and while he didn’t dominate the third quarter, he did score another 10 points in the third quarter to give him 26 going into the fourth. He only scored three more points, and wound up a minus-11 with a game-high five turnovers.

The Warriors needed a heroic effort out of Curry. There were spurts, but not long stretches.

Another Experiment

One day after the Warriors’ Game 5 loss in Houston, coach Steve Kerr let it be known that anything was on the table regarding his starting lineup for Game 6. Kerr kept Buddy Hield as part of his first five, but sent Brandin Podziemski to the bench. In came the positionless Gary Payton II. 

This isn’t just a group that has little experience together. They had none. They didn’t share the floor together once in the regular season, and hadn’t at all in the first five games of the first round of the playoffs before Friday night. When Kerr made his first substitution, bringing Podziemski in for Hield, the Warriors were down 11-7, but four of those Houston points were a result of Draymond Green’s Flagrant 1 just three minutes into the game.

Starting Payton puts Alperen Sengun into pick-and-roll actions, but having GP2 and Green on the floor together means the Warriors are with two non-shooters. The starters played the first five-plus minutes together and were a minus-4. They didn’t see the floor again as a unit until the start of the second half.

The starting five didn’t exactly dominate to open the third quarter either. They played a total of eight minutes and 51 seconds on the night and were outscored 23-18. Hield, for the second straight game, was an absolute no-show, going scoreless in 17 minutes. Payton was cooked by Fred VanVleet (29 points and six threes) and was a minus-12 in 20 minutes.

Simple Truths

Golden State’s biggest lead was two points when Moses Moody made a 3-pointer to make it a 19-17 game with three and a half minutes to go in the first quarter. From that point on, the Rockets simply were the better team. They had an answer whenever it seemed like the Warriors had gained momentum. 

When Curry scored 11 consecutive points in the second quarter, the Rockets answered with a 5-0 run. When the Warriors scored the final four points of the third quarter, the Rockets opened the fourth on a 6-0 run. The Warriors countered with a 4-0 run, only for the Rockets to then go on a 14-1 run before a Flagrant 1 foul on Sengun gave Butler two free throws and the Warriors the ball out of bounds. 

As it has been all series, the Warriors couldn’t break the length and athleticism of the Rockets’ zone defense. The Warriors’ best offense was rebounding and getting out in transition, but that wasn’t easy to rely on. While the Warriors had 17 more fastbreak points and made three more threes, the Rockets won nearly every other important category. 

It felt like the Rockets were able to grab all the long rebounds and 50/50 balls, too, which sucked out any energy from the home crowd.

Curry and Butler combined to score 48 points through three quarters. The rest of the Warriors had scored 36 points. The final tally was Curry plus Butler 56 points, and 51 points for their teammates. 

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Looking back at Gregg Popovich's key moments with San Antonio Spurs

Looking back at Gregg Popovich's key moments with San Antonio Spurs originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Some of the key moments in the career of San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich, who stepped down as coach Friday:

Dec. 10, 1996: The beginning

Saying the team needed a change in direction, general manager Gregg Popovich fired coach Bob Hill and named himself coach on the same day that star center David Robinson was returning to the lineup. The Spurs were 3-15 at the time.

June 25, 1997: Tim Duncan gets drafted

After winning the draft lottery, the Spurs get the chance to take Tim Duncan No. 1 overall in the 1997 draft. The team immediately becomes a contender, and Popovich and Duncan become joined at the hip for the better part of the next two decades.

June 25, 1999: Championship No. 1

Two years to the day after Duncan got drafted, the Spurs beat New York 78-77 to win the NBA Finals in five games.

June 15, 2003: Championship No. 2

Popovich wins coach of the year in a season where the Spurs sent David Robinson into retirement as a champion, beating New Jersey in six games for the franchise’s second title.

June 23, 2005: Championship No. 3

Tied going into the fourth quarter, the Spurs never trail in the final 12 minutes and Popovich wins his third title. San Antonio beats Detroit 81-74 in Game 7.

June 14, 2007: Championship No. 4

Popovich and the Spurs sweep LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers, winning the four games by an average of 6.0 points.

March 16, 2009: Pop reaches 1,000

In a game at Oklahoma City, Popovich becomes the 24th coach in NBA history to reach the 1,000-game milestone. The only coaches with better records after 1,000 games were Phil Jackson and Pat Riley.

April 6, 2011: Pop passes Red

The Spurs beat Sacramento for Popovich’s 797th career win, one that allowed him to pass Boston’s Red Auerbach for the second-most wins with a single team.

June 15, 2014: Championship No. 5

Popovich becomes the fifth coach in NBA history with five championships, the Spurs beating Miami 104-87 to win that title in five games.

Feb. 4, 2017: The most wins with one team

The Spurs defeat Denver and Popovich gets career win No. 1,128, passing Utah’s Jerry Sloan for the most by a coach with one team.

Aug. 7, 2021: USA Basketball wins Olympic gold

Popovich leads the U.S. to its fourth consecutive gold medal in men’s basketball, with the Americans beating France 87-82 at the Tokyo Olympics. “Every championship is special, and the group you’re with is special, but I can be honest and say this is the most responsibility I’ve ever felt,” Popovich said.

March 11, 2022: The winningest coach ever

Popovich becomes the NBA’s all-time coaching win leader, with the Spurs beating Utah 104-102 for the 1,336th victory of his career — one more than Don Nelson’s previous mark.

Aug. 12, 2023: Pop enters the Hall

Popovich, after years of resisting because he wanted more of his former players to be enshrined before him, enters the Basketball Hall of Fame. “It’s unimaginable,” Popovich said.

Nov. 2, 2024: Popovich suffers stroke

Popovich had a stroke at the team’s arena in San Antonio a couple of hours before the game that night against Minnesota. Assistant coach Mitch Johnson took over as acting head coach that night and wound up coaching the team’s final 77 games of the season.

Feb. 27, 2025: Popovich updates his status

Popovich released a statement saying Johnson will finish the season. “Mitch Johnson and his staff have done a wonderful job and the resolve and professionalism the players have shown, sticking together during a challenging season, has been outstanding,” Popovich said in the statement distributed by the Spurs. “I will continue to focus on my health with the hope that I can return to coaching in the future.”

May 2, 2025: Popovich steps down as coach

Popovich stepped down as coach of the Spurs. “While my love and passion for the game remain, I’ve decided it’s time to step away as head coach. I’m forever grateful to the wonderful players, coaches, staff and fans who allowed me to serve them as the Spurs head coach and am excited for the opportunity to continue to support the organization, community and city that are so meaningful to me,” he said. Later that day, the Spurs promoted Johnson to the head coach role.