If only for one night, Warriors display championship mettle in win vs. Clippers

If only for one night, Warriors display championship mettle in win vs. Clippers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

INGLEWOOD, Calif. – Steve Kerr knew how he sounded as his words came out. 

The same Steve Kerr that was a five-time champion as a lightly recruited high school player who carved out a 15-year NBA career as the No. 50 overall pick in the draft. The same Steve Kerr who became a four-time champion head coach with no past coaching experience. The same Steve Kerr who played with a long list of all-time greats and now has led countless others as a coach. 

This isn’t what Kerr and the Warriors play for. Not the NBA play-in tournament or being a No. 10 seed. Perfectly so, none of that mattered. Sports erase thought in moments of greatness, taken aback by the supreme. 

“For one night, we’re us,” Kerr said. “We’re champions again. I know that may sound crazy to everybody out there. It’s a play-in game – I don’t care. Just absolutely beautiful to watch.”

A winner by nature and a fan of the game at heart, Kerr meant every word after the Warriors’ 126-121 comeback win Wednesday night against the No. 9 seed LA Clippers on the road at Intuit Dome. Win or go home. The Warriors are packed and going to Phoenix.

Steph Curry and Draymond Green have been Warriors basketball to a generation of fans. Another cast member is gone but not forgotten. They grew up on them. Kerr wasn’t their first coach, but he was the first to celebrate championships with them. 

They’re still here, too. 

With 9.5 seconds left in the game in hand as Brandin Podziemski shot free throws, Curry and Green turned to each other and hugged out their own ‘thank you’ cards to one another. 

Curry appreciated every game Green trudged through without him during his 27-game absence to runner’s knee. Green appreciated Curry’s care and commitment to returning for a losing team in a season he could have done without. Of course the game came down to them in the end. 

The score was tied at 117 apiece and about a minute and a half remaining in fourth quarter when Curry came off a screen from Green and let a three fly from the left wing. He missed. Nobody remembers. 

After stopping the Clippers on one side, Curry and Green spoke in their secret language and played a two-man game the ended with Steph catching a handoff from Draymond and used his screen to take two dribbles to the left past 7-footer Brook Lopez, get space and send a rocket to the moon that landed safely through the net and back to its home.

The shot gave the Warriors a 120-117 lead with 50.4 seconds left. Nobody was surprised. 

“Well, I’m taught to crash right there,” Green said to NBC Sports Bay Area. “But of course I’ve seen it too many times. It’s going in. I knew it. It’s what he do.” 

It’s what Curry came back to do. To show the world he can still perform magic, scoring 35 points in 36 minutes at 38 years old with a bad knee and having defense played on him like holding, grabbing and tugging is rewarded instead of whistled. He also wanted to show himself there’s still tricks up his sleeve. 

Curry looked more like a 38-year-old with a bad knee at the start of the single elimination game than someone who surely would have been an All-NBA selection if he stayed healthy. The evidence was in watching him have trouble getting past a long and athlete Derrick Jones Jr., and in the box score, scoring eight points on 2-of-9 shooting and the Warriors down by eight at halftime. 

The wait is always worth it for a signature Curry Flurry. Once it began, the Clippers couldn’t stop the destruction. Curry scored 27 points in the second half – 16 in the third quarter and 11 in the fourth – and his coach had a few things to say about his superstar player, pounding the podium table in the middle of his message.

“This is why Steph came back,” Kerr said. “So everybody out there who thought Steph should have taken the rest of the year off, this is what he does. This is who he is. If he can compete, he’s going to compete. And it was just incredible to watch.” 

As was Green’s defense against Kawhi Leonard down the stretch. Leonard averaged a career-high 27.9 points per game this season and exhaustingly got to 19 points on 8-of-17 shooting but only 1 of 6 on threes with Green in his grill. Green had a game-high four steals, and Leonard had a game-high five turnovers.

Three of Draymond’s four steals came from Kawhi, including the game-sealer. First, he picked him up full court. Then, Green got in front of Leonard and was able to shift his hips in position at the right wing beyond the arc. Right as Leonard went to dribble between his legs, Green called check mate, swiping the ball away and diving on it before giving it up to Podziemski. 

The play before, Green dug into his football days and got in position like a defensive back to tip away an inbounds pass to Podziemski, who completed a three-point play. 

“He feeds off those battles,” Curry said of his longest tenured teammate defending greats like Leonard. “Those matchups get him going. It’s our job to have his back. But the way he played tonight, and just the level of impact he had was incredible. I’m falling short on the words to describe it. It was unbelievable. 

These are the Warriors, and this is what they do. This wasn’t just the Warriors of old, though. It also was about the Warriors of new, including their elder statesman. 

Al Hoford, who turns 40 years old in June and recently returned from a calf strain, missed his first three shots. His only make going into the fourth quarter was a diving dunk.

Just like that, Horford showed why this part of the calendar is why the Warriors signed him. From the 5:37 mark to the 2:12 mark of the fourth quarter, Horford was Curry. He couldn’t miss, going 4 of 4 from 3-point range, with the last one giving the Warriors a two-point lead. 

Horford even outscored Curry 12 to 11 in the fourth quarter from those four threes.

Were these the kind of games that Horford had in mind when he signed with the Warriors?

“I don’t know about the play-in,” Horford joked, “but the type of intensity in a meaningful game like this, yes. And then me being able to help our group, be there in those moments, I’m very grateful for that opportunity.” 

The Warriors at the trade deadline brought in one of Horford’s close friends and championship teammate on the Boston Celtics. Kristaps Porziņģis scoring 20 points, throwing down a monster putback dunk and making three 3-pointers in this one game was more important than the 15 previously he had played on the Warriors. The win also left a lasting impression on Porziņģis, delaying his intriguing free agency this summer. 

The play-in isn’t the regular season, nor is it the playoffs. In the regular season, the Warriors went 7-34 when trailing going into the fourth quarter. Championship DNA can even show up in the postseason ghostland of the play-in. 

“This is the one of those 41 that if we lose we go home,” Green said to me. “We don’t want to go home. We want to keep playing. Anytime you got Steph Curry, you got a chance. So it’s on all of us to do our part to give him a chance to show his greatness. Everybody did their part. 

“Brandin Podziemski was huge. Everybody did their part – Gui Santos. And we allowed him to be Steph Curry.” 

It was Santos, 23, whose 20 points tied Porzingis for second-most on the team while leading the Warriors in plus/minus at plus-16. Podziemski, 23 and the youngest Warrior, was second in plus-minus, plus-10, third in scoring with 17 points and led in rebounds with seven. Each had miscues, but neither was scared of the moment. 

This fading star was down by as many as 13 points in the fourth quarter. Its light still flickers, and even shines, from time to time.

“With all the wins that we’ve had here, a lot of them with a lot more at stake, this is right up there,” Kerr said. “Just because where we are and our age and the decline of our performance this year with the injuries. It was just a beautiful display of competitive will.” 

Even for at least one more night, these are still the Warriors, and this is still what they do.

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Tyrese Maxey sends message before Celtics-Sixers Round 1: ‘We ain’t backing down’

Mar 1, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Philadelphia 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey (0) dribbles down the court defended by Boston Celtics guard Derrick White (9) during the first half at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Paul Rutherford-Imagn Images | Paul Rutherford-Imagn Images

The Philadelphia 76ers survived the NBA play-in tournament with Wednesday night’s win over the Orlando Magic. Now, they’ll face their next — and far greater — challenge: the Boston Celtics.

For the fourth time in eight years, Boston and Philadelphia will meet in a best-of-seven series. Historically, the Celtics have dominated, winning each of their last six playoff matchups dating back to the 1985 Eastern Conference Finals. And while coach Nick Nurse — along with other members of the coaching staff — is among the rare few in the locker room old enough to recall the Sixers eliminating the Celtics in the playoffs, the team is still looking forward to Sunday afternoon’s Game 1 in Boston.

“This group is tough. We ain’t backing down from nobody,” Tyrese Maxey told reporters, per NBC Sports. “Trust me, if y’all seen our practices earlier in the year, I thought we were trying to kill each other. I was like, ‘Listen, this is too physical for me. I’m going to sit on the sidelines.’ But it’s a good thing, though. It’s a really good thing, and we have a lot of tough guys out there. We’re not gonna take no miss, and I think that’s going to be good for us.”

Maxey scored a team-high 31 points for Philadelphia on Wednesday night. In the regular season, Maxey averaged 30 points on 51.4 percent shooting from three with 8.8 assists in four games against the Celtics.

“I want to win, so that’s all that matters,” Maxey said. “But you gotta go out there and really compete, and we’ve done it. We won in Boston earlier this year. I think we beat them home once, so it’ll be fun. I think they’re a great team and it’s gonna be a great challenge for us.”

Nurse, well aware of the Boston-Philadelphia rivalry, is also looking forward to the series. As the Sixers locked in a first-round matchup with the Celtics, fans at Xfinity Mobile Arena broke into chants of “We want Boston.”

“It’ll be a great atmosphere in both arenas,” Nurse told reporters, per NBC Sports. “I think that’s always a blast when you get two arenas that are electric with energy. And playoff time, you gotta really look forward and enjoy that, and we’ll do our best.”

Mar 1, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Philadelphia 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey (0) shoots during the first half against the Boston Celtics at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Paul Rutherford-Imagn Images | Paul Rutherford-Imagn Images

Even though it’s Nurse’s third year at the helm in Philadelphia, he’s no stranger to the Celtics. Six years ago, as head coach of the Toronto Raptors, Nurse faced younger versions of Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown in the 2020 semifinals. His Raptors pushed Boston to a winner-take-all Game 7 in the NBA’s pandemic-shortened season before ultimately falling short.

This time around, Nurse is battling a depleted Sixers roster that’s undergone no shortage of adversity throughout the regular season and into the playoffs.

On Opening Night, Philadelphia relied on Maxey and rookie V.J. Edgecombe to defeat the Celtics 117-116. Star center Joel Embiid scored four points, shooting 1-of-9 and forward Paul George was sidelined, recovering from a left knee injury. Little improved from there, as Embiid and George both played less than half the season, while Embiid underwent emergency surgery for appendicitis last week.

Nurse didn’t even expect Embiid to be in attendance on Philadelphia’s bench during Wednesday night’s victory.

“Some of the other guys didn’t know he was there either,” Nurse mentioned. “They asked him how he was. He said he feels good. Smiled. Some of the players said hello to him, and all that kind of stuff. So it was good to have him around.”

The Sixers went 45-37 during the regular season, splitting their four-game regular-season series with the Celtics, 2-2. Philadelphia averaged the league’s second-fewest assists (24.6) and ranked 17th in rebounds (43.6 per game).

Meanwhile, Boston secured the No. 2 seed in the East despite adjusting throughout Tatum’s 62-game absence. The Celtics averaged the fewest turnovers in the NBA (12.4 per game) and led the conference in both 3-pointers made (15.5) and in offensive rating.

“They’re playing great,” Nurse said. “They’ve played really great all season. They got a bunch of guys that have been together — a core group of guys that have been together for a long time, through a lot of winning and a lot of deep runs. Tremendous, tremendous challenge for us, but we’ll see if we can go figure something out between now and Sunday.”

Nurse acknowledges the path to punching their playoff ticket wasn’t ideal. After Philadelphia’s play-in win over Orlando, the Sixers now find themselves heading to TD Garden to face their next challenge. Still, Nurse is focused on what they can make of the opportunity ahead.

“It wasn’t pretty,” Nurse said. “It wasn’t easy and it wasn’t pretty, but we’re here now, and now we have to see what we can do with it.”

Steph Curry settled debate among Warriors fans with performance vs. Clippers

Steph Curry settled debate among Warriors fans with performance vs. Clippers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The debate that raged through the streets of Dub Nation from mid-March into early April reached emphatic resolution Wednesday night.

Stephen Curry delivered such a spectacular final argument that even those who didn’t want to see him step on a basketball court until October must know it’s OK to concede their case.

Ten days after returning from a 65-day absence due to persistent soreness in his right knee, Curry’s presence and production carried the Warriors to a 121-116 NBA play-in tournament victory that extends their season for at least one more game while shoving the favored Los Angeles Clippers into the offseason.

For all the thoughts and prayers coming Curry’s way during his recovery, this was his “Thank you and appreciate you, but this is why I wanted to rejoin my teammates.”

Curry scored 35 points, 27 of which came in the second half, when the Warriors were trimming deficit after deficit until they overtook the Clippers at Intuit Dome. With LA’s defense designed to limit his production, he played 36 minutes, shot 12 of 23 from the field, including 7 of 12 from distance.

Steph was more than fine. He was divine.

“This is why Steph came back,” coach Steve Kerr told reporters in Inglewood. “So, everybody out there who thought Steph should have taken the rest of the year off, this is what he does! This is who he is! If he can compete, he’s going to compete. And it was just incredible to watch.”

Kerr pounded the table five times before saying, “this is what he does.” Yet it was reasonable for fans to wonder if Curry should spend his energy playing basketball for a Golden State team that watched its compromised goals all but vanish in his absence. He turned 38 while sidelined. The Warriors were losing twice as often as winning. They meant well. Their concerns were valid.

But this was Steph’s rebuttal. From Jan. 30, when he limped off the court with what was diagnosed as “runner’s knee,” he endured went through hundreds of hours of ice and rehab and recovery because he was determined to return.

“We talked about it the whole time,” Curry said of time off the court. “If we have any type of chance or hope to extend our season, I want to be out there to experience it.”

Curry did more than experience it. He was most responsible for manufacturing a victory that sends Golden State into a winner-take-all play-in game Friday night in Phoenix. He got plenty of assistance, with Gui Santos and Kristaps Porziņģis each scoring 20 points, Al Horford banging four triples in the pivotal fourth quarter and Draymond Green defending LA superstar Kawhi Leonard into virtual irrelevance.

But Curry shook off an unimpressive first half (eight points, 2-of-9 shooting from the field, including 2 of 5 from beyond the arc) to lift his team’s collective confidence by scoring 16 of Golden State’s 30 points in the third quarter.

“When the head of the snake is locked in like that and everything’s going wrong for him and he stays dialed in and continues to push forward, no one else is allowed to drop your head,” Green said of Curry. “You’re going to watch this guy who has nothing to play for. If he goes home today, he’s Steph Curry. Nothing is changing that.

“But you watch him go through what he’s gone through. You watch him deal with the tough start. And his head is held high. The next shot in his mind is his best shot. Well, everybody else feeds off that.”

Spurred by a strong third quarter, Golden State in the fourth quarter crafted a work of art. After posting 16 assists through three quarters, the Warriors recorded 13 in the fourth, Santos, Green and Curry each with three dimes. They shot 75 percent from the field, including 72.7 from deep. Curry dropped 11 points, while Horford had 12 on 4-of-4 shooting beyond the arc.

This game never was a rout, but Golden State’s 16-6 run over the final 3:15 looked a lot like euphoria. For the Warriors. For Curry.

“This is what you work all year for all summer, all offseason,” Curry said. “We’re not guaranteed a series yet, but these nights make everything worth it because you feel the anxiety of having to perform when the lights are bright, a do-or-die game.

“The last two days of preparation trying to get our game plan right and got us really locked in on the moment so . . . considering how our season has gone, and all the injuries and all that, for us to play the way we did tonight was special.”

Curry did a walk-off interview with Amazon Prime, another with Prime’s studio panel and a third with local and national reporters. Nearly 24 minutes total. He seemed to enjoy it.

Should Steph have come back? His 36-minute closing argument was a resounding yes.

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Warriors vs. Clippers player grades: Steph Curry and Draymond Green turn back the clock

Steph Curry and Draymond Green hugging on the court.
Inglewood, CA - April 15: Guard Stephen Curry, left, hugs forward Draymond Green #23 of the Golden State Warriors after defeating the LA Clippers 126-121 to win a NBA play-in tournament basketball game at Intuit Dome in Inglewood on Wednesday, April 15, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

Well, they did it. The Golden State Warriors saved their best for last, ending a three-month run of uninteresting play, and emerging from their first play-in tournament game with one of their most entertaining games of the season.

More importantly, they emerged with a win. The Warriors ended the season leaking oil, and faced off in the first round of the play-in tournament against an LA Clippers team that had some tangible momentum. On top of that, the game was in Los Angeles.

No matter. The Warriors used multiple double-digit comebacks — including one in the fourth quarter — to beat the Clippers 126-121, and advance to the second round of the play-in tournament, where a spot in the NBA Playoffs will be on the line.

That’s a worry for another day, though. Friday, specifically. For today, we judge the players who took the court and pulled off the epic victory. And to do that, we assign grades. As always, grades are based on my expectations for each player, with a “B” grade representing the average performance for that player.

Note: True-shooting percentage (TS) is a scoring efficiency metric that accounts for threes and free throws. This year, league-average TS was 58.1%.

Gui Santos

32 minutes, 20 points, 6 rebounds, 5 assists, 1 steal, 5 turnovers, 2 fouls, 9-for-13 shooting, 2-for-4 threes, 76.9% TS, +16

We saw a lot of the good and the bad with Santos in this game. There was a reason he got the start, and there was a reason he was the lone player to get subbed out of the game less than three minutes in, with the Warriors already down double digits. There was a reason he came back in not long after that. He had the most turnovers on the team, but also the best plus/minus. He had some of the biggest, most clutch shots, and some of the most back-breaking turnovers.

And yet, as is almost always the case with Santos, the good far outweighed the bad, and it’s hard — virtually impossible — to envision the Warriors winning the game without his contributions.

If you’re frustrated by the difficult moments, just remember that Santos is a 23-year old who entered this year having played in just 79 NBA games … and averaging just 12.1 minutes in those games. This is his first year with a significant role in the NBA. There will be bumps, and times where the game moves a little too fast for him.

But the good was mesmerizing. His footwork broke down Clippers defenders time and time again. His cuts were perfectly timed. And he created chaos with his defense and rebounding. It’s easy to see why Steve Kerr loves him.

He probably gets a B+ if this is a regular season game. But it wasn’t.

Grade: A-
Post-game bonus: Best plus/minus on the team.

Draymond Green

35 minutes, 7 points, 6 rebounds, 9 assists, 4 steals, 3 turnovers, 2 fouls, 3-for-5 shooting, 1-for-3 threes, 70.0% TS, 0 +/-

On Tuesday, I wrote an article listing a few ways that the Warriors could pull off the upset. Here’s a snippet from that article:

The Klaw has scored 40 or more points on five occasions this season, and the Clippers have amassed five blowout victories in those games. He’s been held to 20 points or fewer just seven times, and LA has gone a lowly 1-6 in those contests, including an October loss to the Warriors.

If there’s one thing the Warriors should be focused on, it’s limiting Leonard. And if there’s one person who is up for that job, it’s Draymond Green.

Kawhi Leonard entered the fourth quarter with 19 points. And he was stuck on that number until the final seconds, when he finally made a layup, but only because the Warriors were playing no-threes defense. Those were his only points of the quarter.

He was utterly and entirely shut down by Green in the quarter (and really all game … almost all of Leonard’s damage came against other defenders). It was, quite simply, one of the best individual defensive performances in the NBA this season. And as he so often does, Green turned it on when it mattered most. Not only was his fourth quarter truly special, but Dray forced not one, but two turnovers by Leonard in the final minute, when the game was still very much up for grabs. For as special as Steph Curry’s offense was, Green’s defense was equally memorable.

Grade: A+
Post-game bonus: Led the team in assists.

Kristaps Porziņģis

28 minutes, 20 points, 5 rebounds, 5 assists, 1 steal, 2 blocks, 1 turnover, 1 foul, 8-for-12 shooting, 3-for-6 threes, 1-for-3 free throws, 75.1% TS, -4

There are a lot of questions that the Warriors have to ask about Porziņģis when the offseason starts, which it notably did not due on Wednesday. The two biggest ones are: how healthy can he be going forward, and how much money will he command in free agency?

But, critically, there are also a few questions that the Warriors don’t have to ask about Porziņģis. Namely: how good is he, and how well does he fit on the team?

Porziņģis looked like his All-Star self in this game. He had numerous highlight defensive plays, single-handedly ending multiple Clippers possessions that looked like easy buckets. He was a walking bucket, scoring from all over the court, largely within the system but also taking matters into his own hands when it was needed. And he had some passes that made your eyes pop wide open.

It was a complete — and completely excellent — performance. And it left no doubt as to whether or not the Warriors will make re-signing Porziņģis a priority this coming offseason.

Grade: A+

Brandin Podziemski

41 minutes, 17 points, 7 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 steal, 1 block, 4 turnovers, 2 fouls, 5-for-11 shooting, 2-for-7 threes, 5-for-8 free throws, 58.5% TS, +10

Don’t let the ridiculous narratives surrounding the Warriors and their (lack of) two timelines keep you from appreciating what’s in front of your face. Podziemski and Santos were a reminder that the Warriors young players can be the perfect complements to the Hall of Fame-bound core.

Podz did a little bit of everything in this game. His defense and the way he free safetied himself towards every loose ball were game changers. He drew multiple charges late (and took his fair share of damage in the process), and was tied with Leonard for the second-most rebounds of any player in the game.

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before, but Podziemski’s offense was also more efficient than it looks on paper, as a good chunk of his shots were late in the clock when he had to force something up.

But the biggest thing that Podz did was keep the energy level dialed up. He started the game with endless energy. When the Warriors fell behind by double digits in the first quarter, he maintained that endless energy. When they fell behind by double digits in the third quarter, he maintained that endless energy. When they fell behind by double digits in the fourth quarter, he maintained that endless energy.

And it all played out with one of the biggest shots of the night, when he took a Green steal inside the final minute, and turned it into a beat-everyone-down-the-court transition and-one layup.

Grade: A
Post-game bonus: Led the team in rebounds.

Steph Curry

36 minutes, 35 points, 1 rebound, 4 assists, 1 steal, 3 turnovers, 4 fouls, 12-for-23 shooting, 7-for-12 threes, 4-for-5 free throws, 69.4% TS, +9

I have no words. I really just have no words. Curry was the best player on the court, and if you want to know why they won — and why they’ll have a good chance on Friday — look no further than that point right there.

Curry took his time to get going. He had just three points in the first quarter, and an inefficient eight points in the first half. But the world was his (and Draymond’s) in the second half, and we were all just living in it. The Clippers very much included.

Steph had 16 third-quarter points, and he was just getting started. It was big shot after big shot after big shot, each bucket seeming to give the Warriors a lifeline when they were on the verge of losing. His biggest shot? A 29-foot step-back three that broke a tie with just 50 seconds remaining. In total, the Warriors — who won by five points — outscored the Clippers by 15 in the fourth quarter minutes that Curry played.

Curry didn’t just lead the Warriors to victory on Wednesday. He reminded you that, even in what has been a miserable season, there are 30 reasons to be happy that the season lives to see another game.

Grade: A+
Post-game bonus: Led the team in points.

Gary Payton II

24 minutes, 6 points, 3 rebounds, 1 assist, 2 steals, 2 fouls, 2-for-4 shooting, 2-for-3 free throws, 56.4% TS, +8

Payton was more impactful than his numbers would suggest. He helped Golden State’s defense swarm the perimeter, which forced LA into countless chaotic offensive possessions. And he sure made the most out the points that he did score.

GPII is another one of those players who feels more important the bigger the game is. He can change a game with his defense, and he’s never going to make the mistakes the give the game away.

Grade: A-

De’Anthony Melton

23 minutes, 7 points, 5 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 steals, 2 turnovers, 4 fouls, 3-for-7 shooting, 0-for-2 threes, 1-for-2 free throws, 47.0% TS, -7

Not Melton’s best game, but with Curry playing as well as he did, the Warriors didn’t really need it to be Melton’s best game. The important thing is that he kept the team afloat, and kept the offense moving when Curry was on the bench. The Dubs don’t fall apart when Curry is resting, and Melton is the biggest reason why.

Grade: C+
Post-game bonus: Tied for the worst plus/minus on the team.

Al Horford

22 minutes, 14 points, 3 rebounds, 2 turnovers, 2 fouls, 5-for-8 shooting, 4-for-7 threes, 87.5% TS, -7

I don’t know if Horford will be back next year or not. He has a player option for $6 million which the Warriors would likely be thrilled if he opted into, but perhaps retirement — or free agency — will come calling.

Either way, this is a game that will cement his legacy with the team, because it really was an unforgettable performance. Just past the midway point in the fourth quarter, with the Clippers slipping away, Horford made threes on three consecutive possessions to pull the Warriors back to within two points. He added another three a few possessions later, giving Golden State their first lead of the quarter with 2:12 remaining. And then he buckled in and played outstanding defense for the final minutes.

You can say this about a lot of players, but the Warriors don’t win on Wednesday if not for Horford. We won’t forget that performance anytime soon.

Grade: A+
Post-game bonus: Tied for the worst plus/minus on the team.

Wednesday’s DNP-CDs: Charles Bassey, Seth Curry, Will Richard, Pat Spencer

Wednesday’s inactives: Jimmy Butler III, Moses Moody, Quinten Post

Andy Simpson, the unluckiest England rugby player in history, finally gets his Test cap

Longsuffering hooker, who warmed bench for 21 Tests and lost part of a thumb, is getting RFU recognition at last

Initially, Andy Simpson thought it was a Saturday morning wind-up. Someone from the Rugby Football Union museum was phoning to tell him that, at the age of 71, he was finally a capped England player. Given he had retired without featuring in an officially recognised Test – “the first thing you think is: ‘Who’s taking the mickey here?’” – his scepticism was understandable.

But no, it was totally legit. Simpson is among 47 former players now basking in a warm, rosy glow that had previously eluded them. Having trawled through its archives, the RFU has deemed that several fixtures against full-strength national teams – including a 1986 contest between Italy and an England B side containing Simpson – were effectively Test matches. The long wait is over and the golden oldie debutants have been invited to attend a special, if belated, capping ceremony on 8 June.

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Golden Knights Capture Pacific Division Title After 4-1 Beatdown Over Kraken

The Vegas Golden Knights are the champions of what might be the most anticlimactic race of all time. With a 4-1 victory over the Seattle Kraken on Wednesday, they clinched their fifth Pacific Division title in franchise history.

Connor McDavid’s words were truth disguised as jest– this year, teams in the Pacific Division have done nothing but squander opportunities to pull ahead in the race to claim the division title. It took until day 190 of the NHL season for a team to pull ahead and stake its claim on the Pillow Fight Division title.

“We were on top there for a while, for a lot of the season,” said Golden Knights defenseman Brayden McNabb. “Then we’re in third, flirting with a wildcard. We found our game at the right time and won the division. That’s what we wanted to do, and we did it.”

For the first 30 minutes of play, it didn’t look like the Golden Knights were particularly interested in winning said division. It took them nearly nine minutes to record their first shot on goal; the Kraken recorded nine shots before Vegas managed two. But after an encouraging power play opportunity, Seattle only outshot the Golden Knights 11-6 at the end of the first period.

But despite being thoroughly outshot– and arguably outplayed– the Golden Knights entered the second period with a clean slate and a 0-0 tie.

Both teams recorded nine shots on goal in the second period, and the Golden Knights generated three high-danger scoring chances against Seattle’s two.

The Kraken broke the ice 2:24 into the second period. Carter Hart kicked out Jamie Oleksiak’s blast from the point, and Jani Nyman beat Jeremy Lauzon to the puck. Nyman found Shane Wright all alone in front of the net, and Wright fired it home.

The Golden Knights netted the equalizer at 17:35 in the second. Nic Dowd won the offensive zone draw, and Shea Theodore beat Nikke Kokko with a shot through Reilly Smith’s screen.

Finally, the ice opened up in the third period. The Golden Knights outshot the Kraken 12-4 and controlled 91.39% of the expected goal share. They also generated nine high-danger scoring chances while not allowing Seattle to manage a single one.

The Golden Knights took their first lead of the night just 1:23 into the third period off another face-off play. Jack Eichel won the offensive zone draw back to Brayden McNabb, who walked the line and fired a shot on goal. As McNabb’s shot came through, Mitch Marner redirected it home from the slot.

The Golden Knights extended their lead at 12:01 in the third. Jack Eichel capitalized on a blown coverage in the offensive zone and set up a two-on-one. Rasmus Anderson got the pass across for Reilly Smith, who slammed a fluttering puck into the empty net.

The Golden Knights added another on a delayed penalty at 16:36. Tomáš Hertl fired a shot on goal; Kaedan Korczak, who was parked atop the crease, whacked at the rebound. The puck came loose, and Reilly Smith banged in his second of the night from the goal line.

Nothing this year has been easy for the Golden Knights, and this game was no different.

“We just slowly went about our business and finally found our game,” said head coach John Tortorella following the 4-1 win. “You’d almost want to play one of those before the playoffs, if you knew the result was going to be a win– they don’t like being in it when it’s going on. But give our guys a lot of credit, they stayed with it and just kept on playing. They’ve grabbed hold of it. We have found some consistency, and they feel more and more comfortable with it.”

Three Takeaways of the Knight

1. Despite playing without much intensity in the first period, the Golden Knights entered the first intermission tied at zero. Despite having nothing to play for, the Kraken took advantage of Vegas’ uninspired play and shelled Carter Hart in the first period. Shea Theodore raved about his goaltender postgame:

“He’s been great,” Theodore said following the 4-1 win. “He’s been so solid. I think we’ve given up too many chances, but he’s been big back there. He’s been a backbone ever since he came back.”

2. The team is fully bought in right now, and no one embodies that more than Reilly Smith. He’s been in and out of the lineup for a chunk of the season, but he’s never let that affect his work ethic or attitude around the locker room.

“We have high expectations, and we try to live that every day,” said Smith after his two-goal performance. “Through the organization, the players, everyone, tries to live up to that level. Every day we’re at the rink, we don’t accept losing, and I think the last couple of weeks are a good testament to that.”

3. And with that, the 2026 regular season comes to a close for the Vegas Golden Knights. They’ll kick off the postseason this weekend at home against the Utah Mammoth.

When asked if he had any early thoughts about their playoff opponent, John Tortorella simply replied:

“Nope.”

That’s all, folks! 

NBA Play-In Tournament winners, losers: Steph Curry shows he's still great

The first round of the NBA Play-In Tournament is a wrap, which means the playoff field is nearly set.

We now know who the No. 7 seeds will be in both the Eastern and Western Conferences: the Philadelphia 76ers and Portland Trail Blazers, respectively.

Now, the final two games of the Play-In, which will be Friday, April 17, will determine the No. 8 seeds. The Orlando Magic will host the Charlotte Hornets in the East, and the Phoenix Suns will host the Golden State Warriors out West.

But first, we have the chance to make sense of the first round.

Here are the winners and losers of the NBA Play-In Tournament, thus far:

WINNERS

Stephen Curry makes his case for the future

Even if the Warriors happen to upset the Suns Friday, they won’t go far in the playoffs. For one, their opponent would be the defending-champion Thunder. For another, this roster has too many injuries and too many holes.

But Curry’s heroics in Golden State’s thrilling victory over the Clippers, his 35 points and 7 made 3-pointers, sent a message to the team’s front office. More specifically, it sent a message to general manager Mike Dunleavy, that he needs to be aggressive and reshape this roster for one last run. Curry, though, will need some help. The team needs more shooting. It won’t happen this year, but Curry showed that he’s still capable of greatness.

The Oklahoma City Thunder

They did not play but ended up winning, anyway. The Thunder own the unprotected 2026 first-round pick that belonged to the Clippers, the last remaining piece of the trade that sent Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to Oklahoma City.

Anyway, with Golden State’s victory over the Clippers, that pick is now a lottery selection, one with a 7.1% chance of becoming a Top 4 pick. The rich get richer.

Draymond Green

His defense on Kawhi Leonard was a masterclass in persistence and tenacity. Add those two big steals late in the game to an already iconic highlight reel.

The upstart Charlotte Hornets

Since the All-Star break, only the Spurs have a better offensive rating (121.8) and net rating (11.1) than the Hornets. San Antonio is a legitimate contender for a title. The Hornets still have to beat the Magic Friday to become the No. 8 seed — and to have the privilege of facing the No. 1 Detroit Pistons in the first round.

Either way, this is a massive moment for Charlotte, which earned its first postseason victory in nearly 10 years. One of the opposing players in the last Hornets victory April 27, 2016 was Amar’e Stoudemire … who was with the Heat. The Hornets play fast and shoot the ball extremely well. They’ve proven resilient. They’re also young and a fun watch and may be maturing in real time.

Tiago Splitter

The morning after the Trail Blazers played their season-opening game, Tiago Splitter awoke to his phone buzzing with texts and calls that his boss, Portland head coach Chauncey Billups, had been arrested for his alleged role in an illegal gambling ring.

All Splitter has done as the interim is turn the Blazers into a balanced, fluid offense and a pesky team. Turnovers are still an issue, but the best sign that Portland could be on the come up is that the players — both young and veteran — have developed over the course of the season.

LOSERS

Jamahl Mosley and Paolo Banchero

The Magic feel like a team headed for a disruptive offseason. They’ve underwhelmed this season and Paolo Banchero has regressed somewhat; he often runs through his offensive actions as if overthinking or lacking confidence. His 7-of-22 night against the 76ers, including 0-of-5 from 3-point range, pointed to the inefficiency with which he has played this season.

Had the Magic won their season finale against the Celtics, who rested their top seven rotation players, they would’ve hosted the 76ers in the Play-In. Instead, Orlando lost and now faces a tough Hornets team. It all spells trouble for coach Jamahl Mosley, whose job may be tenuous, given the team’s lack of cohesion.

The Los Angeles Clippers

Now that their season is officially over, it stands reason to believe that the NBA-backed investigation into alleged salary cap circumvention during Kawhi Leonard’s acquisition will wrap up without hindrance. Los Angeles could find itself in a precarious situation, depending on the severity of any potential discipline, and it could get even worse.

The pick Indiana sent to Los Angeles as part of the Ivica Zubac-Bennedict Mathurin trade only conveys to the Clippers if it falls between Nos. 5-9; the Pacers have a 52.1% chance to get a Top 4 selection.

Erik Spoelstra and the Miami Heat

This team prides itself on competing every season and believing they can make a run deep into the postseason. But after four consecutive Play-In appearances, and after getting bounced Tuesday by the Hornets, it’s time for some introspection in Miami.

This roster isn’t balanced enough to threaten in the East. Miami may have solid stretches, but it simply lacks consistency. What’s worse is that coach Erik Spoelstra lacked trust in his rotations, tweaking them until the very end. Granted, the Heat faced injuries, but Spoelstra struggled to find combinations that worked with both Bam Adebayo and Kel’el Ware on the floor, just like he miscalculated the defensive shortcomings of a Tyler Herro-Norman Powell backcourt. Miami is stuck in purgatory, and this stale roster needs an overhaul.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Steph Curry highlights NBA Play-In Tournament winners and losers

Stephen Curry finds his magic one more time, lifts Warriors past Clippers in play-in

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — At the start of the fourth quarter, in 2:33 without Stephen Curry or Kawhi Leonard on the court, the Clippers were +4, stretching their lead over the Warriors to as much as 13.

It didn't feel like enough — Stephen Curry was starting to heat up.

It wasn't.

Curry scored 27 of his 35 points in the second half — hitting 5-of-7 from deep — despite clearly being bothered by his troublesome right knee. It sparked a fourth-quarter double-digit comeback win by the Warriors, 126-121 in a dramatic play-in game.

"Everybody out there who thought Steph should have taken the rest of the year off, this is what he does," coach Steve Kerr said, pounding the table. "This is who he is."

With this win, the Warriors advance and will travel to Phoenix on Friday for a win-and-you 're-in final play-in game. The Clippers' season has come to an early and unceremonious end, despite an impressive second half of the season.

It wasn't just Curry who lifted the Warriors. Al Horford turned back the clock in the fourth quarter and went 4-of-4 from beyond the arc in the frame. Draymond Green had a strong defensive night against Kawhi Leonard, including a clutch steal near half court to help seal the win. The Warriors got 20-point games from Gui Santons (on 9-of-13 shooting) and Kristaps Porzingis (8-of-12).
"I just told [the team], with all the wins we've ever had here, a lot of them there was a lot more at stake, this is right up there," Kerr said. "Just because, where we are and our age and the decline of our performance this year, and the injuries, it was just a display of just a beautiful display of competitive will.

A big part of what the Warriors did was keep Leonard in check. He finished with 21 points on 8-of-17 shooting, but was just 2-of-6 with Green as the primary defender. More than just Green, the Warriors brought early doubles when Leonard started to face up and make his move. This stat sums up the Clippers' night: In the first half, LA was +16 in Leonard's 20 minutes, but -8 in the four minutes he sat. For the Game, Leonard was +7.

Bennedict Mathurin led the Clippers with 23 points off the bench, including 5-of-6 from 3-point range. Darius Garland finished with 21 points but battled foul trouble most of the night.

The Clippers now head into the postseason with a cloud hanging over them in the form of the league investigation into Leonard and the franchise's dealings with former team sponsor Aspiration. There is speculation around the league about the future of Leonard with the Clippers, a team that traded away James Harden and Ivica Zubac during the season.

The day will come when the Warriors need to answer questions about their future, but for now the only future that matters to them is Friday night in Phoenix and a chance to get back into the playoffs.

"We've had a really difficult season in many ways, and we're looking at it like the free swing," Kerr said of the play-in before the game. "If we can go get a win tonight, get another crack at it Friday, and we're in the tournament, and then you got a chance, and that's all, that's all you really want."

Frustrated Mets searching for answers as losing streak reaches eight games

The Mets' losing streak has hit eight games after their 8-2 loss to the Dodgers on Wednesday night.

It was a game filled with the offensive outage that has plagued this team for over a week now, a bullpen implosion and miscues in the field and basepaths that have become daily for this squad after the first 19 games of the season. All of that has led manager Carlos Mendoza, visibly upset, to state the obvious about his team after another lackluster defeat.

"We’re not playing good baseball right now," Mendoza said. "Everybody’s frustrated. We gotta use the off day tomorrow to regroup and get back at it because we gotta get going here. It’s not a good showing right now."

The Mets scored just two runs on five hits -- the second run coming in the ninth inning after the game was well in hand -- on Wednesday night. In the three-game series, New York scored just three runs and collected 12 hits. The Dodgers had 12 hits in Wednesday's game alone.

"I don’t really wrap my mind around it. It’s tough right now," Bo Bichette said of the team's losing streak after the game. "If we knew the answer, we’d do it. But we’ll keep working to try and figure it out."

Bichette, the biggest free agent signing on the offensive side this offseason, went 1-for-4 with a run scored in the series finale. He was just 2-for-11 in the series and is now batting .228 in the early going. But it's not just Bichette. With Juan Soto out with a calf injury, the Mets have simply not been able to get consistent offense.

During the eight-game losing streak, the Mets have scored just 12 runs. They've pushed across more than two runs just once in that span and have been shut out three times. It's something that no one who spoke after Wednesday's loss could understand, let alone explain.

"Guys just have to start playing better. It’s as simple as that," Mendoza said. "They’re too talented. But right now we’re not seeing anything on the field. It has nothing to do with preparation or the work they’re putting in. We just have to go out there and do it."

"I mean, it’s surprising, but you go through these things," Bichette said. "This is a bit extreme, probably, but it doesn’t help facing two of the best in the game the last two days. We could be swinging the bat well and running into [Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Shohei Ohtani], it’s like running into a buzzsaw. ...I don’t really got much to say other than I can’t explain it and will keep working on it to figure it out."

Clay Holmes, who held the Dodgers lineup to just two runs over five innings on Wednesday, repeatedly said that no one is pointing fingers in the clubhouse and that they all have their part to play in the losing streak. 

"It’s baseball. If we had an answer, we definitely don’t want to be in this spot," Holmes said. "It’s one of those things you go in those stretches where it’s tough. There’s no pointing fingers. Everyone has to take it upon themself to help the team win."

Holmes shared his optimism with the reporters in the clubhouse. When asked what makes him confident that the Mets will turn things around, he said that the players' history of playing well is there.

"What people have done in the past is way better than what we’ve done here," Holmes said. "Can’t just look at the last couple of games and that defines us. These stretches, there’s a history and a future where we know where we can go."

Speaking on the offense specifically, Mendoza explained what is frustrating him the most during this stretch.

"We’re not dictating at-bats," he said. "Getting beat by fastballs even though there was some good fastballs byOhtani today, we swung through a lot of them today. We have to be able to put pressure and be in attack mode. Right now, understanding what guys are going through is contagious. At the same time, nobody is feeling sorry for us. We got to be able to dictate at-bats."

Bichette, who acknowledged that the players are upset by what's going on, echoed what Francisco Lindor said after Tuesday's loss about the offense being more competitive, and perhaps they can use it as a springboard to get back in the win column.

"Last couple of games, we competed a lot better," Bichette said. "At the end of the day, the mindset is to compete, I don’t care what the at-bats look like as long as we’re in there fighting. Two great pitchers that beat us. Obviously, we got to be better. But the commonality is two great pitchers."

The Mets will get a reprieve before starting a three-game series against the Cubs in Chicago on Friday afternoon. New York has played nine straight games and the off day could do the team good. 

But make no mistake, the Mets are not happy with how the early season has gone, and that's exactly what the Mets skipper wants to see.

"They’re pissed. Frustrated. Not happy about it," Mendoza said of the mood of the team. "I want them to be pissed." 

Chris Paul mocks Clippers with meme after their play-in loss to Warriors

Chris Paul’s return to the L.A. Clippers didn't go the way he expected. He shared his reaction after his former team's disappointing performance in the NBA Play-In Tournament on Wednesday, April 15.

The Clippers parted ways with the 40-year-old guard in December 2025, but Paul clearly has kept his eyes on the team in the months that followed.

He shared a well-known meme of a man dressed for a funeral, in the moments following the Clippers' season-ending 126-121 loss to the Golden State Warriors on April 15.

Paul was officially traded to the Toronto Raptors as part of a three-team trade on Feb. 5. He was waived by the Raptors and retired on Feb. 13. The 12-time All-Star spent 21 years in the NBA, including parts of seven seasons with the Clippers.

He averaged 2.9 points, 3.3 assists and 1.8 rebounds per game in 16 games played this season.

The Clippers finished third in the Pacific Division after closing out the regular season with a 42-40 record.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Chris Paul reacts to Clippers' loss to Warriors in NBA Play-In game

Fantasy Baseball Closer Report: Brewers turn to Abner Uribe, Kenley Jansen moves to third in all-time saves

In this week's Closer Report, the Brewers are moving off of Trevor Megill in the ninth inning and giving Abner Uribe a chance to close out games. Meanwhile, other closers could be on the hot seat as many struggled on the mound, including Jeff Hoffman, who blew his third save in five chances. Let's dive in as we cover the last week in saves around baseball with an updated closer rankings.

⚾️ Baseball is back! MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

2026 Fantasy Baseball Closer Rankings

▶ Tier 1

Mason Miller - San Diego Padres
Jhoan Duran - Philadelphia Phillies
Andrés Muñoz - Seattle Mariners
Edwin Díaz - Los Angeles Dodgers
Ryan Helsley - Baltimore Orioles

Miller struck out the side on back-to-back days against the Rockies last week, picking up a win on Friday. He then tossed a scoreless inning with one strikeout on Tuesday for his fifth save of the season. It was the first outing in which he did not record multiple strikeouts. Must have been an off night. The 27-year-old right-hander has retired 20 of the 27 batters he has faced for a 74.1% strikeout rate. For reference, Devin Williams holds the highest strikeout rate in a single season at 53% percent during the abbreviated 2020 season.

Duran has been lights out and the easy number two closer through three weeks. He struck out one batter in a clean inning against the Diamondbacks on Saturday for his fifth save. Duran has yet to walk a batter this season while generating an 18.8% swinging-strike rate and a 62.5% ground ball rate. Duran and Miller probably deserve to be in a tier of their own, as they've been the true dominant top closers so far, but we have to keep in mind we're still only three weeks into the season. There's a long way to go.

After not walking any batters across his first four outings, Muñoz worked around a pair of walks in his first two appearances this week, picking up his first save before falling in line for a win against the Astros. But Wednesday night was one to forget. Muñoz came in with a four-run lead in the ninth, a non-save situation, and gave up three runs on four hits and a walk before he was relieved with two outs. The two runners he left on would come in to score, leaving Muñoz with the loss. The 27-year-old right-hander will likely put this one behind him, and there are still very few closers I'd feel better about, but the five earned runs in a non-save outing are tough.

It was a weird week for Díaz as the Dodgers sent mixed signals around his status following his three-run blown save on Friday against the Rangers. There was concern regarding his reduced velocity in the early going, averaging 95.5 mph on the fastball. Díaz stated he felt fine and has generally been a slow starter. Through the first month of 2025, he averaged 96.3 mph. By May, he was throwing 97, and only increased as the season progressed. The team wanted to see Díaz throw a bullpen session before Tuesday's game against the Mets, making him unavailable for the save chance. It was Alex Vesia closing it out by striking out the side to end the game. After, manager Dave Roberts said Díaz checked out fine after the bullpen and should be good to go. Díaz was in fact warming up for the ninth on Wednesday before the Dodgers extended their lead to seven runs in the eighth.

The bounce-back season for Helsley appears to be in effect, as he has been outstanding in the early going. He made three scoreless appearances this week, picking up his fifth save against the Diamondbacks on Monday. He's allowed two runs with an 11/4 K/BB ratio across 7 1/3 innings.

▶ Tier 2

Cade Smith - Cleveland Guardians
Devin Williams - New York Mets
Daniel Palencia - Chicago Cubs
Raisel Iglesias - Atlanta Braves
David Bednar - New York Yankees
Aroldis Chapman - Boston Red Sox

It hasn't been the smoothest start for Smith. After a scoreless appearance on Monday, he gave up one unearned run and was charged with a blown save against the Cardinals. He holds a 5.00 ERA while going 3-for-5 in save chances, but an 11/3 K/BB ratio and solid underlying skills suggest he'll settle in. Still, his lack of track record in the ninth inning, combined with his slow start, doesn't make fantasy managers comfortable early on after taking him as a top-five closer, sometimes as high as top-three.

Williams hadn't made an appearance in a week before taking the mound down by two runs in the eighth inning against the Dodgers on Wednesday. These non-save situations after a long layoff could tend to end poorly, as it did for Williams. He gave up four runs on a grand slam and only recorded one out. All you can do is hold steady and practice patience. The same can be said for Palencia, who still has only one save on the year across five scoreless innings. He did pick up a win against the Pirates on Sunday.

Iglesias has silenced any preseason skeptics so far, tossing 6 2/3 scoreless innings with a 7/0 K/BB ratio, generating an impressive 17.2% swinging-strike rate. He struck out two in a scoreless inning against the Marlins on Tuesday for his third save of the season.

Bednar's velocity is another one to watch. He's made just one clean appearance while giving up one run in four of his seven outings. Bednar was charged with a blown save and a loss on Saturday against the Rays. He's averaged 95.8 mph on the fastball so far, down from 97.1 mph. Unlike Díaz, Bednar's velocity was flat across the entire 2025 season, starting and ending at 97 mph.

Chapman's velocity was also down a tick early on. He had just three strikeouts over his first five innings of work. That was until Tuesday, when he sat 98.9 mph and struck out the side in a scoreless inning against the Twins.

▶ Tier 3

Riley O'Brien - St. Louis Cardinals
Jeff Hoffman - Toronto Blue Jays
Kenley Jansen - Detroit Tigers
Paul Sewald - Arizona Diamondbacks
Emilio Pagán - Cincinnati Reds
Abner Uribe - Milwaukee Brewers
Seranthony Domínguez - Chicago White Sox
Pete Fairbanks - Miami Marlins

O'Brien continued his strong start to the season, picking up two saves and a win. The 31-year-old right-hander has emerged as a reliable save source, tossing 10 1/3 scoreless innings with an 11/0 K/BB ratio with five saves. He's generated an incredible 73.9% ground ball rate to go with the zero walks. That'll work. I'm buying into this start for O'Brien.

This is where things get tough. Hoffman hasn't had the best results, but the strikeout skills have been outstanding. He's accumulated 18 strikeouts on a 23.1% swinging-strike rate. The problem has been a higher walk rate and an incredibly unlucky .529 BABIP. It's led to three blown saves in five chances. Hoffman should get the opportunity to see his fortunes turn in the ninth inning, but if the team wanted to give him a break from closing, Louis Varland would be next in line. He hasn't allowed an earned run over 10 1/3 innings while striking out 15 batters to just three walks.

Jansen worked four scoreless appearances this week, picking up three saves to give him 480 for his career, moving him ahead of Lee Smith for third all-time. He's off to a good start with the Tigers, striking out seven with one run allowed over 4 2/3 innings. Jansen was sure to get every save chance until he moved ahead in the history books. It seems manager A.J. Hinch will be content keeping Jansen in the ninth, where he's comfortable, even after surpassing Lee.

Sewald had a big week on the mound, locking down three saves for the Diamondbacks. The 35-year-old right-hander is up to six saves with a 2.45 ERA, 0.55 WHIP, and a 10/0 K/BB ratio across 7 1/3 innings. He's doing it without conventional closer stuff, with a 91.7 mph fastball. It's a profile that typically comes with volatility, though excellent control does help. You have to love the value and continue taking his production as long as he's effective.

Pagán worked two scoreless outings, making that six scoreless since his four-run appearance on April 1. Yet, he still carries a 4.82 ERA. He locked down his fifth save with a clean inning against the Giants on Tuesday. Pagán seemed to hobble off the mound following his final pitch in that game. He reportedly felt his hamstring tighten up, but played catch with no issues on Wednesday, adding that he "dodged a bullet". Still, it could be something to monitor over his next few outings. If Pagán were to reaggravate the hamstring issue, Tony Santillan would stand to see some save chances.

Trevor Megill surrendered four runs and failed to record an out against the Nationals on Friday. He then got a save chance against the Blue Jays on Tuesday and gave up three more runs. With that, manager Pat Murphy stated the team will need to move from Megill in the ninth for the time being. The team saw another save chance on Wednesday, and it was Uribe who got the nod. He struck out one in a clean inning to come away with his first save. Uribe hasn't been off to the best start himself, but has the most upside after posting a 1.67 ERA and 90 strikeouts over 75 1/3 innings last season, ending the year with seven saves, filling in for an injured Megill. If Uribe is available, he should be a priority add for any teams looking for saves.

Domínguez worked two save chances this week, converting both while striking out two batters each time out. He's yet to work a clean outing, giving up two runs and four hits with a 7/4 K/BB ratio across 5 2/3 innings. That'll be the Domíguez experience all season as he generally runs high walk rates. But he has a decent leash on the closer role as long as he's getting the job done.

Fairbanks made his first appearance since taking a few days off on the paternity list. He had given up three runs as the opener the last time out, then gave up another three runs in the eighth inning against the Braves on Tuesday to get charged with a blown save and a loss.

▶ Tier 4

Lucas Erceg - Kansas City Royals
Bryan Baker - Tampa Bay Rays
Jakob Junis - Texas Rangers
Jordan Romano - Los Angeles Angels
Ryan Walker/Keaton Winn - San Francisco Giants
Dennis Santana/Gregory Soto - Pittsburgh Pirates
Bryan King/Bryan Abreu/Enyel De Los Santos - Houston Astros

Erceg worked two clean innings this week to convert a pair of saves. He's up to five since stepping in for Carlos Estévez. It's come with just a 4/2 K/BB ratio across 6 2/3 innings and a 4.1% swinging-strike rate. That's not exactly shutdown stuff.

Baker worked around two hits to convert a save against the Yankees on Friday, then surrendered the lead in the eighth with two runs allowed on Saturday. He then stepped in for the final out against the White Sox on Tuesday for his third save. Baker continues to be the preferred option in the ninth for the Rays, but Edwin Uceta could factor into the mix once he's activated from the injured list.

Junis emerged from the Rangers' situation last week with a pair of saves, then converted his third against the Dodgers on Sunday. He's another one that I don't really trust to hold the job all year with his current skillset, but he's the current go-to option for manager Skip Schumaker.

Any one of these relievers could have a week like Romano just had, which brings their role into question. Romano blew two save chances against the Yankees over the last three days, giving up five total runs. He's still likely to see the next save chance, but you have to wonder if Kirby Yates will be given a shot to claim the job once he's ready to be activated.

The Giants have still only had one traditional save chance on the season, converted by Walker on March 30. Since then, he's made his last four appearances before the ninth inning with mixed results. Meanwhile, Winn has impressed with a 32% strikeout rate behind an 18.2% swinging-strike rate. The next ninth-inning save chance should be telling.

Santana picked up two saves this week. He's yet to allow a run over nine innings, but it's come with an uninspiring 6/4 K/BB ratio. Soto, meanwhile, has collected 15 strikeouts over 9 2/3 innings of work and should remain in the mix for matchup-based save chances against a lefty-heavy lineup.

As Bryan Abreu works some middle relief as he figures things out, King got the chance to close out the game against the Rockies on Tuesday. Though he was asked to record five outs when he entered the game with two runners on and one out in the eighth. He got out of the jam and returned for the ninth before letting two runners on with two outs. De Los Santos then recorded the final out for the save. After a taxing day for King, De Los Santos got the ninth inning again on Wednesday and converted his second save, with Abreu recording four outs as the setup man in what was his best outing of the season. It seems this will be a committee until either Abreu returns to form or Josh Hader returns from the injured list, set for sometime in May.

▶ Tier 5

Cole Sands/Taylor Rogers/Justin Topa - Minnesota Twins
Victor Vodnik - Colorado Rockies
Clayton Beeter/Gus Varland - Washington Nationals
Hogan Harris/Mark Leiter Jr./Joel Kuhnel - Athletics

Mariners snatch defeat from jaws of victory, lose walkoff to Padres 7-6

Apr 15, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego Padres center fielder Jackson Merrill celebrates after hitting a walk-off double during the ninth inning against the Seattle Mariners at Petco Park. All MLB players are wearing number 42 today to honor Jackie Robinson. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images | Denis Poroy-Imagn Images

We’re all still trying to figure out what went wrong in a game that the Mariners were winning handily for eight innings. Emerson Hancock was brilliant, giving up just one two-run homer over six innings of work. Luke Raley had his first ever four-hit game, and made a nifty catch in the outfield to boot. The Mariners did strike out double-digits (12), but also recorded double-digit hits (10) and took seven walks. And all of it didn’t matter, because the bullpen allowed a five-run inning in the ninth and the Padres walked it off, 7-6. The Mariners have now lost seven straight games on the road. They are back to three games below .500 after getting tantalizingly close to a winning record for the first time since March 30th. The good vibes, which roared to life after a four-game sweep against the Astros, are once again on life support.

Seriously, what the heck?

Things started off so well. Emerson Hancock was again fantastic, working through the sixth inning with the only damage against him a two-run homer from the impossibly hot-hitting Xander Bogaerts (also the only Padres hitter who had homered off Hancock previously). Hancock was untouchable over the first half of his outing, no-hitting the Padres the first time through the order before giving up a base hit to Bogaerts, who had two of the four hits the Padres mustered off Hancock. Hancock owned the strike zone tonight, throwing 20 of 23 first-pitch strikes and constantly working ahead of hitters, finishing with six strikeouts to just one walk. There were a couple of those wonky sweepers that strayed too far from the zone, but he also collected three of his six strikeouts on the pitch. He pounded the bottom of the zone with the sinker and sweeper, but also successfully changed hitters’ eye levels with his four-seamer up, staying out of the meaty part of the zone. It was a stellar performance from Hancock on Jackie Robinson Day; the two happen to share a hometown (Cairo, Georgia).

That is the story that should be told about this game – that and the performance of the offense, which scored six runs for Hancock. Dominic Canzone got the Mariners on the board in the second, as the scalding-hot Randy-Raley duo got on base (Arozarena with another walk, Luke with a nice single on a changeup); Canzone then torched the hardest-hit ball the Mariners have had all season, a 114 mph laser line drive that hit the foul pole that’s in play for some reason and rolled away from a bewildered-looking Nick Castellanos.

The Mariners could have gotten more in the third – Cal Raleigh recorded hit #500, a double, and then Jackson Merrill robbed Julio of a home run over the center field wall. Payback for all the homers Julio has robbed, I guess, but it sure feels unfair, especially considering how this game ended.

But the Mariners were only temporarily discouraged. The patience the hitters showed in the Astros series returned with a vengeance in the third; Cole Young and Leo Rivas both worked two-out walks, loading the bases (Randy had led off the inning with a double). The Rivas walk was especially impressive, as Rivas challenged a strike three call on a pitch clearly inside. That set up Brendan Donovan, who got himself into a hitter-friendly 2-0 count before lacing a ball through the right side of the infield for another two runs.

Cal Raleigh also worked a walk that inning, as the Mariners pushed Padres starter Randy Vásquez to 85 pitches in the fourth. Not that the Padres bullpen is any walk in the park, but after needing to use their leverage arms last night, that set up the Mariners well – something Luke Raley took advantage of against new pitcher Ron Marinaccio in the fifth, walloping this no-doubter two-run homer (scoring Randy, once again on in scoring position thanks to a single and a stolen base, his fifth already of the year).

This would also be a nice story to tell about this game: Luke Raley, risen from the specter of injury that haunted his 2025, hitting a new career milestone, on a night when his buddy Cal Raleigh also hit a career milestone and his other new buddy Brendan Donovan knocked in two runs of his own. A real power of friendship recap.

But unfortunately, it’s not the one we can tell, because the ninth inning happened. Backing up, because again, we’re all still trying to figure out what happened here: Eduard Bazardo pitched a perfect seventh inning, and Gabe Speier handled the eighth. Dan Wilson then called for Andrés Muñoz to come in for the ninth in a non-save situation. Muñoz hasn’t looked right this year, seemingly struggling with his slider command, but has managed to scrape out of some sticky situations. There would be no scraping out tonight, unless it was the scraping out of my eyeballs with a melon baller after watching the bottom of the ninth.

To be fair to Muñoz, he suffered some bad batted-ball luck, although he didn’t help himself out by walking Manny Machado to lead off the inning. Gavin Sheets then snuck a ball past Donovan at third, putting runners on at second and third with no one out. Muñoz was able to get Nick Castellanos swinging after a slider for the first out, but then suffered more bad luck on a Baltimore chop from Ty France that Muñoz couldn’t field cleanly, loading the bases and bringing up the tying run in the form of pinch-hitter Fernando Tatís. Tatís hit a sac fly, bringing in a run.

Okay. Not ideal, but okay. Two outs, still a three-run lead, an out at any base but third, and the nine-hole hitter coming up. But despite getting Luis Campusano in an 0-2 count, Muñoz went back to the slider for a third time and hung it, allowing a hard-hit single and turning over the lineup. It wasn’t a scoring play, but in retrospect, this was probably the breaking point of this game. Ramón Laureano would then hit another single, yanking a good pitch inside for a single because that’s what Laureano does, setting up the wunderkind Jackson Merrill for a walkoff winner off new pitcher Jose Ferrer. We can heap a little fault on Ferrer, even with Muñoz taking the loss, for going to the sinker for a third straight pitch in a 2-2 count and failing to put away his lefty hitter, and maybe to Randy Arozarena for dropping the transfer on Merrill’s double, eliminating any play at the plate (merciful, some might say, the some being recap writers), but this mess was of Muñoz’s doing. It’s the worst solution to a mystery story I didn’t want to write in the first place. Here’s hoping for a happier story next time.

Warriors win wild play-in game vs. Clippers to advance to play Suns

INGLEWOOD — For one reason or another, neither team inside the Intuit Dome for the Western Conference’s bottom play-in game expected to be there.

In the end, a Warriors team decimated by injuries will get another chance at the unlikeliest of playoff berths. On the other side, a Clippers team that started the year 6-21 and surrounded by off-the-court controversy had its season come to an end Wednesday in a 126-121 loss to Golden State in a Western Conference play-in game.

Both teams understood they would have the longest of shots this postseason, but those slim odds — a chance to play meaningful basketball — are exactly what Steph Curry worked his way back from a persistent knee injury to experience again.

Curry made the most of it, with 35 points in 36 minutes. Kristaps Porzingis and Gui Santos added 20 apiece, and Golden State limited Kawhi Leonard to 21 points in 40 minutes.

The Clippers’ backcourt of Darius Garland and Benedict Mathurin torched the Warriors for a combined 44 points — a team-high 23 from Mathurin, 15 in the second half — but they allowed a double-digit fourth quarter lead to slip away into the grasp of the championship pedigree on the other side.

With four late 3s in quick succession from Al Horford, the Warriors were able to withstand 20 turnovers that turned into 35 Clippers points, seven more points left at the foul line and a series of illegal screens that wiped out more points, left coach Steve Kerr incensed and led to a technical foul on Draymond Green.

Steph Curry had with 35 points in 36 minutes. AP
Curry was held to eight points and 2-of-9 shooting in the first half, but exploded for 16 in the third quarter. NBAE via Getty Images

Green forced a pair of turnovers on Leonard to seal the game in the final minute. It took that long for the Warriors to grab their largest lead of the game after playing from behind for most of the game.

Los Angeles led by double digits with 9:35 to play and didn’t relinquish its lead until Horford connected on his fourth 3-pointer to put Golden State up 117-115 for its first lead since early in the second quarter.

What it means

The game came down to who had the better duo.

Curry and Porzingis proved to be more powerful than Leonard and Garland.

The win was the Warriors’ first against the Clippers in Los Angeles since Nov. 28, 2021, snapping a nine-game road losing streak that was Golden State’s longest against a single opponent in Kerr’s 12 seasons.

The Clippers can book their cabanas in Cabo. The Warriors are making travel plans for Phoenix, where they will face a second win-or-go-home play-in game against the No. 7 seed Suns.

Turning point

Garland helped the Clippers race out to an early 12-2 lead with eight of his 21 points coming in the first quarter. Los Angeles extended its lead as wide as 13, but the Warriors never went away. All the while, they were waiting for a patented Curry flurry.

It began midway through the third quarter.

Curry, held to eight points and 2-of-9 shooting in the first half, exploded for 16 in the third quarter. Curry turned a dribble handoff from Draymond Green into a four-point play, pulled up from 30 feet and sank another from distance after crossing over his defender.

The win was the Warriors’ first against the Clippers in Los Angeles since Nov. 28, 2021. NBAE via Getty Images

Curry gave the Warriors hope.

Horford finished the job.

Golden State limited Kawhi Leonard to 21 points in 40 minutes. AP

MVP: Steph Curry

Curry was unstoppable when it mattered most.

On top of his 16 in the third, he added another 12 in the fourth for 26 after halftime.

Stat of the game: 13-for-21

It was a tale of two halves for the Warriors beyond the 3-point line.

They were held to 30% — 6-for-20 — in the first half. As Curry, Horford and Porzingis took over in the second half, Golden State made 13 of 21 attempts from beyond the perimeter.

Up next

The Clippers’ season is over, putting an end to the most dramatic turnaround in NBA history. The Warriors, meanwhile, are on to Phoenix. They will play the Suns on Friday night for the chance to head to Oklahoma City as the No. 8 seed for a first-round matchup with the defending champion Thunder.


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Not done yet! Steph Curry lifts Warriors past Clippers in incredible comeback win

Golden State Warriors Steph Curry dribbles against the Clippers
INGLEWOOD, CA - APRIL 15: Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors dribbles the ball during the game against the LA Clippers during the SoFi Play-In Tournament on April 15, 2026 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Golden State Warriors injury mired, frustrating season isn’t over yet. Despite a 13-point fourth quarter deficit, the Dubs defeated the Los Angeles Clippers 126-121 and will play the Phoenix Suns for the eighth-seed in the Western Conference. It would be easy to argue that the Clippers were the better team on Wednesday night, leading for most of the game. But they didn’t have Steph Curry.

It would also be easy to argue that Dub Nation would have felt relief for this season to finally be over. The Warriors were disappointing early and mired in drama. Then, they faced an avalanche of injuries just as they seemed to be hitting their stride. There are no logical championship hopes left. Why keep trudging through the muck?

Yet the end to a season, even a disappointing one, only brings Steph Curry’s career closer to an end. It’s why he worked so hard to return from his injury even as the Dubs fell in the standings. We all got to see his magic on display Wednesday because he refused to quit.

Curry had the basketball world transfixed once again. Steph has done it over and over since he first burst onto the scene at Davidson back in 2008. No matter how dark or distracted NBA fandom can be by discourse and debates, nothing has unified everyone for more than a decade than Steph Curry with a basketball in his hands dancing on defenses.

The Warriors victory gifts us all a chance to maybe see a couple more moments like that from Steph this season.

Curry finished with 35 points on 12-for-23 shooting from the field (7-for-12 from three). He was 10-for-14 with 27 points in the second half alone. Despite some ugly moments, Gui Santos finished with 20 points, 7 rebounds, 5 assists, and a game-high +16 plus/minus. Al Horford and Kristaps Porziņģis were the most important offensive sidekicks for Steph, though. Porziņģis recorded 20 points, 5 rebounds, 5 assists, 2 blocks, and a steal. Horford had 14 critical points.

Benedict Mathurin led the Clippers with 23 points in 29 minutes, and was perhaps underutilized attacking weaker defenders. Kawhi Leonard finished with 21 points, 7 rebounds, and 3 assists, but committed 5 turnovers and made just one shot in the fourth quarter.

Golden State got off to a horrendous start, particularly offensively. The Clippers unsurprisingly did everything possible to force the ball out of Curry’s hands early and the strategy paid off. The Dubs fell behind 12-2 and would not lead in the quarter.

The Warriors were similarly quick to try and force the ball out of their opponent’s best offensive player’s hands. However, Leonard found his footing quicker and had a supporting cast seemingly more ready for the moment. At the end of the first quarter, the Clippers led 31-22.

Porziņģis chose an opportune time to have his best performance since Steph’s return. The center led a 13-0 Warriors run with Curry on the bench to put Golden State ahead. The lead would not last for long, but it did help the Dubs continue to bide their time.

Steph finished the first half with just 8 points on 2-for-9 shooting from the field alongside 0 rebounds or assists. The fact that Golden State only trailed 61-53 was a sign that the Clippers were wasting opportunities.

The Warriors lack of athleticism and offensive creators was on full display against the Clippers length. At times, Santos looked overwhelmed in his first prolonged playoff-adjacent rotation minutes. Santos, De’Anthony Melton, Gary Payton II, and Brandin Podziemski all had uncharacteristic drops and made poor passing decisions. As a team, the Dubs committed 20 turnovers.

Yet, Draymond Green’s defensive effort was the Warriors savior. Leonard capitalized whenever he could get off Green, but Draymond kept the Clippers from every building enough offensive momentum to pull away.

Golden State also targeted Darius Garland, the Clippers dynamic point guard, on defense. He picked up his fifth foul in the third quarter. While he did not foul out until the game was largely decided, his weak defense was made even worse as he tried to avoid fouling out.

It seemed like every time the Warriors pulled within five points, the Clippers answered.

Curry exploded for 16 points in the third quarter, but Los Angeles remained largely in control.

Porziņģis converted an and-one and a deep transition three on back-to-back possessions to cut the deficit to three, but Garland responded with an and-one and a step-back three to bring the lead back to 10.

The Clippers started the fourth quarter ahead by six and immediately went on a 5-0 run. A timely basket from Melton and a three from Santos successfully kept things from getting out of hand. A one-man press from Payton forced a Clippers turnover with 9:27 left in regulation, and Curry checked back in trialing 98-88. On his first possession, he knocked down an open three.

Then Horford emerged for his first signature moment in a Warriors uniform. The future Hall of Famer entered the game with 6:36 left in regulation. The Clippers led 108-99.

Horford made threes on three consecutive possessions. Two minutes later, Horford made his fourth triple of the quarter to give put Golden State ahead 117-115, giving the Warriors their first lead in the second half.

The good news came with some bad, however. Draymond seemed to hyperextend his knee on the next possession. As Brook Lopez went to the free-throw line (where he’d tie the game at 117), Green quickly hobbled to the bench, stretched, and insisted on playing through the pain.

Curry missed a three, but the Warriors forced a stop at the other end to give him another opportunity to break the tie. Leonard would not score in the fourth quarter, save for a mostly-meaningless bucket in the closing seconds, almost entirely thanks to Green.

Curry and Green ran a two-man game as the clock ticked under a minute remaining. Curry tossed the ball to Draymond before faking a cut and spinning around his longest-tenured teammate. Green knew what Steph wanted, left him the ball and Steph shot over two desperately chasing Clippers for a three.

The Warriors led 120-117 with 50.7 seconds left in regulation.

The Clippers called timeout, but that let the Warriors setup defensively. Draymond denied an in-bound pass to Leonard and his steal setup Podziemski for an and-one layup on the other end.

Golden State had it’s largest lead of the night (123-117) and Green stole the ball from Leonard again. Steph drew a foul and split the free throws to go ahead by 7. Green continued to lock down defensively and forced the Clippers to burn precious clock. They got a layup, but it was too much too late.

Somehow.

Someway.

The Warriors had won.

But we know the how and the way.

It was Steph Curry with enough scoring punch from his teammates and Draymond Green’s legendary defense.

It may not lead to a title, but don’t let that spoil the fun.

Too much Steph Curry as Clippers' season comes to end with play-in loss to Warriors

INGLEWOOD, CA - APRIL 15: LA Clippers guard Kris Dunn (8) swipes for the ball while Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) drives to the basket against guard Darius Garland (10) during the fourth quarter of an NBA play-in-tournament at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood Wednesday, April 15, 2026. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Stephen Curry drives against Darius Garland, left, and Kris Dunn of the Clippers. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

It was do or die Wednesday night at Intuit Dome, and the Clippers did not do enough to keep their season alive, blowing a 13-point lead early in the fourth quarter and losing to the Golden State Warriors, 126-121.

Having rebounded from a franchise-worst 6-21 start to earn the next-to-last berth in the NBA play-in tournament, coach Tyronn Lue’s resilient bunch could not extend its historic comeback on its home floor.

Stephen Curry led the Warriors with 35 points, Kristaps Porzingis and and Gui Santos each had 20, and Brandin Podziemski added 17. The Warriors were 19 for 41 from three-point range, with Al Horford hitting four in the fourth quarter.

Bennedict Mathurin scored 23 points off the bench, while Kawhi Leonard and Darius Garland each added 21 points for the Clippers, who won three of the teams’ four regular-season meetings, including a 115-110 victory in the same arena four days earlier. Wednesday night, however, Leonard was held scoreless in the fourth quarter until the final seconds as the Warriors rallied.

"It happens, we’ve won games like that before, we’ve lost games like that before,” Leonard said. "They played great defense, they won the game. They deserve it. They scored 43 points in the fourth quarter.” 

Garland, a point guard acquired from the Cleveland Cavaliers at the trade deadline in exchange for James Harden, contributed mightily to the team’s late-season surge but picked up his fifth foul with 2:51 left in the third quarter and fouled out with 50 seconds left in the fourth. 

“It came down to contested threes and not a lot of good possessions for us... in the end No.30 did what 30 does,” he said, referring to Curry. “It was fun for the time I’ve been here. To be in the play-in game is a credit to this group and the coaching staff. This isn’t the way we wanted to end the season, but this group is amazing and everybody wants to win. The championship pedigree they have over there shined through.” 

The Clippers got off to a hot start, scoring 12 straight points to take a 10-point lead 3:19 into the game, but Golden State used a 12-2 run of its own to tie it and took a 17-16 lead on Curry’s first three-pointer with 5:07 left in the first. A 15-5 run put the Clippers back up 31-22 at the end of the quarter.

Stephen Curry falls to the court to grab a loose ball against Clippers Bennedict Mathurin and Kris Dunn in the third quarter.
Stephen Curry falls to the court to grab a loose ball against Clippers Bennedict Mathurin and Kris Dunn in the third quarter. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Porzingis’ three-pointer from the top of the key put the Warriors in front early in the second quarter, but the Clippers closed the first half with a flourish. The Warriors' Draymond Green got assessed a technical foul, and Leonard made the ensuing free throw to give his team a 10-point lead with 3:24 left; the Clippers headed to the locker room ahead 61-53.

Back-to-back buckets by Derrick Jones Jr. pushed the Clippers’ lead back to 10 points with 7:48 left in the third quarter, but again the proud Warriors responded with eight straight points by Curry, including a rare four-point play, to pull within four. The Clippers pushed the lead back to 11 before Golden State used a 5-0 run to creep within 89-83 heading to the fourth quarter.

Porzingis’ three-pointer whittled the Warriors' deficit down to three with 8:16 left, but Garland’s three-pointer pushed the margin back to nine with 6:36 left. Horford’s final three gave the Warriors a 117-115 lead with 2:12 left. Brook Lopez hit a pair of free throws to tie it with 1:51 left, but Curry, as he has done so many times in his career, sank a three-pointer to put his team up 120-117 with 50 seconds remaining. Green, guarding Leonard, then tipped away the Clippers' inbounds pass out of a timeout, and Podziemski drove for a three-point play as the visitors hung on.

"We turned the ball over 18 times for 23 points and we can’t do that,” Lue said. “Horford made some big shots to get them back in the game. We had the game in our hands and made silly plays. To be up 13 with 10 minutes left… we have to finish that game.”

Kawhi Leonard walks off the court after the Clippers' season-ending loss.
Kawhi Leonard walks off the court after the Clippers' season-ending loss. He was held scoreless in the fourth until the final seconds. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The Clippers had won nine consecutive home games against Golden State, their longest active home winning streak against a conference opponent. The Warriors had last beat the Clippers in Los Angeles on Nov. 28, 2021 at Staples Center, then their home arena. 

The Warriors’ reward is a flight to Phoenix where they will take on the Suns in a Friday night matchup to decide the eighth and final playoff seed in the Western Conference. The Suns had a chance to clinch the No. 7 seed Monday but lost at home to Portland, 114-110. Should the Warriors prevail they will meet No. 1-seeded and defending champion Oklahoma City in a best-of-seven series opening Sunday on the road.

Steve Kerr, who has coached Golden State to four NBA championships in 12 seasons, stated before the game that his team was ready for the challenge — and it was. 

“We have a lot of veteran guys who have been through big moments,” Kerr said. "It’s the exact same vibe as any other elimination game — you have to be locked in. We’re aware that this is an opportunity we may not get again, we don’t know. The first year [of the play-in] we were the eighth seed and I hated it. This year we’re 10th and I love it. I think it’s good for the league.”  

After their disastrous start the Clippers went 36-19 the rest of the way and became the first team in NBA history to dip 15 games below .500 and finish with a winning record. Leonard played 65 games and averaged a career-best 27.9 points, however Wednesday’s loss was a bitter pill to swallow. 

"They had a great game plan, being physical all game and making sure I don’t get my catch-and-shoot shots,” Leonard said. "Draymond Green is a Hall of Fame defender — it was hard to get shots. I’m not used to losing a lot of games early in the season. We could’ve easily let go of the rope but we made strides and the eight seed was right there, but in the end it wasn’t good enough."

Entering the last year of a three-year contract, Leonard was asked if he wanted to remain with the Clippers.

"I’m going to cry about this loss a little more and we’ll have our discussions when the time comes.” he said.

The Clippers dropped to 6-8 all-time in the postseason against the Warriors. Lopez had 17 points, Derrick Jones Jr. had 13, John Collins had 11 and Kris Dunn had seven points and 10 assists.  

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.