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The Warriors should have beat the Rockets at home on Wednesday night. Houston was without Kevin Durant, Steven Adams, and Tari Eason. The Warriors hit their first five shots and earned a 12-point lead at halftime.Ā
But Golden State scored just 17 points in the third quarter and faded in the fourth, blowing a lead in a game that was indicative of some of the Warriorsā worst defeats to start the season.
Wednesdayās loss dropped the Warriors to 10-10 through a quarter of the season and soured the mood of Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler ā the teamās most vocal veterans.Ā
āI think youād agree, we shouldāve won tonight,ā Green said. āYou have bad losses and youāre 10-10, guess what you are? Fāāā .500 team that loses games you should win. Thatās what .500 teams are …Very average team.ā
During the 104-100 loss to Houston, Steph Curry took several big hits ā on an Alperen Sengun screen, when Sengun dove for a loose ball and collided with his lower body, and when Amen Thompson rammed into him on a drive. Curry exited with a right quad contusion before the final horn, an injury not typically associated with significant missed time.Ā
Everything changes if Curry is sidelined. But things arenāt all rainbows and sunshine for the Warriors with him at the moment, anyway.Ā
āWe donāt box out, we donāt go with the scouting report, we let anybody do whatever they want: open shots, getting to the paint, free throws,ā Butler said after the loss. āItās just sad.ā
The Rockets hounded Steph Curry defensively, and the Warriorsā star exited Wednesdayās game with an injury. | Source: Amber Pietz/The Standard
Houston, statistically one of the best offensive rebounding teams ever, took 17 more field goal attempts because the Rockets hauled in 25 offensive boards. The Warriors got into foul trouble early in the third quarter, allowing the Rockets to stampede to the charity stripe. Green locked down star Sengun, but second-year guard Reed Sheppard carved up Golden Stateās perimeter defense for a career-high 29 points.Ā
It was a bad loss, and not the Warriorsā first. They shouldāve handled the depleted Rockets, but the Warriors probably should have also defeated the Bucks without Giannis Antetokounmpo, the skeleton-crew Pacers, the Blazers without their starting backcourt, and the Magic without Paolo Banchero.Ā
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Tuesday, Nov. 18
This is a team thatās already had leaders called out its competitive fire. Now, somewhat curiously, their defense is drawing ire.Ā
Even after Wednesday, the Warriors rank 10th in defensive rating. Their offense, meanwhile, comes in at 22nd.Ā
The Warriors struggled to protect the rim against the Rockets on Wednesday night at Chase Center. | Source: Amber Pietz/The Standard
āOur defense is shit,ā Green said. āBecause itās not necessarily the numbers. Itās like, how do you feel when youāre out there? And if itās just letdown after letdown, itās bigger than the numbers. Defense is about demeanor. So, if thereās letdown after letdown and it kills your demeanor, kills your bravado, then youāre just a soft team.
āSo itās bigger than the numbers. What does the other team feel when youāre defending them? And right now, they donāt feel no force. So even if youāre getting stops, like yeah we have great coaches, weāre going to have a good scheme. But what about the force? We donāt have that.āĀ
The point of attack has been a consistent weakness for the Warriors through 20 games. Their best perimeter defenders are Moses Moody, Will Richard, and Gary Payton II, and theyāre generally overextended as true stoppers. Curry, Brandin Podziemski, and Buddy Hield often allow straight-line drives into the lane or commit fouls trying to shuffle their feet.Ā
Curry committed a brutal hand-check foul on the perimeter late in the shot clock against Aaron Holiday on Wednesday. Early in Mondayās win over the Jazz, an irate Steve Kerr called a timeout when Podziemski left the hot-handed Keyonte George wide open for his fourth 3-pointer.Ā
Golden State allowed 25 offensive rebounds in a game it lost by just four points on Wednesday. | Source: Amber Pietz/The Standard
Defense and offense are connected. But poor offense shouldnāt be an excuse to let up defensively. That was one of Butlerās biggest points of frustration.Ā
Letting offensive struggles bleed into the defensive end is like an error in the field taking a ballplayer out of their next at-bat. Is something like that surprising for a locker room with so many veterans?Ā
āNo, itās not surprising,ā Butler said. āBecause I think a lot of our hustle and a lot of our everything is dictated by our offense. When weāre making shots, oh man, weāre celebrating, weāre cheering, weāre doing all those things. When weāre not, when the gameās not going our way, we put our heads down and we mope. We donāt box out, we donāt get back, we foul. We do all the bad things. But when itās going good ā some people call it front-running ā when itās going good, itās all smiles.āĀ
Although Butler insisted āweāll be alright,ā itās definitely not all smiles at the moment for the .500 Warriors.


