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Curry, Butler, Green star as Warriors close out Rockets in Game 7

Joseph Dycus, The Mercury News on

Published in Basketball

HOUSTON – With the season on the line, Golden State asked its veterans to carry the team against a foe that was on the verge of an incredible comeback.

They answered the call.

On the verge of an epic postseason collapse on Sunday night in Houston, the Warriors Hall of Fame veterans showed up.

Laden with championship experience, the Warriors closed out youthful Houston using a combination of Steph Curry’s phenomenal late-game shotmaking, some timely Jimmy Butler baskets and heady defense by Draymond Green in the Warriors’ 103-89 victory.

It was the fifth time the Warriors have beaten the Rockets in a series in the Curry era.

Steph Curry scored 22 and showed off his signature “night-night” after burying a tough triple with 2:55 to go to put the Warriors up by 17. Butler poured in 20 and Green did a little bit of everything with 16 points, six rebounds and five assists.

It wasn’t all the Big 3, though. In Game 7s, teams often get contributions from unlikely places, and Sunday was no exception.

Buddy Hield scored 33 points and made 9 of 11 3-pointers, 22 of those points coming in the first half.

That provided the Warriors the spark they needed to close out a Houston team that had clawed back from a 3-1 deficit, and advance to a second round matchup with Minnesota.

It was close for a while.

After a slow start that saw Curry score just three points in the first half, he came alive late in the third, when the 37-year-old scored two quick buckets.

Then he repeated that trick to start the fourth, taking on Jabari Smith and Thompson in isolation, and scorched both with tough baskets to extend the Warriors lead to 75-62 with just 11 minutes left in regulation.

After going into the third quarter with a double-digit lead and extending it to as much as 54-39, Houston responded with a 10-2 run over the next four minutes, forcing two turnovers and converting on both to key the run.

 

The Rockets were able to eventually cut the lead to 63-60 before Steve Kerr called a timeout, and the Warriors went on a run of their own.

Butler canned a flat-but-accurate corner 3, and then Green found openings in the Rocket interior and converted on both a layup and a soft floater to give Golden State a 70-62 lead after three quarters.

Golden State got early contributions from its non-Curry and Butler players, with Green making two 3-pointers off spot-up opportunities in the first two minutes of the game.

Hield, who was scoreless in Game 6, ended the period with a corner triple and a buzzer-beating halfcourt bomb to put the Warriors up 23-19, helping offset a scoreless quarter by Curry.

The veteran shooting guard kept up his torrid play in the second quarter. Meanwhile, Golden State’s defense remained stingy while the rest of the offense tried to find its way.

After a few Quinten Post minutes, Kerr tasked Looney with absorbing the backup center minutes and did an admirable job of banging with Alperen Sengun and Steven Adams in the slugfest.

Curry remained scoreless until the final minute of the half but still found a way to contribute.

He was an active defender in the Warriors’ 2-3 zone during the second quarter, and also had 10 rebounds and seven assists, including a slick dime to a cutting Brandin Podziemski on the short roll.

Podziemski’s short shot gave the Warriors a 39-29 lead with 3:19 left in the half. The Warriors were still up by double-digits when Green got his regularly-scheduled technical foul when he hit Fred VanVleet in the neck while Green was fouled.

The Warriors led 51-39 at halftime, and pulled away in the fourth quarter to clinch the victory.

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