Tucker, Rockets spoil Warriors' celebration
Send a link to a friend
[October 18, 2017]
OAKLAND, Calif. -- Two guys who
were imported to help make the Houston Rockets a better defensive
team demonstrated Tuesday night they pack a little offensive punch
as well.
Luc Mbah a Moute ignited a rally with 12 fourth-quarter points, and
P.J. Tucker scored the game's final two on a pair of free throws
with 44.1 seconds left, helping the Rockets stun the Golden State
Warriors 122-121 in the defending champion's ring-ceremony opener.
The defeat was the first since 2011 and just the fourth since 2000
on opening night for an NBA defending champ.
The Warriors, who lost just 15 times last season, also dropped their
opener last year, drubbed 129-100 by the San Antonio Spurs.
"I think the right outcome happened. We deserved to lose," Warriors
coach Steve Kerr said. "They outplayed us."
Houston's win wasn't official until a video review confirmed that
Kevin Durant's possible game-winning 12-footer from the left
baseline was still on his fingertips when the final horn sounded.
The Warriors also lost another apparent point when, after review,
Patrick McCaw's jumper from the corner with 1:43 remaining was
changed from a 3-pointer to a 2, leaving the Rockets down 121-118.
A driving hoop by James Harden, the game's leading scorer with 27
points, made it a one-point game with 1:32 to play, setting up
Tucker's difference-making free throws.
"The guys wanted it, and they did it," Rockets coach Mike D'Antoni
said. "It's sweet, and we'll like it, but we've got to move on."
The foul on Tucker occurred after Mbah a Moute retrieved a Harden
miss and found Eric Gordon for a 3-point try, which he missed with
46 seconds left.
Tucker was fouled by Shaun Livingston in pursuit of Houston's second
offensive rebound in the key sequence.
"We looked tired," Kerr said. "I don't think we are in good enough
shape yet to play a 48-minute game against a great team."
The Warriors had three subsequent chances to win.
First, Stephen Curry threw the ball away, Golden State's 17th
turnover, to give Houston a possession on which Harden misfired from
3-point range.
Then Curry was off the mark on a 3-point attempt with five seconds
left, after which a deflection resulted in the ball ending up in the
hands of Durant.
The forward's frenzy-inducing shot eventually was ruled no good,
sending the sellout crowd home disappointed.
"Somebody said we don't take it seriously on defense," D'Antoni
said. "We want to be a good defensive team, but when you play
against guys like that, you better be able to score the ball. We
were able to do both."
After trailing by as many as 17 in the first half, the Rockets got a
3-pointer from Mbah a Moute in a 9-0 run to open the fourth quarter
and trim all but four from a 101-88 Warriors lead.
Houston still trailed 114-107 after a Curry 3-pointer with 5:12 left
before rallying.
Gordon had a three-point play, while Tucker and Trevor Ariza buried
3-point shots during the late flurry that set up the last-minute
drama.
[to top of second column] |
Rockets guard James Harden (13) dribbles the basketball against
Golden State Warriors forward Kevin Durant (35) during the first
quarter at Oracle Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY
Sports
The Warriors played the fourth quarter without All-Star forward
Draymond Green, who sustained a strained left knee late in the third
period.
"He was our best player tonight," Kerr said of Green, who just
missed a triple-double with nine points, 11 rebounds and 13 assists
despite playing just 28 minutes.
Harden had 10 assists and six rebounds to complement his 27 points
for the Rockets, who also beat Golden State in the teams' first
meeting last season, a double-overtime thriller on Dec. 1.
The Rockets have now recorded at least one win in Oakland in 10 of
the past 14 seasons.
Five Rockets joined Harden in double figures: Gordon with 24, Tucker
20, Mbah a Moute 14, Ryan Anderson 13 and Clint Capela 12.
In his Houston debut, Chris Paul had four points, 11 assists and
eight rebounds.
Nick Young had a team-high 23 points, including 20 in the first
half, in his Warriors debut.
Curry finished with 22 points but missed six of his nine 3-point
attempts. Durant had 20 points, but also eight turnovers.
Klay Thompson added 16 points for Golden State, which outshot the
Rockets 53.8 percent to 48.5.
NOTES: NBA commissioner Adam Silver presented the Warriors with
their 2016-17 championship rings in a pregame, on-court ceremony.
The franchise's fifth all-time championship banner also was unveiled
in the Oracle Arena rafters. ... The game was officiated by two
referees for the final 8:56 after Tre Maddox sustained an injury to
his right side in a collision with Warriors PF David West. Maddox
had to be helped to the locker room. ... The Warriors recorded 34
assists in the game. They went 49-1, losing only to Houston, when
totaling 30 or more assists last season. ... The Warriors played
without SF Andre Iguodala, who strained his back in a
weight-training session. He is expected to make his season debut
during the three-game trip that tips off Friday night at New
Orleans. ... The Rockets will experience their second home opener as
a visitor when they travel to Sacramento for the second half of a
back-to-back on Wednesday night.
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|