By Janie Mccauley / The Associated Press
OAKLAND, California—DeMarcus Cousins lost his cool, and the Golden State Warriors lost at home in embarrassing fashion once again.
Gordon Hayward scored 30 points off the bench, Kyrie Irving had 19 points and 11 assists, and the Boston Celtics ran away from the Warriors early on the way to a 128-95 win on Tuesday night in a game that turned testy with the two-time defending champions down big.
Cousins and Terry Rozier received double technicals with 8:44 to play. Cousins was called for his fifth foul on a charge drawn by Aron Baynes, then the fiery Warriors center stood over Baynes in clear frustration. Jayson Tatum bumped Cousins with his right arm, and Cousins pushed back with some force, then Rozier entered the fray and he and Cousins traded shoves.
“It was silly. It was nothing, absolutely nothing,” Cousins said without elaborating.
Boogie’s moment summed up an ugly evening of basketball by his team—and fans seeing their final season in the East Bay made a mad dash for the Oracle Arena exits in the closing minutes. It was the Warriors’ fifth home defeat by 20 or more points.
“I’d love to have some magic potion and say we can come out and play with better energy and better discipline and kind of rectify it, but we’ve got to, at some point, stop talking about it and figure it out,” Stephen Curry said.
Curry provided a bright spot with 23 points and four three-pointers on a night Splash Brother Klay Thompson sat out with soreness in his right knee.
“Klay would have had to play a hell of a game to overcome all that,” Coach Steve Kerr said.
Kevin Durant scored 18 points but committed five turnovers, while Cousins wound up with 10 points on 4-for-12 shooting—missing all five of his three-point tries—and nine rebounds to go with four turnovers.
The Warriors, who had won the last two meetings with Boston, couldn’t overcome a lackluster first half in which they were outhustled on both ends and faced a daunting 73-48 halftime deficit.
“It looked to me like we were jogging up the floor. You can’t play basketball jogging. You’ve got to sprint,” Kerr said. “Your cuts have to be hard. You have to be going all out. We did not go all out and it was embarrassing.”
Tatum scored 17 points for the Celtics, who came in having lost five of six since the All-Star break.
“I think we played with purpose all the way through. We were very businesslike the whole night, even at halftime and just now after the game,” Celtics Coach Brad Stevens said. “We know we haven’t played like that enough but It’s encouraging as a reminder that we can.”
Golden State missed its initial four shots and fell behind 11-0 as Boston started 5 of 7 before Curry’s jumper at 8:26. The Warriors made five straight shots and used a 12-2 burst to get right back in it.
Alfonzo McKinnie started in place of Thompson and contributed seven points in 17 minutes.
“It starts with a passion and an anger and an intensity, and it wasn’t there tonight,” Kerr said.
Durant responded to that by asking, “I thought we moved off of joy, now anger?” in response to Kerr’s usual message of playing with joy.
Then, the two-time reigning Finals MVP challenged everyone.
“All around top to bottom, coaches, players, we’ve just got to be better,” he said.
In Toronto, James Harden scored 35 points, Gerald Green had 11 of his 18 in the fourth quarter and the Houston Rockets beat the Toronto Raptors, 107-95, on Tuesday night.
Eric Gordon and Austin Rivers each scored 13 points as the Rockets won their sixth straight, matching a season high.
Kawhi Leonard scored 26 points, and Serge Ibaka had 10 points and 15 rebounds for Toronto. Pascal Siakam had 17 points, and Danny Green 14 as the Raptors had their seven-game home winning streak snapped.
Harden, the NBA’s leading scorer, made 12 of 30 shots, including three of nine from long range. He was perfect at the foul line, hitting all eight of his attempts.
Harden has scored 28 or more points in 39 straight games, the second-longest streak in NBA history. Wilt Chamberlain (71 games) holds the record.
Image credits: AP