SAN FRANCISCO – NBA regular-season wins leader Houston, powered by James Harden’s 30 points and 27 from Chris Paul, edged defending champion Golden State 95-92 Tuesday to level their semifinal playoff series at two wins each.
The Rockets snapped Golden State’s record playoff home win streak at 16 games, the Warriors suffering their first loss since the 2016 NBA Finals, and took their first playoff win over the Warriors in eight all-time tries.
“We know how hard it is to come back from 3-1,” Paul said. “When it’s winning time, you have got to suck it up. We knew we needed one here and we got it.”
P.J. Tucker had 16 rebounds and Clint Capella grabbed 13 for the Rockets, who host game five of the best-of-seven Western Conference final Thursday in Houston.
Paul hopes the title quest helps the Houston area take relief from a school shooting that saw a teen gunman kill 10 people, much the way the Houston Astros’ World Series baseball crown did last year after hurricane flooding.
“Hopefully basketball can be a way for people to ease their minds, if only for a moment,” Paul said.
The series winner will face either Cleveland or Boston in the NBA Finals starting May 31.
Stephen Curry led Golden State with 28 points on 10-of-26 shooting while Kevin Durant added 27 points and 12 rebounds and Draymond Green had 11 points, 14 rebounds and eight assists.
The defeat marks the first time the Warriors, seeking a third crown in four seasons, have lost twice in a playoff series since Durant joined last season.
“Now we’ve got to fight. This is now a real playoff-type experience,” Curry said. “We’re ready for it. The vibe in the locker room is really positive when it comes to what we need to correct to win game five.”
Harden made 11-of-26 shots from the floor and Paul hit 10-of-20 to lift the Rockets, who closed the game on a 25-10 run after falling behind 82-70.
“I wish we had done a better job of taking control,” Durant said. “We had chances to win... We’ve just got to get better next game.”
The Warriors lacked starter Andre Iguodala with a bruised left leg and saw Klay Thompson strain his left knee in the second quarter while Houston’s Paul said his nagging left foot injury was improved.
“It’s as good as it’s going to be right now,” Paul said. “Mental toughness is just as important as physical toughness and we showed that.”