HOUSTON — One of the enigmas that demonstrates the historic greatness of the Golden State Warriors is when their star players have a slump. It is both concerning for the Warriors and frightening for opponents.
Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson have not been themselves in the high-stakes Western Conference semifinal series with the Houston Rockets. They’re shooting just 37 percent overall and 27 percent on 3-pointers, the weapon that earned them their Splash Brothers nickname.
In Saturday’s 126-121 Game 3 loss, Curry and Thompson combined to miss 26 of 39 shots. In the final minutes, those misses included Curry blowing an uncontested layup and a dunk — as an aside, Curry is now 1-of-4 on dunks this season, including one in which he almost seriously hurt himself — and Thompson badly missed the type of clean 15-footer that any high school starter should make.
And yet, it still took 41 points from James Harden — including a fortunate non-call on the game-clinching basket where Harden easily could’ve been hit with an offensive foul, probably leaving the Warriors to be the ones stewing over the forthcoming last-two-minutes report this time — plus overtime for the Rockets to win a game.
This is just how tremendous of a mountain the Warriors are to climb. Even as Thompson and Curry are mired in a slump, the Warriors are still so difficult to overcome. That’s why the concept is scary for opponents. Even when you hold the Warriors duo down, you sometimes barely survive.