National Post (National Edition)

WARRIORS-ROCKETS THE SERIES THAT EVERYONE WANTED

-

The buildup for this series truly began in February, with some pointed comments from Golden State’s Draymond Green.

Or in October, when Houston won at Golden State on ring night.

Or in June, when the Rockets landed Chris Paul.

Whenever it started, however it started, it’s clear that this is the series that the Nba-watching world wanted. Western Conference finals, Golden State versus Houston, Game 1 on Monday on the Rockets’ home floor. Series winner to the NBA Finals, series loser will undoubtedl­y feel like they let a championsh­ip ring slip away.

“They got us. We got them,” Green said. “We’ll see who is better.”

After more than 10 months of playing, posturing and some pontificat­ing, it really is that simple.

This Rockets team was assembled — the key being the trade for Paul last summer — with hopes of unseating the reigning champion Warriors from their perch atop the NBA. So far, so good. Houston set a franchise record with 65 wins in the regular season, went 2-1 against the Warriors in games that were hyped at the time though seem meaningles­s now, and has the likely MVP in James Harden.

But how this Houston season will be remembered hinges largely on the outcome of this series.

“Everybody at the beginning of the year thinks they’ve got a chance to be here,” Houston’s P.J. Tucker said. “Everybody talks about winning. Everybody talks about fighting for a championsh­ip. ... We really believed it. We’re really fighting to get there.”

The three WarriorsRo­ckets games were about as anticipate­d as any in the regular season: Golden State lost two of the three, and the final combined score of those matchups was Warriors 353, Rockets 352.

“That was so long ago,” Warriors forward Kevin Durant said. “I think both teams are different and playing better.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada