Houston Chronicle

Kerr insists reserve Young could be a factor vs. Rockets

- Connor Letourneau

OAKLAND, Calif.— Like most NBA coaches, Steve Kerr has shortened his bench in the playoffs.

It came as little surprise when reserve guard Nick Young, one of the Warriors’ more inconsiste­nt players, spent much of the first two rounds anchored to the sideline.

That might change in the Western Conference finals. After Golden State’s Game 5 win over the New Orleans Pelicans in the second round Tuesday, Kerr went out of his way to mention Young could be a factor against the Rockets.

“Nick Young played really well against Houston this year, and he's a good matchup for them,” Kerr said. “I think every series is different, and you have to look at your opponent and figure out what you need to do to match up and to win some battles.”

Last July, Young took a pay cut to chase a ring with Golden State. Only 15 of his 672 NBA games had come in the playoffs. With a career winning percentage just shy of 33 percent, Young hadn’t gone further than the 2012 Western Conference finals, with the Los Angeles Clippers.

Now, after averaging 7.9 minutes through the Warriors’ first 10 playoff games, Young could be an asset against the Rockets. Given Golden State’s glut of shooters, the Rockets tend to give him room to operate. Young averaged 16.7 points on 16-for-24 shooting (66.7 percent) in three games against the Rockets this season.

“All three times we’ve played them this year, he’s played well,” Draymond Green said. “He can make shots. When you can make shots, especially on this team, you’re going to get open looks.

“When you can knock those shots down at a high rate, which Nick is capable of, that’s really big. We have confidence in him.”

Curry’s defense a question mark

Stephen Curry has made significan­t defensive strides in recent years, but he is probably the weakest defender in the Warriors’ starting lineup.

It raises an intriguing question: Will the Rockets try to isolate Curry on pick-and-rolls?

His lateral quickness isn’t quite what it was before he recently missed five-plus games with a sprained left medial collateral ligament.

“I’ll be fine,” Curry said. “James ( Harden) averages 30 points a game. He’s hard to stop for anybody in the league.

“We’ve been in situations where teams are going to try to pick on whoever. It’s kind of funny if you look at the Hamptons 5 lineup that’s out there. I would probably do the same exact thing if I was coaching out there.

“You have got Klay (Thompson), Andre (Iguodala), Draymond (Green) and Kevin (Durant) out there. I embrace those opportunit­ies to get stops, try to make it tough in those iso situations and just do my job.

“At the end of the day, for us, we have a pretty good game plan going into it. We’ve played teams that try to do that constantly, whether it’s Cleveland in the Finals the last three years, or whatever team tries to do it.”

 ?? Ezra Shaw / Getty Images ?? Warriors guard Nick Young, right, has a history, albeit a small sample size, of having good games against the Rockets. Young averaged 16.7 points in three games against the Rockets this season.
Ezra Shaw / Getty Images Warriors guard Nick Young, right, has a history, albeit a small sample size, of having good games against the Rockets. Young averaged 16.7 points in three games against the Rockets this season.
 ?? Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle ?? Because Stephen Curry, right, is coming off a knee injury, his defense could be suspect.
Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle Because Stephen Curry, right, is coming off a knee injury, his defense could be suspect.

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