Los Angeles Times

With Paul, Rockets have foot in door

Guard picked up the pace late in Game 4 to help send Warriors to a stunning defeat.

- By Dan Woike dan.woike@latimes.com

OAKLAND — James Harden rolled his eyes and sighed through the thick brush of beard hiding most of his face during the postgame news conference. Chris Paul shrugged off the injury question, but in private conversati­ons, the veteran point guard acknowledg­ed that something wasn’t OK.

His foot was bothering him — badly. He couldn’t push off, couldn’t explode. He was moving slowly, getting beaten on defense. If it were January, maybe he wouldn’t have even been on the court. But this was Game 3 of the Western Conference finals and Paul wasn’t going to miss it.

His presence hardly mattered. The Golden State Warriors drubbed Paul’s Houston Rockets by 41, the most lopsided beating he had taken in the playoffs in nine years.

He’d been down this road before with the Clippers — lessons he learned in blowout wins and losses that were erased the next game.

In 2015, Paul and the Clippers got beaten by 27 in San Antonio to go down 2-1 to the Spurs, the defending NBA champions. He was awful that game, with just one more point than his six turnovers. Two days later, thanks to his 34 points on just 19 shots and seven assists, the Clippers evened things on San Antonio’s home court before going on to win the series in seven games.

So he knew what no one outside of the Rockets’ locker room did. His team would be OK if he could be OK.

“I called him after Game 3 and he said, ‘Coach, I’m telling you, if I can get my foot right, we’ll beat these guys,’ ” Houston coach Mike D’Antoni said late Tuesday after the Rockets’ Game 4 win. “Lo and behold, he got his foot right.”

Now, at least until Game 5 on Thursday in Houston, everything’s right with the Rockets.

During their 95-92 win in Game 4 here, the Rockets relied heavily on Paul as they came back from double-digit deficits in the first and fourth quarters.

He scored a series-best 27 points, including eight in the fourth quarter when heavy legs and high-pressure defense made baskets incredibly tough.

“It was a huge difference,” Paul said of the foot he injured in Game 2.

A healthier, productive Paul gives the Rockets the added dimensions their offense needs. Though Houston will continue to lean heavily on Harden, two more performanc­es like this from Paul, and the Warriors could be eliminated before the Finals for the first time since 2014.

After Game 4, Paul said he was as good as he’s going to be, and that he was “cool.” Don’t believe him. Paul said he was “cool” before Game 3. He’s said he was “cool” when his knees and joints have ached, when his ligaments have been sprained, when his muscles have been bruised.

His play doesn’t lie. It can’t.

The truth in Game 4: Paul was back and now the Warriors are in trouble.

Injury updates

The Warriors announced starting shooting guard Klay Thompson (knee strain) and forward Andre Iguodala (knee bruise) are questionab­le for Game 5. Iguodala didn’t play in the Warriors’ Game 4 loss, forcing heavier minutes on the Warriors’ regulars and forcing Kevon Looney into his first playoff start.

Golden State coach Steve Kerr said Wednesday that Iguodala is making progress, and the team hopes he’ll be able to play Thursday. Thompson, the team’s thirdleadi­ng scorer, injured his knee Tuesday night, but Kerr said Thompson is moving around well and should be fine.

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez AP ?? CHRIS PAUL scored 27 points in Game 4, eight in the fourth quarter.
Marcio Jose Sanchez AP CHRIS PAUL scored 27 points in Game 4, eight in the fourth quarter.

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