Warriors instant analysis: Curry’s big game squandered in loss to Toronto

Despite possessing multiple double-digit leads in the second half, the Warriors found themselves in a familiar spot: stuck in a close game, with turnovers to blame in Toronto on Sunday afternoon.

Immanuel Quickley’s 3-pointer for the Raptors with under a minute tied the game at 120. Brandin Podziemski gave the Warriors another lead by grabbing an offensive rebound off a rare Curry miss and putting it in with 32.8 remaining. Scottie Barnes answered by putting back a Brandon Ingram miss to tie it at 122.

Overtime ensued after Curry turned the ball over and the Raptors missed a buzzer-beater.

The Raptors scored the first 10 points over overtime to doom Golden State to an 141-127 loss, snapping the Warriors’ three-game winning streak.

“They turned up the pressure, and we didn’t handle it well and they scored 35 points off our turnovers,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “That was the game. It sucks. We’re on a little bit of a run, have a chance at some momentum and control the whole game, and we let it slip.”

Steph Curry led the team with 39 points and made 13 of 30 shots, making the Raptors pay for top-locking him on defense and allowing Curry to cut to the basket for layups and foul shots until late, when he went cold. The Warriors fell to 2-6 when Curry scores at least 35.

Meanwhile, Jimmy Butler scored 19 and Draymond Green put in 21 while making a season-high four 3-pointers. Quickley led the Raptors with 27 points and Ingram put in 26 as seven different Raptors scored in double-figures. Barnes scored 23, grabbed 25 rebounds and had 10 assists.

“Barnes just dominated the boards, and whether we were big or small, it just seemed like he was getting every rebound,” Kerr said.

After mixing and matching and shuffling for the first two-and-a-half months of the season, Kerr settled upon a first five of Curry, Moses Moody, Butler, Green and Quinten Post for the fifth consecutive game, and that continuity paid off early.

The Warriors embarked on an 11-0 run in the second quarter to take a 54-50 lead midway through the period. The Raptors, led by Ingram, fought back to lead 65-64 at halftime. The Warriors led by as many as 13 in the third thanks to, oddly enough, a flurry of 3-pointers by Green and strong inside work by Curry.

But the Raptors forced four consecutive turnovers to cut the deficit to just 100-96 going into the fourth quarter. The Warriors bounced back to start the fourth, being aided by Buddy Hield and Moody’s 3-pointers that helped push the lead back to a dozen before a flurry of turnovers helped the Raptors stick around. 

From there, the Warriors felt the impact of 21 turnovers — 15 in the second half and overtime while they had trouble with the Raptors’ hard doubles all game — and an additional three Raptors offensive rebounds in the first two minutes of overtime to send the Warriors (16-16) back to .500.

Golden State will play in Brooklyn on Monday (4:30 p.m., NBC Sports Bay Area). 

Defensive effort for naught

Payton cannot soar with the same abandon he once did, but the 32-year-old still has some life in his legs when playing limited minutes. Now strictly relegated to being an energetic defensive specialist, Payton made the most of his spot minutes. 

He blocked two different Raptors dunks in the first half, on the heels of a spectacular two-handed smother of Cooper Flagg on Christmas. With De’Anthony Melton out of the lineup, his activity against an athletic Toronto squad was much-needed. 

The Raptors, similar to the super-sized Blazers, are replete with rangy wings who love to attack the paint. RJ Barrett returned to action after missing a month with a knee injury as Toronto scored 70 points in the paint. 

In the third quarter, the Warriors broke out a 2-3 zone, clogging the paint and attempting to close off driving lanes. The Warriors entered the game ranked third in defensive rating (112.2), and they were bolstered by Al Horford’s presence. For the second consecutive game after returning from sciatica, the center played well. He scored seven points and grabbed seven rebounds while playing active defense in 17 minutes. 

But because of an avalanche of turnovers, the Raptors were able to score 35 off those plays, nullifying any halfcourt effort the Warriors showed.

Melton out, Hield in … sort of

Though Melton is beginning to ramp up his minutes – he was coming off a season-high 24 minutes against Dallas – the team is still being cautious with a player who is returning from a torn ACL. 

With the game against Brooklyn scheduled for the next day, Kerr sat Melton and inserted Hield back into the lineup. Hield saw his streak of 198 consecutive games played snapped last week, and had played only three minutes in the past two games combined.  

Though Hield played 13 minutes and scored three, it was actually Will Richard who absorbed most of Melton’s playing time. While playing high-level defense (five steals), the second-round pick put in 10 points and grabbed seven rebounds while playing with the stars late in the fourth and overtime. 

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