Steph Curry Hilariously Trolls Rockets During Warriors Win -Klay Thompson Sounds Off On Rockets’ Failed Troll Job After Red-Hot Warriors’ Blowout Win


Stephen Curry

Golden State Warriors superstar Steph Curry trolled the Houston Rockets on April 4 as they were on their way to victory. More specifically, he trolled Tari Eason.

During the game, Curry placed multiple soda bottles on his fingers to taunt Eason and the Rockets.

This is, of course, in reference to the iconic scene in the 1979 movie Warriors where an enemy taunted them, saying, “Warriors, come out to play!”

The reason why Curry did that to the Rockets is because Eason taunted the Warriors ahead of time by quoting the movie.

Despite not playing, Eason wore a shirt with the exact same phrase when Golden State and Houston faced off.

This is very much in character for Curry, as he has taunted teams in the past to rub it in.

With the win, the Warriors are 42-34, which puts them four games ahead of the Rockets for the No. 10 seed with six games left. While Houston may not be an issue going forward, Golden State will have to play perfect basketball if they want to move up any higher in the standings.

The Rockets weren’t ready for Klay Thompson and the Warriors.

The Golden State Warriors have won four of the last nine NBA championships. They employ the undisputed greatest shooter in NBA history, another all-time marksman, the most impactful defender of his generation and a player who’s fully deserving of the nickname ‘Point God,’ all of whom are well past their playing primes, aged into their mid-30s or beyond them. What, you thought the Dubs were too accomplished, experienced and mature to be petty?

Golden State blew out the Houston Rockets 133-110 on Thursday at Toyota Center, extending a league-best winning streak to a season-long six games. More importantly, the Warriors effectively ended the upstart Rockets’ hopes of surpassing them for the final play-in berth in the Western Conference, moving four games ahead of Ime Udoka’s team in the standings with just six left to play.

It wasn’t even the opportunity to dash a team’s postseason dreams that had Golden State frothing entering Thursday’s game. Ongoing taunts from injured Houston forward Tari Eason clearly served as motivation enough for the Dubs, who made sure to acknowledge that dynamic after the final buzzer.

“A great performance, much-needed win and above all, it was just a lot of fun to beat these guys,” Klay Thompson told NBC Sports Bay Area during an on-court interview. “I know there’s been a lot of noise and a lot of trolling. Felt pretty sweet to come in here and get a win. A lot of great history in this building; always fun to do it in Houston.”

Thompson spearheaded one of the Warriors’ most comprehensive efforts of the season in H-Town, dropping 21 of his 29 points in the first half on a series of vintage jumpers from all over the perimeter. Stephen Curry matched Thompson’s 29 points, too, just 48 hours after the Splash Brothers combined for 27 points on 32 shot attempts in a hard-earned home win over the Dallas Mavericks.

Asked specifically about Eason’s fire-stoking attire on the postgame podium, Thompson couldn’t help but pounce once again.

“Yeah, that’s pretty lame, especially if you’re not even playing. Like it’s one thing if you’re playing and you’re out there competing and you back it up, but if you’re just gonna be trolling from the sideline. Like, bro, what are we doing?” he said of Eason. “At times we talk mess, at least we’re out there competing. I’m not gonna—that’s all I have to say about that.”

Warriors end ‘soft or scared’ Rockets’ play-in hopes

Golden State Warriors forward Andrew Wiggins (22) celebrates with forward Trayce Jackson-Davis (32) after a basket against the Houston Rockets in the second quarter at Toyota CenterThomas Shea-USA TODAY Sports
Udoka didn’t mince words about his team’s disappointing effort with its season on the line. Then again, it would’ve been impossible to watch the early stretches of Thursday’s game and come to any other conclusion than the one he so plainly admitted to reporters.

“It looked like the moment was too big for a lot of players out there. I saw it looked like deer in the headlights a little bit,” Udoka said. “We either looked soft or scared, one or the other, two bad things for a lot of our guys to have. Didn’t rise up to the moment like I thought we would.”