Clippers-Warriors rivalry it doesn't mean they can't sling barbs as well as the more established veterans.
The latest bit of verbal jousting came before the Clippers hosted the Warriors at Staples Center on Tuesday night. Rivers, the second-year coach of the Clippers, said he could understand why Draymond Green, who has inflammation in his shins, wasn't playing in the fourth and final meeting of the season between the two teams.
"That was pretty predictable, they didn't want to take the risk of going 2-2 [in the season series] with their regular guys," Rivers said. "You could pretty much predict they weren't going to play everybody."
"Oh, is that right?" Kerr, in his first year as the Warriors coach, said with a chuckle when Rivers' quote was relayed to him. "Either that or we have a nine-game lead and a couple guys banged up. Somewhere in there."
Kerr actually sold his team short. The Warriors entered the night with a 10-game advantage over the Memphis Grizzlies for the best record in the Western Conference, in addition to leading the Clippers by 11 ½ games in the Pacific Division.
Then again, the Clippers-Warriors dust-ups tend to be more about feelings than facts.
There's a history of hard fouls and sideline antics over the past four seasons, with a hard-fought seven-game playoff series last year thrown in. The most recent tiff started when the Clippers' Dahntay Jones brushed by Green during an on-court postgame interview. That drew an icy stare from Green, a $10,000 fine from the NBA and this observation from Rivers: "I guess that tough guy in Golden State, the bump was too hard for him, clearly, the way he reacted. My goodness. I thought the guy was tough."
Green resorted to using Rivers' given first name in his reply, saying: "Cool story, Glenn."
Just because Doc Rivers and Steve Kerr are two of the newest arrivals in the The latest bit of verbal jousting came before the Clippers hosted the Warriors at Staples Center on Tuesday night. Rivers, the second-year coach of the Clippers, said he could understand why Draymond Green, who has inflammation in his shins, wasn't playing in the fourth and final meeting of the season between the two teams.
"That was pretty predictable, they didn't want to take the risk of going 2-2 [in the season series] with their regular guys," Rivers said. "You could pretty much predict they weren't going to play everybody."
"Oh, is that right?" Kerr, in his first year as the Warriors coach, said with a chuckle when Rivers' quote was relayed to him. "Either that or we have a nine-game lead and a couple guys banged up. Somewhere in there."
Kerr actually sold his team short. The Warriors entered the night with a 10-game advantage over the Memphis Grizzlies for the best record in the Western Conference, in addition to leading the Clippers by 11 ½ games in the Pacific Division.
Then again, the Clippers-Warriors dust-ups tend to be more about feelings than facts.
There's a history of hard fouls and sideline antics over the past four seasons, with a hard-fought seven-game playoff series last year thrown in. The most recent tiff started when the Clippers' Dahntay Jones brushed by Green during an on-court postgame interview. That drew an icy stare from Green, a $10,000 fine from the NBA and this observation from Rivers: "I guess that tough guy in Golden State, the bump was too hard for him, clearly, the way he reacted. My goodness. I thought the guy was tough."
Green resorted to using Rivers' given first name in his reply, saying: "Cool story, Glenn."
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