http://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/26705236/the-rockets-chance-put-end-if OAKLAND, Calif. -- For the past year, James Harden, Chris Paul and the Houston Rockets organization have sat around lamenting "what if." What if Paul didn't pull his hamstring in last year's Western Conference finals against the Golden State Warriors? What if the Rockets had continued to control the series? What if they had played the outmanned Cleveland Cavaliers in the NBA Finals? These are a lifetime of what ifs, old men in the bar what ifs, alone with your thoughts in the dark what ifs. This is why this moment now is vital for the Rockets. This is a chance to grasp this karmic turn. Kevin Durant's calf injury Wednesday night in the third quarter of the Warriors' 104-99 win in Game 5 of this year's conference semifinals knocked the series from its orbit. It changed Houston's opportunity. In a flash, the Rockets' underdog status was nullified. No Durant. No DeMarcus Cousins. Stephen Curry in some bizarre funk that has afflicted his entire game for a week. Houston had already vaporized Golden State's 20-point lead. The Warriors understood it. They huddled and stared at one another as Durant hobbled down the tunnel. "We all looked at each other," Curry said. "There were a couple smiles in terms of what that meant for us as a team -- the guys that were going to need to step up in those moments." The Rockets knew it too. It was a three-point game with 14 minutes left. Durant was gone. They all suspected it was serious, possibly an Achilles tendon injury. Iman Shumpert, who had been nearest to Durant when he shot moments before the injury, swore Durant hadn't landed on him. He asked his Rockets teammates if they had seen it, thinking maybe in the moment he hadn't felt Durant. "Even in times of war, you don't want to hurt another guy," Shumpert said. Durant hadn't landed on Shumpert, they told him. It was noncontact and he'd looked back as if someone had kicked him, the classic reaction to an Achilles or calf injury. The Rockets knew Durant wasn't coming back. They knew that if they could win those 14 minutes, they'd have the leverage. This was a chance to change the direction of history. It was a chance to make Game 5 the last Warriors game at Oracle Arena. Tyson Chandler was injured. Twice when Paul was with the LA Clippers, he lost star teammate Blake Griffin in the playoffs, once to an ankle injury and once to a foot injury. In 2015, Paul hurt his hamstring and missed two games in a second-round series the Clippers lost. In 2016, he broke his hand with his team up 2-1 against the Portland Trail Blazers and his team lost the next three games without him. Then, of course, last year he went down in the final seconds of Game 5 as the Rockets grabbed a 3-2 series lead. The rest you remember: The Warriors won Games 6 and 7 en route to another title. Harden has been struggling to get back to the NBA Finals since 2012. His tenure in Houston has been defined by glorious regular seasons and then letdowns in the playoffs. After tremendous Games 3 and 4 this week in Houston, Game 5 was right there for Harden to take. He did not. But Durant will not likely be back for Game 6 or a potential Game 7. Paul, Harden and the rest of the Rockets missed the opening presented to them in Game 5. But like the Warriors last season, who rallied after seeing Paul go down, the length of a playoff series affords them a last chance. Missing on this one, in the wake of last season, would be pure misery. The Rockets now have something they really didn't expect: the advantage. They always said they believed they could win straight up, but their reliance on whistles at the series' outset told the true tale: To beat the Warriors, they needed some sort of assistance. A false step by Durant has presented them within reach of that brass ring. Paul is 34. Harden has chomped the apple many times without reaching his goal. This right here might be it, a last best chance. "We want their best shot, you know what I mean?" Paul said. "Hopefully [Durant is] all right. We'll see." We will see about a lot.
This is the Rockets moment. If KD is out, this is it. Legacy games for our stars. We’ve lost 3 game so by an average of 5 points, with KD going off. This is it. Run it back? Ok, now it’s time to do what they did to us last year. Injuries suck, but no excuses.
Yeah, there is simply no excuse to not win this series even if Curry or Klay goes for 40. We have an MVP who has something to prove and at least somewhat of a bench who puts points on the boards. This will definitely be big for all their legacies. They should know what's at stake. So lest the refs go nuclear on us, if we lose game 6 and or game 7 then that's solely on these guys. I'd fire MDA immediately and go for a crazy defensive minded coach like JVG to make that our identity. Lionel Hollins says hello.
I hope this indicates a change in the "national narrative.". Would be great to have the not-so-invisible hand working for the Rockets for once
Yeah, I paid no attention to that part, since it’s what most of the media perceives anyways. It’s not that we can beat them straight up, it’s that we “bend the rules” or “cheat” or need help. That’s the sad narrative, if we win, that’s all people will say.. oh KD was injured. Damned if you do and damned if you don’t... but I’ll take the series win, even with the haters
They better realize if they can’t win the series if KD is out, they will be forever be remembered as the pretenders haunting them. This is going to te worse than the 30 point loss at home in G6 to the Spurs without Kahwai. That game we could excuse Harden was exhausted. But this one, there will be no excuses.
Exactly what we need right now, this fat prick giving us a history lesson on Harden and CP3 coming up short in the playoffs.
Windhorsecrap is the sort of overly dramatic and sensationalistic American reporters I hate the most. Hiding all his stupid biased “opinions” under flamboyant writing. And people are taught to respect his ideas because of his tenure and so called reputation. In truth the contents are all but poop poop platters.
Yep. Let me fix it for Windouche: "They always said they believed they could win straight up, but a lack of proper officiating at the series' outset cost them Game 1. To beat a team with 2 MVPs, 4 All-Stars, and a DPOY, they need consistently fair refs."
Assistance, like the refs calling the game correctly and not waiting for autographs from Steph, Klay, and KD after the game? Windhorst attached himself quickly to the Warriors when LeBron left the Cavs.
What y’all dont understand is that 7 games is already in the books for the league. They have already decided that game 7 is where they’re gonna let them play this out. And, the overwhelming favorite is GSW. Rockets are just gonna have to take it... like Hakeem did.
Klay Thompson crashing into Harden's legs and not being called for a foul is not "assistance" from the refs. Because, why, refs aren't obligated to call a foul a foul? So ****ing stupid.