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Warriors at Rockets: How to watch, stream, lineups, injury report for Game 2

Warriors at Rockets: How to watch, stream, lineups, injury report for Game 2

USA Today23-04-2025

Warriors at Rockets: How to watch, stream, lineups, injury report for Game 2
In the opening game of the series, the Golden State Warriors went into Houston and stole the opening game of the series against the Rockets, 95-85. Steph Curry led the Warriors with 31 points and five made 3-pointers while Jimmy Butler added 25 points to fuel Golden State to a 1-0 series lead.
Before the Warriors meet the Rockets on Wednesday evening, here's everything you need to know about Game 2, including how to watch.
This post originally appeared on Warriors Wire! Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!
How To Watch:
Date: Wednesday, April 23
Time: 6:30 p.m. PT
Location: Toyota Center - Houston, Texas
Channel: TNT
Stream: HBO Max
Probable Lineups:
Warriors:
G - Stephen Curry - No. 30 - Davidson
G - Brandin Podziemski - No. 2 - Santa Clara
F - Jimmy Butler - No. 10 - Marquette
F - Moses Moody - No. 4 - Arkansas
F - Draymond Green - No. 23 - Michigan State
Rockets:
G - Fred VanVleet - No. 5 - Wichita State
G - Jalen Green - No. 4 - G League Ignite
F - Amen Thompson - No. 1 - Overtime Elite
F - Dillon Brooks - No. 9 - Oregon
C - Alperen Sengun - No. 28 - Turkey
Injury Report
Subject To Change
Warriors:
Stephen Curry - Available - Right Thumb Sprain
Gary Payton II - Available - Left Thumb Splint
Rockets:
Jock Landale - Out - Right Knee Contusion
Ja'Sean Tate - Out - RIght Ankle Impingement
Uniforms
Warriors:
Icon Edition (Blue)
Rockets:
Icon Edition (Red)
Warriors' Next Games:

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When Don Nelson collects Chuck Daly Lifetime Achievement Award, he'll throw shade at Doncic trade
When Don Nelson collects Chuck Daly Lifetime Achievement Award, he'll throw shade at Doncic trade

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When Don Nelson collects Chuck Daly Lifetime Achievement Award, he'll throw shade at Doncic trade

Don Nelson never coached by the book, maybe because he never read the book, having had no intention of coaching in the first place. So the man honored Sunday at the Pacers-Thunder NBA Finals game in Oklahoma City with the Chuck Daly Lifetime Achievement Award had to write his own virtual book on coaching. Here is a snippet, which might bring back fond memories for long-time fans of the Golden State Warriors. It takes place in early 2007 at Smitty's, an Oakland dive bar near Lake Merritt. Nelson, coach of the Warriors, arrives with two of his players, Stephen (Stack Jack) Jackson and Baron (Boom Dizzle) Davis. The Warriors hired Nelson that season, an eyebrow-raising move because he was 66 and had been out of coaching a year, seemingly retired. This was his second go-round with the Warriors, having coached them for seven seasons, starting in '88. The Warriors had just traded for Jackson, who came with baggage. The previous season, while on probation for an assault-and-battery charge, Jackson got into a beef at a strip club and fired several shots from his handgun. Davis had a rep for not getting along with coaches, including the previous Warriors coach, Mike Montgomery. At Smitty's, Nellie, Stack Jack and Boom Dizzle played shuffleboard, drank scotch and talked basketball for a couple hours. Finally, Nelson told his two players, 'You guys are going to be my captains. You run this team, and we're going to have fun.' And so it was. The Warriors scrapped and swashbuckled their way into the playoffs and pulled off the 'We Believe' miracle, a No. 8 seed defeating the No. 1 seed Dallas Mavericks. Yes, Nelson had a style. Still does. He said for Sunday's on-court award presentation he would wear a tuxedo jacket, out of respect for the honor; a black t-shirt and blue jeans, because he doesn't take himself too seriously, and a Hawaiian necklace, because he is an adopted son of Maui, his long-time home. And shoes. More on those in a moment. The award is a big deal to Nelson. He hasn't left Maui in six years. He was lured away from paradise by the Chuck Daly honor, the culmination of Nelson's lifetime love affair with basketball that began in a chicken yard in rural Illinois, on his parents' hog farm. 'My uncle Walt put up a basket (a bicycle tire rim) in the chicken yard, and the chickens just (pooped) all over your court, of course,' Nelson says. 'It was a mess. One day I was playing against the guy next door, I dropped my gum, I thought I found it three or four times.' With Nelson's stories, sometimes you have to ponder the punch line for a moment. When Nelson was in seventh grade, pork prices slumped and the family lost the farm. That was fortuitous for young Don, because the one-room schoolhouse with six kids back on the farm wasn't going to lead him to college. The family moved to big-city Rock Island, where Don, big, strong and smart, became a star in high school. At Iowa, he was a third-team All-American as a junior, and in those pre-NIL days, he took a summer job at the International Harvester factory in Rock Island, operating a punch press. 'I looked to my right and to my left, and both guys working those machines had fingers missing,' Nelson said, laughing. 'They got 'em lopped off on the machines. They had these protective sleeves you're supposed to wear, but this was piece-work, and the only way you could make money was to take the sleeves off so you could go faster. I'm looking over, their goddamn fingers are missing and I'm going, 'Holy s—t, it's going to be hard to be a basketball player with fingers missing.' ' Nelson survived the factory, and after Iowa he went on to a 12-year NBA career, earning five rings with the Boston Celtics. He played one season under coach Red Auerbach, before Auerbach moved to the front office. Nelson made it a routine on game days to arrive at the arena several hours early and drop by Auerbach's office. 'I would sit there and talk basketball with him,' Nelson said, 'and I just learned so much from him. That's how I really got deep into the game. Things like how to run a team, how to get your team ready, get after guys at halftime.' That reminded Nelson of a story. 'One game we were down by about 15 at halftime. Red got on my old friend, Tom (Satch) Sanders. He said, 'Goddammit, Satch, you're not playing worth a s—t. If you don't get going, we're going to lose this game.' Satch says, 'Coach, I haven't been in the game yet.' ' After retiring, Nelson needed a job, so he decided to become an NBA ref. 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