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Steph Curry injured as Warriors drop home opener to Clippers

SAN FRANCISCO — The Chase Center crowd was ready to explode all night, with its team riding a hot start to the season to create an anticipated home opener.

Then it held its breath. Twice.

Late in the third quarter, star Steph Curry twisted his left angle trying to maneuver his way through a screen. He limped to the bench, where he stretched out with an exercise band.

Curry returned with eight minutes left in the fourth quarter for his usual substitution pattern. But on the Warriors’ first possession, he re-twisted his left ankle and had to be helped to the trainer’s room.

As the 36-year-old stayed in the locker room for the remainder of the game with a sprained left ankle, his teammates valiantly shaved the Clippers’ double-digit lead but ultimately fell short in a 112-104 loss. Golden State (2-1) committed too many turnovers and surrendered too many second-chance points, which amounted to its first loss of the season.

Andrew Wiggins led the Warriors’ comeback bid by scoring 11 of his 29 points in the fourth quarter, but the Clippers’ advantage in the possession game was too much to overcome. Los Angeles took 23 more field goal attempts than the Warriors through the first three quarters. In all, they hauled in 14 offensive rebound and forced the Warriors into 20 turnovers.

The Warriors won their first two games of the season by an NBA-record margin of victory of 77, getting off to as magnificent a start as possible. They pushed the pace, clamped down on defense, played a 12-man rotation and rained 3s. Everybody ate, and the vibes, which started high in training camp in Hawaii, have been high.

But that was against Portland and Utah, expected lottery teams. On Sunday, they faced a fairer fight.

The Clippers, despite losing Paul George in free agency (after a brief, game-theorized dalliance with the Warriors) and having star Kawhi Leonard sidelined indefinitely, are in Golden State’s weight class. They’re deep, rangy, big and run through James Harden.

They made sure the Warriors’ home opener wasn’t like their first two games.

Golden State trailed almost the entire game. Buddy Hield, who led the Warriors in scoring in their first two games, struggled to create separation against the Clippers’ stockpile of rangy wings.

Ivica Zubac (23 points, 17 rebounds) and Derrick Jones Jr. especially gave the Warriors issues. Jones drilled a pair of 3s and finished fast breaks, while Zubac was a handful on the glass. At halftime, the Clippers center had 13 points and 10 rebounds, consistently creating extra possessions with tip-outs.

Los Angeles held the Warriors scoreless for the first four minutes of the second quarter, and eventually sent Golden State to its locker room at halftime down 59-54. The Clippers took nine more field goal attempts than the Warriors, handily winning the possession battle because of their work on the boards and Golden State’s 12 first-half turnovers.

The Warriors opened the second half with a trio of turnovers, inspiring Steve Kerr to call a timeout less than two minutes into the third quarter.

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