QUINIX Sport News: Jimmy Butler injury update: Warriors rule out star forward for Game 3 vs. Rockets

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Butler’s MRI on Thursday revealed a pelvis contusion

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Imagn Images

Golden State Warriors star Jimmy Butler will not take the floor for Saturday’s Game 3 against the Houston Rockets. Butler suffered a pelvis and deep glute muscle contusion when he took a hard fall in Game 2 of their first-round series against the Houston Rockets on Wednesday, and was listed as questionable to play in Game 3. After pregame warmups, however, the Warriors decided it was best that Butler sit out.

Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga, who re-entered the rotation after Butler’s injury in Game 2, will start Game 3 in his place. Golden State will also start stretch-five Quinten Post in place of Moses Moody in order to provide more spacing next to the Kuminga-Draymond Green combo.

At practice on Friday, Golden State coach Steve Kerr told reporters that “there’s a chance” that Butler will be available in Game 3.

“I’m relatively optimistic,” Kerr said. “I mean, Jimmy is Jimmy. We know he’s willing to play through anything. So we’ll see. This is a day-to-day thing, for sure, and we’ll see how he feels tomorrow.”

Kerr said that the coaching staff will have two rotations ready — one that includes Butler, one that does not. Butler was physically present at practice, but “he was off to the side,” Kerr said.

Butler suffered the injury in the first quarter of Golden State’s 109-94 loss in Houston. He went up for a rebound and was unintentionally undercut by Amen Thompson:

Stephen Curry took a fall just like that in March, and it cost him two games. Kerr said that that Butler’s injury is “very similar” to Curry’s, in that “it’s a pain-tolerance thing.” 

Even before Butler got hurt, the Warriors were being taken out of their game by Houston’s physicality on both ends. The officials are really letting these teams play — not just in this series but across the playoffs — and it is allowing a team like Houston to really rough up the Warriors, who are plenty tough in their own right but lack the athleticism that can make it a little easier to create space and get downhill against tight pressure.

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James Herbert

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Butler is really the only guy who can loosen some of this pressure, which, in the absence of a second star, falls entirely on Curry in the form of two and three defenders more or less trying to rip his limbs off. You can’t ever discount a crazy Curry performance, but, barring something crazy, Houston’s defense is probably too physical and disruptive for the Warriors to overcome without Butler. 

Now the best-case scenario for the Warriors is that Butler can suit up for Game 4.

 

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