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Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green, left, looks to pass the ball under pressure from Houston Rockets forward Jabari Smith Jr. (10) during the first half of an NBA basketball game Sunday, Oct. 29, 2023, in Houston. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke)
Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green, left, looks to pass the ball under pressure from Houston Rockets forward Jabari Smith Jr. (10) during the first half of an NBA basketball game Sunday, Oct. 29, 2023, in Houston. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke)
Dieter Kurtenbach
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

The Warriors and Rockets will play a season-defining game Thursday night in Houston.

How often have I written a sentence like that over the last decade?

Too many to count.

So why does this time feel so different?

Or, more specifically, why does this showdown not produce any feelings?

The Warriors and the Rockets were once rivals of the highest order. Their adversarial relationship wasn’t as simple as the team teams playing each other often in the playoffs, it was larger, if not downright ideological.

The Warriors won’t publicly admit it because it’s not couth — the NBA is a so-called “brotherhood,” after all — but this core didn’t pull punches behind the scenes. They hated the James Harden-led Rockets. They despised them. And they weren’t always good at hiding it.

And the Rockets, bless them, hated the Warriors back.

It was the kind of hate between two teams that makes sports great.

Houston thought the Warriors were pretentious front-runners. The Warriors thought the Rockets were styleless hacks.

Both were probably right.

Of course, history is written by the victors and not those who miss 27 straight 3-pointers, so the Warriors’ narrative of events is the official record.

But if styles make fights, the Warriors and Rockets’ contrast set up elite showdowns. The personalities only added to the spectacle. As much as Golden State’s annual meetings with LeBron James and the Cavs were the defining matchups of the aughts, the real NBA Finals were often played between the Warriors and Rockets.

Those series built up enough vitriol to last decades.

But while Draymond Green, Steph Curry, Klay Thompson, and Chris Paul are still part of the Warriors-Rockets proceedings, none of that bile has made it to 2024.

“I don’t give a damn about the Rockets,” Green said last month.

It makes me miss the old days.

My, how things have changed.

Green wasn’t posturing with that comment, though. He really didn’t care about the Rockets.

Perhaps for good reason, too.

Thanks to a five-game win streak, the Warriors can effectively end the surging Rockets’ chances to make the postseason on Thursday. The Rockets can make the Warriors perspire as they fight for the final spot in the Western Conference postseason.

This is a big game, yet no baggage is attached to it. Jerry Seinfeld was wrong — we don’t just root for laundry.

I have a couple of theories on why Warriors-Rockets means nothing but the obvious and straightforward these days.

The first was that the rivalry was, really the Warriors vs. Harden, and Harden left Houston and has now been on three other teams. (One move away from filling out the punchcard and getting a free one.)

The second is that the other Rockets villain, Chris Paul, is now playing hero for the Warriors, and we’re all apparently okay with that. I still find it strange that Warriors fans don’t care (maybe Seinfeld was right), but Rockets fans don’t give a rip, either.

The entire Rockets team has been totally rebuilt since every Warriors-Rockets game was must-see TV.

And, of course, there’s the fact that while this is a big game, the stakes aren’t exactly high.

Fighting for the No. 10 seed in the Western Conference playoffs is a far cry from the battle of Western titans.

There’s hope for a revival of hate, though. The Dubs’ core — Green specifically — won’t need much prodding to see red.

Perhaps that old Warriors adversary, former Grizzly and now Rocket Dillon Brooks can help with that.

The new Rockets stand a chance at being hated, too. Jalen Green is finally living up to his future star potential, averaging 25 points per game on a 58 true shooting percentage since the All-Star Game. Always a gifted trash talker with a devil-may-care smile, Green has all the makings of an arch-villain.

Perhaps the Warriors are too old to be picking fights with a 22-year-old. (Or, in the case of Green, he’s too old to do it again.)

After all, these teams operate on two different timelines. Sorry if that was triggering.

The Rockets are a young team on the rise. The Warriors are a veteran team trying to hold onto the last vestiges of dominance—and perhaps pining for grudges that expired a half-decade ago.

Alright, alright, that last part might be just me.

Perhaps Thursday night will spark a new Warriors-Rockets rivalry. Don’t call it a rekindling.

And perhaps this is just the nostalgia talking, but that won’t compare to what these two teams once had.

Nothing can.