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Steve Kerr shoulders blame for Warriors' upset loss to short-handed Pacers at home

D. Ross Cameron-USA TODAY Sports

Despite being down Domantas Sabonis, Myles Turner, Malcolm Brogdon and Caris LeVert on the second leg of a road back-to-back, the underdog Indiana Pacers showed up to play against the Golden State Warriors at Chase Center on Thursday night.

After falling behind by eight at halftime, the Pacers fought back. Chris Duarte and Keifer Sykes pushed the Pacers to tie the game before the start of the fourth quarter.

In the final quarter, fireworks from Steph Curry gave the Warriors a three-point advantage with less than 10 seconds remaining in the contest. With the lead on the final possession, Steve Kerr’s squad made the decision not to foul, giving Indiana the chance to launch a 3 before the final buzzer.

That decision cost the Warriors. Justin Holiday pulled up from deep to bury a game-tying 3 and push the game into overtime.

Despite multiple chances during overtime, the Warriors’ ice-cold offense had no answer for the gritty Pacers. Rick Carlisle’s short-handed squad served the Warriors a surprise upset loss at home, 121-117.

After the game, Steve Kerr was the first to take the blame for Golden State’s loss to Indiana.

I blame myself No. 1. I didn’t think I did a good job preparing the team to be ready to play. Anytime a team has half their guys missing, it’s like the same old story in the NBA. All the guys who play can’t wait to get out there. They made 15 3s. They just took it to us all night. I did not do a good job of preparing the group. It was a struggle. We couldn’t really get stops consistently. I give Indiana great credit. Their guys stepped up and made plays – made big shots. We had some huge turnovers in the second half. I think we had 14 in the second half and those really hurt. Just kind of a combination of all that.

Via @NBCSWarriors on Twitter:

When it came to the decision to not foul with a three-point lead before the end of regulation, Kerr shouldered the blame for that, too.

As far as the 3-point shot that tied it, yeah, I’m normally a fouler. I take the hit on that one, too. So, this was my night to stink it up.

Curry led the way for the Warriors with a game-high 39 points on 12-of-27 shooting from the field in 44 minutes, but it wasn’t enough against Indiana. Duarte matched his career-high with 27 points on 10-of-16 shooting from the field. The Pacers rookie added seven boards, three assists and three blocks in 39 minutes.

Kerr and the Warriors will not have much time to dwell on Thursday’s surprise loss to the Pacers. On Friday, the Warriors will welcome the Houston Rockets to Chase Center for the second leg of a home back-to-back.

The post originally appeared on Warriors Wire. Follow Warriors Wire on Facebook and Twitter.

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