OAKLAND, Calif. — Everybody expected Stephen Curry to make the 3-pointer from way out with the clock winding down.
Instead, Curry missed it with 5.3 seconds left, and the Golden State Warriors suffered their first home defeat in more than 14 months, losing, 109-106, to the Boston Celtics on Friday night to snap a record 54-game regular-season winning streak at Oracle Arena.
“Every one of them I think is going down, but it didn’t,” Curry said. “All things considered, it was a pretty good look at it. … We’ve gotten away with some games that we probably shouldn’t have won with some shots like that, and tonight it wasn’t our night.”
That unbeaten run in Oakland included 36 consecutive home wins to start this season. Golden State hadn’t lost at home since a 113-111 overtime defeat to the Chicago Bulls on Jan. 27, 2015.
Now, the Warriors (68-8) must win five of their final six games to break the Bulls’ record of 72 regular-season wins, set in 1995-96.
Isaiah Thomas made a driving layup with 8.3 seconds left on the way to 22 points for Boston. He scored 18 of his points in the third quarter, when Curry got hot from 3-point land, making all six of his attempts.
Shaun Livingston hit two free throws with 46.9 seconds left to get Golden State within two at 105-103, then Draymond Green wrestled the ball away from Amir Johnson moments later for his sixth steal and Golden State called timeout. Green lost the ball with 23.9 seconds left.
“I kind of started observing the floor before I really grabbed the ball and saw the exact situation that we wanted and left the ball behind,” Green said. “I guess you need those lessons sometimes, but it never feels good.”
Evan Turner made a pair of free throws with 18.1 seconds to go before Harrison Barnes’ baseline 3-pointer on a dish from Curry.
Curry’s final look from long range fell short on a night he had been spectacular from beyond the arc. Barnes grabbed the offensive rebound and missed on a long desperation heave with 0.2 seconds left.
Curry went coast to coast and behind his back for a layup to make it 103-101 with 1:29 to go. Boston answered once more, this time on Turner’s jumper.
Curry shimmied and swiveled his hips, celebrating as 3-pointers kept finding the net — he made eight of them to score 29 points — and for a change that wasn’t enough for the sloppy defending champs, who couldn’t overcome 22 turnovers that led to 27 points for the Celtics.
Green tried to rally the Warriors on his own. In order, he had a three-point play, a 3-pointer and a putback with 3:58 left that pulled the Warriors within three at 99-96.
Trailing 82-79 going into the fourth quarter marked just the Warriors’ sixth deficit after three quarters at home this season.
Marcus Smart’s 3-pointer with 8:41 left put the Celtics up, 93-83, and Smart took an elbow to the chin from Barnes in the backcourt with 7:20 left. Every play like that mattered for the Celtics to accomplish what no other team had done in so long.
Boston did it in the second game of a back-to-back no less following Thursday’s 116-109 loss at the Portland Trail Blazers.
While coach Steve Kerr called the execution “really bad,” he also praised his players.
“Everybody’s bummed,” he said. “I congratulated them. Are you kidding me? They just won 54 home games in a row. What our guys accomplished is incredible. I don’t know if people understand the intensity it takes and the work that it takes to put together a streak like that.”
Golden State won the first meeting against the Celtics, 124-119, on Dec. 11 in two overtimes in a game featuring 22 lead changes and 16 ties as the Warriors improved to 24-0. They lost at the Milwaukee Bucks the next night for the first defeat after a record-setting start.
It was a 3-point shootout during one sequence late in the third when Leandro Barbosa hit for the Warriors, then Jared Sullinger, and Curry — who the next time down was fouled from way beyond the arc and made all three free throws. That pulled the Warriors within 73-72 at the 2:19 mark of the third.
Curry hit a 30-foot 3-pointer from the top with 1:52 remaining in the third only to see Kelly Olynyk answer — except Curry’s onslaught from way out never subsided.
“When Curry got going in the third quarter, I thought the biggest moment of the game was us scoring consecutively when he scored,” Boston coach Brad Stevens said.
Curry shot 9-for-19, making eight of 14 3-pointers, and had six assists. Kerr nearly rested him for Wednesday night’s overtime win at the Utah Jazz but Curry declared himself good to go.
“He’s in his prime,” Kerr said of the 28-year-old reigning MVP. “He’s not injured.”
Curry hit two 3-pointers in the first 1:02 of the third and six in all during the quarter.
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