Game Recap: Phoenix 111, Golden State 96. That’s the line. But the real story? Jalen Green went nuclear and the Warriors never got the fire out.
He had 36. On 14-for-20 shooting. Buried eight threes. Some clean looks, some bad-shot-good-shot stuff that makes coaches shrug and opponents cuss. One of them came from way beyond the arc as the clock bled out in the third, a heat-check that felt irresponsible when it left his hands and automatic before it dropped.
That was the mood in the building. You could feel it.
The Suns grabbed the West’s No. 8 seed and now get the defending champion Thunder in Game 1 on Sunday. Tough draw? Sure. But Phoenix didn’t look like a team backing into the bracket. They looked alive.
Golden State looked old.
And yeah, that’s harsh. Also fair.
The Warriors couldn’t keep Green in front, couldn’t bother Booker’s reads, couldn’t survive Phoenix’s fourth-quarter push when the game cracked open. Suns by 15, and it honestly felt wider.
Jalen Green Picked the Right Night to Look Like a Problem
Why did Green torch the Warriors?
Because the jumper was falling. Because Phoenix kept dragging Golden State into actions they didn’t want. Because once Green saw two go in, it was over.
He punished switches.
He cooked in early offense.
He attacked closeouts.
And when the floor shrunk, when playoff-style possessions got ugly, he made something out of nothing. That matters. Against Oklahoma City, it might matter even more.
This wasn’t empty scoring either. This was control.
Three nights after dropping 35 in the play-in loss to Portland, Green came back and basically said, run it again.
That’s growth.
Maybe even a little revenge.
Remember, this is the same guy who got bottled up by Golden State a year ago in that seven-game series with Houston. Averaged 13.3. Shot 37 percent. Took heat for disappearing.
Well. Not this time.
He answered that.
Devin Booker Shifted Gears and Let Green Eat
Why was Booker more passer than scorer?
Because he read the game.
Simple.
Book finished with 20 and eight assists, but this was point-guard Booker, the version that manipulates weak-side help and sprays the ball out when defenses load up.
Four of Green’s threes came off Booker feeds.
That wasn’t random chemistry. That was timing.
Phoenix has spent half the year trying to figure out how Green, Booker and Dillon Brooks fit. Injuries wrecked the runway. Roles shifted. Possessions got clunky. At times it looked forced.
Now? Different feel.
There’s rhythm.
And when Booker can toggle between scorer and table-setter like that, Phoenix gets harder to guard. Pick your poison, like Green said.
Trap Book? Green gets loose.
Press up on Green? Booker snakes into the lane.
Ignore Brooks? He’ll make you pay on cuts or corner spacing.
That’s real playoff stuff.
Turning Point
When did this game flip?
Late third.
Warriors were hanging around. Not comfortable, but hanging.
Then Green launched that ridiculous deep three. Crowd lost it. Warriors looked rattled.
Phoenix smelled blood.
Bench sparked the run after that. Defensive pressure picked up. Rotations tightened. Golden State’s offense got sticky, too much standing, too much searching. Their three-point volume was there, but the shot quality? Rough.
Then came the fourth-quarter surge.
Suns ripped off a run, clamped the perimeter, turned misses into transition chances. Ballgame.
Sometimes a game swings on a 10-0 burst.
Sometimes it swings when one dude hits a shot that breaks your spirit.
This felt like the second one.
Injury-Plagued Season? Green Might Be Hitting His Peak Now
Can Phoenix trust Green in the playoffs?
That’s the whole question, right?
Because the regular season was messy.
Hamstring injury wiped out the first half.
Only 32 games played.
Scoring dipped to 17.8, his lowest since he entered the league.
There were nights he looked disconnected. Nights the fit looked weird. Nights people wondered if the Durant trade package would ever make sense.
Now he looks like a steal.
Funny how fast the league changes.
Green’s athletic burst is back. First step looks nasty again. The pull-up has juice. And maybe most important, he’s not forcing every touch.
He looks comfortable.
That’s dangerous.
What Does This Mean Against Oklahoma City?
Can the Suns challenge the Thunder?
If Green plays like this, they have a puncher’s chance.
Oklahoma City switches everything, crowds driving lanes, turns mistakes into avalanches. Their defensive rating has been elite for a reason. They make scorers work.
But the Suns have something they didn’t have a month ago.
A second bucket getter rolling.
And against a defense that shrinks the floor, a guy who can manufacture offense when the action dies? That’s gold.
Jordan Ott flat-out said it after the game. In playoff possessions, when the court gets tight and the whistles dry up, sometimes you just need to toss it to somebody and say go get one.
Green can do that.
Question is whether he can do it against Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s crew.
That’s a different test.
A nasty one.
But Phoenix didn’t survive the play-in to be polite.
They’re coming.
Key Performances
Jalen Green: 36 points, 8 threes, statement game
Career-high tying eight triples.
Explosive. Efficient. Flat-out killer.
Devin Booker: 20 points, 8 assists
Controlled the tempo, fed Green, made the offense breathe.
Suns defense
Held Golden State to 96.
Clamped the perimeter late.
Forced ugly possessions.
That part can’t get lost.
And What About the Warriors?
Questions coming.
Big ones.
Aging core.
Late-game execution issues.
Perimeter containment problems.
And they had no answer for Green once he got loose.
You give up 111 in a win-or-go-home and let one guard torch you for 36?
That’s not bad luck.
That’s a problem.