Warriors big man Draymond Green has yet to address the late-game gaffe that led to his heated argument with Kevin Durant, but a sly question from Mark Medina of the San Jose Mercury News led to a slight admission of his misjudgment down the stretch, which resulted in a turnover.

“The ball movement si always important,” said Green. “Whether we have a matchup we like or whether a guy has it going, ball movement is always gonna be important. There are times where you just gotta scrap that — a lot of times down the stretch we scrap that. K(evin Durant) is gonna have the ball, Steph is gonna have the ball, Klay is gonna be flying off for a shot… down the stretch you gotta go to those guys late and they have to go get a bucket, that's just a fact of the matter.”

During the last play of regulation, Green snatched a potential rebound away from Durant and failed to look his way as he asked for the ball. While he raced up court, he didn't look for Thompson either, but rather looked to get a cutting Kevon Looney the ball, resulting on the Clippers' blitz and ultimate strip of the ball by his kryptonite Montrezl Harrell, which sent the game to overtime.

One thing worth noticing is just how frustrated Durant is at not getting the ball while Klay Thompson, who had the hot hand to shoot the team back into a 16-3 run to close out the quarter, only showed disappointment by the team's inability to get a shot off before the buzzer.

What was a minuscule blemish on the Warriors' record has now blown up to be a potential rift between Green and Durant due to their own competitive nature, surfacing ulterior motives for their issues with one another.