Jimmy Butler says ‘I don’t like Dillon Brooks’ after trash talk ignites Warriors’ win over Rockets

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When Jimmy Butler hit the ground in Game 2 of the Warriors’ first-round series against the Rockets, it didn’t look like he’d be back on the court any time soon. So when Golden State cleared him to return from his pelvic contusion for Game 4 on Monday, it seemed very reasonable to question just how much the six-time All-Star could contribute in the heat of a nasty, physical series against a Houston team that would be fighting tooth and nail to avoid falling into a 3-1 hole.

“A lot of pain,” Butler said of the days following his Game 2 fall, which included round-the-clock treatment to try to get him back on the floor. “And then I woke up today, and I was good enough.”

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For most of the early going, it didn’t look like it. Butler had just four points on three field goal attempts, two rebounds, two assists and a block in the first half, with Golden State getting outscored by seven points in his 18 minutes — a dramatic departure from the franchise-shifting all-around impact he has made since arriving in the Bay back in February.

Sometimes, though, all it takes to light a fire is one little spark. Like, say, some spirited trash talk from one of the NBA’s preeminent antagonists.

After Butler and Rockets forward Dillon Brooks exchanged, um, unpleasantries during a pair of Tari Eason free throws, Butler made the verbal physical, delivering a hard foul from behind on Brooks to prevent a breakaway dunk. (Given how many official reviews we saw during the second quarter, it seemed surprising that the refs didn’t head to the monitors on that one.) Brooks missed both free throws, but another Golden State giveaway and fast-break dunk sent Houston into halftime up seven … and sent Butler into the locker room with a bit more gas in his tank.

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“People start talking to you,” Butler told reporters after the game. “Then good things happen.”

Like, say, scoring 14 points in the fourth quarter, hitting the game-icing free throws and skying to grab the rebound that sealed a massive Game 4 win.

Butler’s first shot of the second half was a midrange pull-up bank shot over Brooks. It cashed, part of an 18-1 run to start the second half that got him and the Warriors off to the races.

“I mean, I like it,” Butler said after the game. “I think we all like when people start chirping. It’s been this way this entire series. I don’t think it’s going to change.”

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Don’t get it twisted, though: Just because Butler’s comfortable with some verbal jousting, that doesn’t mean he’s got any reservoir of fond feelings for his counterpart. Well, not for this particular counterpart, at least.

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