Not with the 1-2 MVP race thoroughbreds Stephen Curry and James Harden running neck-and-neck all the way to the wire. Not with the top two seeds in the Western Conference that have only grown stronger and more confident through the first two rounds of the playoffs taking each other's body blows and just coming back for more. Not with Kerr responding to Houston's opening gambit of jamming the ball down the Warriors' throats to the point of almost having to pay rent for living at the rim, by turning to a lineup of small ball that has paid off big dividends all season long. Not even when Shaun Livingston, who eight years ago ripped up just about every part of his left knee that kept the lower half of his leg attached and played for seven other NBA teams before landing in the Bay Area last summer, came off the bench to be the one that stopped the rope from slipping entirely through the Warriors' hands. That's because it's exactly who the Warriors are — something or somebody coming at you in some way on each different night. Livingston, who missed 1½ years while rehabbing his knee, finished with a career playoff-high 18 points that included a 5-for-5, 14-point, two-assist, one-rebound, save-the-game second quarter just when the Rockets were threatening to run away and hide by building a 16-point lead. Credit Shaun for coming in and saving the day, keeping us afloat when everybody else was struggling. – Steve Kerr "Credit Shaun for coming in and saving the day, keeping us afloat when everybody else was struggling," Green said. "Once again complete team effort. You never know who's going to step up on this team. We've prided ourselves on our depth all year and it continues to come through for us." It was the sixth time in nine playoff wins this postseason that the Warriors have rallied from at least 13 points down and you can't blame Kerr if he hopes this doesn't become even more of a habit.