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Jordan Poole scores 20 points, Warriors hold off Jazz 94-92

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Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry, left, drives to the basket against Utah Jazz guard Mike Conley during the first half of an NBA basketball game in San Francisco, Sunday, Jan. 23, 2022. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

SAN FRANCISCO – Stephen Curry has been around long enough that he can be playful when it comes to his rare, recent shooting funk.

Are his hands healthy after a couple of recent minor injuries?

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“They're still attached to my body and I'm still getting up plenty of attempts,” the two-time MVP said following another off-night, one where his Golden State Warriors beat the Utah Jazz 94-92 on Sunday.

“I'm trying to have fun with this. It's a big-picture perspective on how you approach the game, the work that you put in. It's obviously frustrating. I want to shoot the ball, it's frustrating. I kicked the chair the other day for that reason," he said. "It's not like I don't care and not trying to figure it out but I don't get preoccupied with it.”

While Curry's shot is a little off — for now — coach Steve Kerr praises his star point guard's ballhandling, how he's dishing off and defending and all the other intangibles, like those 34 assists to six turnovers the past four games.

Curry scored 13 points, struggling again with his 3-point stroke a month after becoming the all-time NBA 3s leader. He went 1 for 13 from deep and 5 of 20 overall.

“Steph looks great physically. The last few games he’s playing some of his basketball in terms of handling the point guard duties,” Kerr said. “He’s taking care of the basketball, he’s playing great defense, shots just aren’t going. ... He’s seemed inhuman for so long. I think everybody just expects him to be in a groove all season long and it’s just not the way it works.”

Jordan Poole scored 20 points on Sunday night to lead a balanced Golden State scoring attack as the Warriors held off a late rally by the Jazz. And Curry's brother-in-law Damion Lee did his part, coming off the bench to hit four clutch 3-pointers and score 12 points.

The Warriors were looking to build some momentum off Curry's buzzer-beater in a 105-103 win over Houston on Friday night. But this was another frenzied finish.

Joe Ingles tied the game at 89 with 4:09 to play.

The Warriors held on despite an 11-point fourth quarter by holding the Jazz to 17 in the period and 38.3% shooting. Royce O’Neale rebounded Bojan Bogdanovic’s missed 3-pointer with a hand in his face and O’Neale couldn’t convert a tip-in as the final buzzer sounded.

“That’s how you’ve got to win when you’re scuffling a little bit,” Kerr said. “Really proud of the team.”

Poole earned another start, taking the place of Klay Thompson, who was a late scratch with soreness in his surgically repaired left knee that sidelined him all of the 2019-20 season.

Poole, who went 7 of 13, tells Curry to “just keep shooting.”

“His shot today looked good,” Poole said. “We know how good of a shooter he is.”

Bogdanovic — who has recently nursed an injured left ring finger — scored 21 points while Rudy Gobert grabbed 18 rebounds to go with 12 points for the Jazz, who lost their fourth straight to the Warriors. That streak dates back to exactly a year ago, when the Jazz won 127-108 in Utah on Jan. 23, 2021.

Rudy Gay's 3 with 11:37 left pulled the Jazz within 83-78 then Gobert dunked two possessions later to make it 83-80 before another slam off an offensive rebound at 9:46. Gay finished with 16 points and four 3s.

Golden State's Kevon Looney had his career-best streak of five straight games with double-digit rebounds end as he grabbed six boards. But his three-point play on a putback with 1:48 left meant plenty and he finished with 10 points.

Kerr called the basket the “key offensive possession of the game.”

“It was big for me, I showed a lot of emotion,” Looney said.

CURRY FROM DEEP

Curry, the reigning scoring champion, is just 35 for 117 from 3-point range this month.

Anything mechanically off? “Who gives a damn about excuses?” he said. “You either make shots or you miss shots. I've got to start making some shots.”

THOMPSON'S BIG QUARTER

Kerr recalled Thompson's NBA-record 37-point quarter from seven years ago, when he went off in the third quarter of a 126-101 win against the Sacramento Kings at Oracle Arena on Jan. 23, 2015.

Curry's Splash Brother wound up with 52 points while going 11 for 15 on 3s.

“It was like a religious experience, one of the most powerful moments of my life,” Kerr said.

TIP-INS

Jazz: Donovan Mitchell sat out his third straight game with a concussion but coach Quin Snyder is keeping the guard in the mix by checking in regularly and providing the game plans. “Concussions are so variable. I feel for him in that sense,” Snyder said. ... Former Warriors F Eric Paschall received a “Welcome Back to the Bay” and nice ovation when he checked in at the 6:53 mark of the first. He had six points in 12 minutes. ... The Jazz lost their third straight on Golden State's home floor.

Warriors: Veteran Andre Iguodala sat out as Golden State manages his left hip injury. “He’s feeling a lot better today, but we’re just going to be safe and keep him out,” Kerr said. ... Golden State took care of the ball, committing just 10 turnovers.

UP NEXT

Jazz: At Phoenix on Monday night to complete the back-to-back.

Warriors: Host the Mavericks on Tuesday night, looking to snap a three-game losing streak in the series and a four-game skid to Dallas at home.

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