You can't blame Chris Paul for being upset, really. His Los Angeles Clippers had fought back from a 17-point second-quarter deficit against the scorching-hot Golden State Warriors to take a lead after three quarters, thanks in large part to his brilliant work attacking the Dubs off the bounce, collapsing the defense and creating opportunities for his teammates. The Clips pushed that advantage to double-digits on a Jamal Crawford putback with just under eight minutes remaining in the fourth quarter ... and it still didn't matter. [ Play Yahoo Daily Fantasy and get a 100% deposit bonus with your first deposit ] Ten unanswered points by about-to-be-obscenely-rich forward Harrison Barnes followed by a 13-points-in-5-1/2-minutes reminder that Stephen Curry is the most frightening thing in the NBA today and sensational late-game defense by the small-ball Draymond Green-at-center lineup that bedeviled the league last season put the Warriors back on top in the final minute. Whether due to momentary hesitation, the defense of Green or a combination of both, Paul missed an opportunity to hit an open Blake Griffin in the lane with just under 30 seconds remaining before instead uncorking a...