With the Warriors down big midway through the fourth quarter Tuesday night, fans began filing for the Oracle Arena exits. Of his four other regular-season home losses as Golden State's head coach, only one — a 113-100 loss to the Spurs on Nov. 11, 2014 — was by double digits. The team shot 21.2 percent from three-point range, was outrebounded 55-35, and didn't seriously threaten after giving up a 14-4 run to close the first half. The Warriors, who thrive on pushing the tempo, were outscored 24-20 in fastbreak points by the traditionally more methodical Spurs. The question now becomes how a Golden State team considered the favorite to win the NBA title responds to an embarrassment. [...] dating back to its Finals loss in June, Golden State has dropped four straight games. Though many pundits tabbed Golden State as a lock to win another NBA title, he recognized that getting a new-look roster to coalesce requires patience. Four of Golden State's next five games are on the road, with the only home date in that span a nationally televised matchup next Thursday against Durant's former Thunder team.