SAN FRANCISCO — Steve Kerr made a point to note the circumstances to his players during their walkthrough before facing the Spurs: it had all the makings of a trap game.

His words proved prescient only hours later, as the Golden State Warriors lost 112-107, struggling to show the same fight they did to get revenge against Phoenix a night earlier. The loss snapped an 11-game home winning streak.

Golden State came to life after halftime, erasing a deficit that grew as large as 22, to take a brief lead but the burst of energy proved to be too little and too late.

Steph Curry ignited the Warriors offense — and the sold-out crowd inside Chase Center – by pulling up at halfcourt as the final seconds ticked off the clock in the third quarter. On his second dryspell of the week, this one was wet.

Over the ensuing 8 minutes, 45 seconds of game time, the Warriors limited San Antonio to a single field goal to finally pull even at 101 on a Curry foul shot. Draymond Green gave them the lead with 2:39 left while falling into the front row of courtside fans, Golden State's first advantage since leading 9-8.

It took until the second half for the Warriors to wake up.

Tipoff Saturday came less than 24 hours after the final buzzer Friday.

Chase Center was missing the same energy it had the night prior when it hosted the top two teams in the Western Conference. With a close loss in Phoenix earlier this week and a convincing win Friday, the Warriors faced their measuring sticks before they stepped on the court against San Antonio.

Curry missed his first nine attempts from the field while Golden State fell behind by as many as 22 points in the first half.

The arena had been waiting to erupt every time Curry took a shot, and on his 10th attempt from the field, he finally found the net. It was a 3-pointer that ended a 37-19 run that stretched for more than 10 minutes of the second quarter, closing Golden State's deficit from 43-21 to 62-58.

The Warriors went without a point for a stretch of more than 5 minutes during the first quarter, allowing San Antonio to mount a 17-0 run.

Their slow start couldn't have been symbolized any better than how the first quarter finished. After making a steal on one end, Curry botched a layup in transition, leading to a breakaway bucket for Lonnie Walker IV that made it 36-19.

The Warriors fell behind by 11 with 6:56 to go in the first quarter and didn't get back within single digits until the 1:49 mark of the second quarter. Golden State used a 37-19 run that stretched for the majority of the second quarter to pull as close as 4 in the final minute before intermission.

However, the Spurs quickly sprang two more buckets before halftime, and it took the Warriors until late in the fourth quarter to draw any closer.

It was easy enough to see the Warriors' dud coming Saturday, even Kerr telegraphed the possibility in his pregame question-and-answer session.

"It's a classic trap game," Kerr said. "It's going to be about our energy and our ability to focus. … so we're going to have to find the energy after last night's game."