Draymond Green did not respond to Austin Rivers with a counterargument. He responded with a blowtorch.
“It’s ridiculous. Draymond has such a high IQ. That’s a big part of his game is how smart of a basketball player he is – so it bewilders me that he even thinks like this.”
Austin Rivers on Draymond Green’s comments regarding Steve Kerr 👀
(via @dpshow) pic.twitter.com/ksnDscr3ao https://t.co/wb8fKsuvTx
— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) May 1, 2026
After Rivers questioned aspects of Green’s NBA career, Green fired back by dragging the debate all the way back to high school.
“Austin, you and I averaged the same amount of points in HS,” Green said, “and I say HS cause that’s when you were at your best.” Then he went for the line that turned the whole thing from basketball disagreement into personal roast: “The guy received the biggest bailout in US history when his dad gave him 42 million dollars.”
Draymond responds to Austin Rivers 👀
“Austin, you and I averaged the same amount of points in high school and I say high school cause that’s when you were at your best. Should he really talk about my NBA career? The guy received the biggest bailout in US history prior to… pic.twitter.com/R3fFBMLqiN
— The Draymond Green Show (@DraymondShow) May 4, 2026
That is Draymond in full media mode: part analyst, part instigator, part guy at the barbershop who refuses to let anyone leave quietly. The point was not subtle. Green was accusing Rivers of being protected by circumstance, helped by his father Doc Rivers, and unqualified to critique a career built on defense, winning and championship equity.
The funny part is that Green has never needed scoring to validate himself. That is almost the entire argument of his career. He became Draymond Green by doing the things box-score watchers often miss: quarterbacking defenses, passing from the short roll, screaming teammates into position, turning chaos into structure and turning himself into a necessary piece of a dynasty.
So when Rivers comes for that career, Green is always going to ask the same question: what exactly are we measuring here?
Rivers had a long NBA career of his own, and that should not be erased. But Draymond’s response was designed to do what his best defensive possessions do: take away space.
As usual with Draymond, the line between argument and entertainment barely existed. But that has always been the deal. He does not just talk about basketball. He turns every slight into a possession, and every possession into contact.
