Highlights from TNT’s broadcast of the Warriors 106-94 victory in Game 1 of the Western Conference Semifinals:

Draymond Green and Barkley did a little shirt-talking Tuesday night.

The playful feud started the moment Green reported for Game 1 duty Tuesday night. TNT cameras caught the Warriors forward sauntering into Oracle Arena while wearing … um … what, exactly? It looked like a black T-shirt grafted onto a lumberjack’s red flannel.

Barkley was aghast…

"Way back when I had the red, black lumberjack with the hat to match." – @SHAQ 😂😂😂 #InsidetheNBA pic.twitter.com/TYkZbuzUSG — NBA on TNT (@NBAonTNT) May 3, 2017

“These guys, they can’t spend over $25 on their outfits, and it ain’t right,” Barkley sniffed as the camera zoomed in on Green’s unusual ensemble. “C’mon, man. That’s almost as bad as James Harden last night.”

That critique apparently found its way back to Green. When he was asked after the game about comparisons to Barkley as a player, the Warriors forward played his typically stiff defense.

“Much love, Chuck, and stop hating on my shirt, alright?” Green said.

Barkely still wasn’t buying it. TNT put the shirt on the screen again during the postgame show, prompting Shaquille O’Neal to ask whether the outfit was made by Versace.

“Garba-ce,” Barkley said.

"Much love, Chuck and stop hating on my shirt, alright?" – @Money23Green after Game 1 win over Jazz#NBAPlayoffs pic.twitter.com/ChQ584sP9t — NBA on TNT (@NBAonTNT) May 3, 2017

UTAH TAKES ITS LUMPS

Barkley loves to take the occasional swing at the Warriors, but he made the Jazz his punching bag this time. Barkley and the rest of the NBA on TNT crew sounded less than impressed with the Jazz’s performance during the Warriors’ 106-94 victory at Oracle Arena. Related Articles The Deets: The Clippers’ collapse is great news for the NBA

Analyzing if Warriors should select Deni Avdija with No. 2 pick

Warriors’ Eric Paschall named to NBA All-Rookie first team

How Shaun Livingston went from the Harvard classroom to the Warriors front office

Why Leandro Barbosa decided to join the Warriors’ coaching staff

Barkley compared Utah’s series opener to stepping into a firing squad.

“Tell you what, boy, watching this game all they needed was a cigarette and a blindfold,” he said.

As the highlights rolled on during the TNT postgame show, Ernie Johnson narrated a second-half bucket that got the Jazz to within 11 points.

“Utah was kind of trying to hang around,” Johnson said.

“No, they weren’t,” Barkley said.

At issue for Barkley was Utah’s offensive approach. The Jazz spent the season slowing the tempo and grinding down the shot clock. He said style that just won’t work against the high-flying Warriors.

Not that a shift in tactics would change much, anyway, he said.

“The Warriors were complaining about the nightlife in Utah,” Barkley said. “The way things look, they only have to take one trip there.”

BEST INSIGHT TO A COACH’S THINKING

The Jazz, fresh off their grind-it-out series with the Los Angeles Clippers, clearly weren’t ready for the dramatic tempo change. TNT game analyst Kevin McHale knows the feeling. He coached the Houston Rockets past the Clippers during the 2015 playoffs before being obliterated by the Warriors in the Western Conference Finals.

“We played these guys in the same exact scenario,” McHale said during the broadcast. “And I remember thinking, ‘My goodness, when did that team get so fast? .. They were running and I was literally, like, ‘These guys are like racehorses.’ I sat down with my assistant coaches and said, “What are we going to do?!”

BEST SUBTLE SHADE

TNT’s “Stat of the Night” highlighted the Warriors’ 207-39 regular-season record over the past three seasons, a mark that topped the 1996-97 Bulls (203-43) and 1984-86 Celtics (192-54).

That stat just happened to tee it up for McHale, who played on those Celtics teams and won two NBA titles during that three-year span.

“All of those (victories) in three years looks great for Golden State. But it’s championship or bust,” McHale said. “They need a championship to validate all that great regular-season play.”

BEST USE OF REPLAY

Utah forward Gordon Hayward struggled to get going, and smart use of replay early in the third quarter showed why. The cameras isolated Hayward as he got past Kevin Durant, only to find Zaza Pachulia looming in the paint. Then Pachulia called for a switch with Draymond Green, who followed Hayward out to the 3-point line to force an errant shot.

“You stop another team’s great player by having everybody involved,” McHale said. “There you saw three different Warriors guarding Gordon Hayward. And you see he had to settle for a contested 3 to beat the shot clock.”