HOUSTON -- The league-leading muscle memory that was missing for much of the first two weeks of these playoffs for the Houston Rockets made an appearance just in time for the start of the Western Conference semifinals.

The sweet-shooting team that rolled through the NBA regular season to the tune of a franchise-best 65 wins, finally showed up ... for a half, at least.

The lock-down defense on the perimeter and in the paint ... the showtime gamesmanship of both James Harden and Chris Paul -- it was all there from the start. Now if coach Mike D’Antoni could just get his crew to keep it up for four straight quarters (instead of a half or the three quarters in five games of the Rockets' first-round series win), he'd be a lot happier.

Because when it’s all clicking the way it did early in the Rockets’ 110-96 Game 1 lip-busting of the Utah Jazz here Sunday at Toyota Center, there is no confusion as to who and what these Rockets believe themselves to be.

James Harden set the tone early for the Rockets in Game 1 against the Jazz.

“Scary,” is the way Harden described it afterwards.

Yes, things got sort of interesting late, after the Jazz woke up and started chewing into the Rockets’ 27-point cushion. D’Antoni said he started sweating when the lead dwindled to 11 in the fourth quarter.

He said he was sweating with every dazzling move Jazz rookie Donovan Mitchell made to get himself or a teammate a shot. That caused D'Antoni to send Harden back into the game three minutes earlier than usual.

“It was a total game until halftime,” D’Antoni said. “Obviously we came out ready to roll from the get-go. Halftime happened, and we didn’t have a lot of the juice we should have had. Obviously, we were ready to roll from the get go. They came off a tough series and we had to take advantage of it. They had some dead legs and we came out and did what we were supposed to do.

“But there’s so much emotion and you get in the game and we’re up 27 or up 24 and you kind of let down and it’s hard to get it back. Give them credit, they kept fighting. We did what we were supposed to do and obviously we’re happy ... but we can do better.”

Can the Jazz do anything different in Game 2 to slow down James Harden?

Better than having Harden or Paul on hand to answer every one of the Jazz’s potentially momentum-shifting play with one of their own?

Sure. How much better? That’s the real question. What’s the ceiling for a team that has used this formula the Rockets have used all season?

“Once again, I think this team offensively, us, we’re just different,” Harden said in trying to describe how the Rockets can perk up so quickly offensively against one of the league’s elite defenses.

“We’ve seen so many different defenses throughout the year that it prepared us for this moment, whether it’s [Rudy] Gobert back at the rim or team’s switching. We’ve seen it all, pretty much all year, so we watch film and we figure out how we can create three [point shots] and create opportunities for each other and we just go out there and play our butt off.”

Yes, things looked a little choppy at times the past few weeks for Houston. But that’s to be expected when you’ve been as good as the Rockets have been during parts of the 2017-18 season.

Trying to find that groove again has proved to be tougher than imagined.

D’Antoni is doing his best to ring the alarm for his team since March, running them through all of the fire drills, without altering the threat level prematurely.

What must the Rockets do to claim a 2-0 series edge vs. the Jazz?

“My job is to nit-pick and try to get better when we’re not good,” he said. “We only scored 46 points in the second half, so that’s not good. Pace wasn't where it should be. Defensively, we had some breakdowns. We had 15 turnovers that gave them 22 points and at halftime there were like five turnovers. We got careless and all that came from the sloppiness in general. Those are the things that we can control. That’s what makes them good, is that we can play a lot better than this.”

Still, D’Antoni could use some outside help making his points.

The Jazz stole D’Antoni’s shot at injecting some emotion and urgency into his team by upsetting the Oklahoma City Thunder (and their trio of superstars) in the first round.

Harden (this season's Kia MVP favorite) going up against his former teammate Russell Westbrook (and the reigning Kia MVP) would have provided on-court fireworks from two of the league’s most dynamic players.