When Mary Babers-Green first got onto Twitter, her son Draymond Green took some immediate action.

“He deleted it,” she said. “He said ‘you have no chill, you can’t get on here, you’ll say the first thing’s that come to your mind.'”

Babers-Green got her account back and took on a “toned down, PG version” to not heighten her son’s alarm. Throughout the Warriors’ title run she amassed more than 9,000 followers on Twitter and became a favorite of NBA fans with her constant stream of just about every emotion Warriors fans were feeling during the games.

“I talk on Twitter like I sit and talk at home, you know watching the game,” she said. “… I’m just sitting there like everyone else, I’m excited, I want to talk.”

Before Babers-Green started an account with her own name on it, she began on the site with a few different aliases years ago just to keep track of what her kids were saying on the social media. Some of those aliases, she lost the passwords to. Others were hacked. Once she decided to put her own name on the account — and got around her son’s protests about it — she made him follow her on Twitter. “He was like ‘I’ll accept you for one week’ and he did and I guess he forgot about it after that.”

She also, to Draymond’s relief, took a cautious approach to what she was tweeting.

“I know I can’t do all the trash talking that I do at home on Twitter, because I know the whole world is watching, so I know I have to tone it down a bit,” she said. “It’s just me being myself.”

Her Twitter personality, she said, is a nothing compared to her in-game personality where she’s always “super trash-talking.” Sitting in the stands, especially at a Warriors’ away game, she’s gotten into confrontations with other fans. She said she’s never made any players mad — at least since Draymond’s college days — because she’s “not that close to the floor.”

“The fans in Cleveland were the worst,” she said. “I had people throwing popcorn, ice, candy, whatever they had they were throwing it. People were wasting their pop so it could roll down to my feet. People were doing crazy stuff in Cleveland.”

Though she often tweets as a way to be connected to the game when she can’t make it in person, Babers-Green was able to cheer for her son in person when Golden State won the NBA Finals last week. At first, she said, she had a hard time processing that it had really happened and the team had really won.

When she was at the victory parade in Oakland, she said it really began to sink in. The same victory parade, I mentioned to her, where many internet commentators said Draymond appeared to be drunk while giving interviews to a local TV station and spraying champagne on the crowd.

“He didn’t have anything to drink at the parade,” she said. “They had been partying the whole night … he was tired and a lot of times when you’re tired you act drunk. You act silly. So he was super tired, he had been up since they were in Cleveland.

“He couldn’t sleep, he was so excited, so overjoyed,” she added. “He just kept saying ‘I’m a champion, I’m a champion.'”