Draymond Green didn’t exactly want to sit the final 11 minutes of the Warriors’ season-ending Game 6 loss against the Lakers.

After the star forward exited with a calf cramp and was evaluated, he felt the calf loosen up and wanted to return.

But president of basketball operations and general manager Bob Myers told Green that he shouldn’t re-enter the game.

“I would’ve gone back in the game,” Green told reporters in his press conference following the Warriors’ 122-101 loss Friday night. “[Myers] stopped me. He said, ‘We’re down 22 points with six minutes to go. You go back out there and you tear your calf and do rehab the rest of the summer trying to chase a 22-point lead. It’s not smart, and we’re not doing it.’

“I could’ve went back in the game, and I think that’s a good sign.”

Green, who could opt out of his contract in the offseason, also reiterated in his postgame press conference that he wants to be with the Warriors “for the rest of my life,” and he’d prefer to “ride out with the same dudes I rode in with.”

Draymond Green gets subbed out during the fourth quarter of the Warriors' Game 6 loss.
Draymond Green gets subbed out during the fourth quarter of the Warriors’ Game 6 loss.Getty Images

Bob Myers, pictured in 2022, told Draymond Green that he shouldn't return to Game 6.
Bob Myers, pictured in 2022, told Draymond Green that he shouldn’t return to Game 6.Getty Images
But at that point in the fourth quarter, when Green exited, the Lakers were already in control and the Warriors’ season was spiraling toward its earlier-than-anticipated finish line.

He left the court with 10:40 remaining — with the Warriors trailing, 91-80 — and was replaced by Kevon Looney, while Golden State eventually listed Green as doubtful to return with right calf tightness.

Los Angeles then manufactured an 11-0 run, with LeBron James scoring five of those points, and the Lakers extended their lead closer to what emerged as the final score in Game 6.

It’s the first time the Warriors haven’t advanced to the NBA Finals while in the postseason since 2013-14, with four titles and two championship losses in the last nine years of their franchise’s run behind Green, Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and head coach Steve Kerr.

That last series loss came under Mark Jackson, with Kerr becoming the team’s head coach in 2014-15.

Draymond Green scored nine points in the Warriors' Game 6 loss.
Draymond Green scored nine points in the Warriors’ Game 6 loss.Getty Images
Green scored nine points and grabbed nine rebounds in 24:01 on Friday, and in 12 playoff games this year, he averaged 9.4 points and 6.9 rebounds per game.

He missed Game 3 of the Warriors’ series against the Kings after he stomped on Sacramento forward Domantas Sabonis, which was followed by a one-game suspension that made the Warriors “livid,” according to ESPN.