OAKLAND, Calif. — That chase for 73 wins and breaking the Chicago Bulls’ record
last season generated so much scrutiny when the Golden State Warriors failed to
win it all at the end.
How might have that taken a toll come playoff time? Did fatigue factor in when
it mattered most?
Nah, Steve Kerr refuses to think about it that way. Stephen Curry’s injury sure
did, though. Absolutely.
The two-time reigning NBA MVP sprained the MCL in his right knee when he slipped
on a wet spot just before halftime of a Game 4 win at Houston in the first round
of the 2016 playoffs.
“Steph gets banged up the first game of the playoffs which affected his whole
run,” Kerr said. “You can’t account for that stuff. You try your best to keep
your eye on guys and to keep them fresh, but honestly Steph was pretty fresh
going into last season’s postseason. So this year we’re doing what we can to
make sure guys are ready to roll, but you never know what’s going to happen.”
Now, the Warriors – who at 67-15 had the NBA’s best record for a third straight
year – and Trail Blazers prepare to face off in the playoffs for a second
straight season after Golden State beat Portland in a five-game Western
Conference semifinals last year.
Kerr rested players down the stretch as needed, he mixed Kevin Durant back in
after a 19-game absence with a left knee injury.
“We’re chasing something, we’re not protecting anything this year,” Curry said.
“… In theory, we’re not the hunted. Obviously, we have the best record but
we’re not defending a championship. There’s really no pressure. Two years ago we
were trying to climb the ladder again and now we’re in that kind of same
mentality. It’s good for us to go just go in with all the confidence in the
world that we’ve built up this regular season and understand that every round’s
going to be different, every round’s going to be just a dogfight. We understand
how important every single game is on that journey.”
The Blazers lost all four regular-season meetings but went 17-6 down the
stretch.
Curry was sidelined for the first three games of that series last year before
coming off the bench in a playoff game for the first time in his career in Game
4 and scoring 40 points, with an NBA record 17 in overtime of a 132-125 victory.
All of that is in the past, Durant assures.
“Last year’s over,” KD said Saturday. “Just trying to move on. We know this is a
different season, a different team, just a different year. We’re not coming in
saying, `Because of last year, we’re trying to get revenge or we’re trying to
show everybody what we got.”‘