Cape Breton Post

During turbulent time in NBA, Warriors enjoy smooth sailing

- BY BRIAN MAHONEY

Coaches get fired. Players get fired up.

A lot happens over the course of the NBA season. In this wacky week, it came in one day.

The Cavaliers lost more games and apparently some patience with Kevin Love, and Jason Kidd lost his job in Milwaukee. Not even the stoic Spurs were immune on the manic Monday, with ESPN reporting there were difference­s between Kawhi Leonard and the team due to frustratio­n in his recovery from a quadriceps injury.

In a time of turbulence around the NBA, the only smooth sailing, it seems, remains by the Bay Area.

The Golden State Warriors seem to be drama free, in part because of lessons Steve Kerr learned while playing for Gregg Popovich and Phil Jackson. They understood that losing games didn’t mean having to lose control, and their championsh­ip teams weathered whatever storms popped up quickly and quietly.

“Wonderful balance of this is our job and we should be passionate about it, we should work our tails off every day and we should be competitiv­e and want to win and get after it, but if we don’t, it’s OK,” Kerr said of those coaches. “It’s not the end of the world. You’ve got other things going on in your lives.”

Teams are beyond the midway point of their seasons, when they want to be building championsh­ip habits. But the only thing the Cavs are creating is more chaos.

They followed their blowout loss to Oklahoma City on Saturday with a team meeting Monday in which fingers were reportedly pointed at Love, who missed practice Sunday because of an illness.

“I’m numb to it at this point,” he said Tuesday in San Antonio, hours before another loss. “We’ve been to three straight Finals. We’ve been able to thrive under a certain amount of chaos at some points.” The Warriors just avoid it.

MILESTONE MOMENTS LeBron James reached a major milestone Tuesday and now two of his close friends are approachin­g others.

Carmelo Anthony needs 30 points to become the 21st player in NBA history to reach 25,000. He has three games remaining this week, starting when Oklahoma City hosts Washington on Thursday.

With 10 more points, Dwyane Wade will move ahead of Hall of Famer Larry Bird (21,791 points) for 32nd place on the career scoring list. His Cleveland Cavaliers have games remaining this week against Indiana on Friday and Detroit on Sunday.

James became the youngest player with 30,000 points and just the seventh ever during Tuesday’s loss in San Antonio, when Wade had 12 points off the bench.

“It was an Honour to not only be in the building for this moment-but to be on the court as your teammate,” Wade wrote in an Instagram post featuring a picture of himself congratula­ting James . “In the midst of this darkness that we’re experienci­ng as a team-THANK YOU for this light!!!”

James, Anthony and Wade were all taken among the top five picks in the 2003 NBA draft.

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