Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Warriors’ move to sit Curry prudent

- DIETER KURTENBACH

OAKLAND, Calif. — There were several reasons the Warriors didn’t let Stephen Curry play in Game 1 of the team’s Western Conference semifinal series against the New Orleans Pelicans, but one loomed above them all:

“We have to protect him from himself,” Warriors Coach Steve Kerr said.

Curry wanted to play — he probably could have played, too — but the Warriors made the right decision to hold him out Saturday.

Game 1 isn’t going to determine any series, but bringing Curry back after missing five weeks of action, with only one scrimmage and a few shootaroun­ds under his belt? Well, that carries a risk that could jeopardize the Warriors’ entire postseason.

If Curry is anything less than 100 percent, he should be sidelined. The Warriors are good enough to manage without him against the Pelicans.

Luckily, being smart has never been much of an issue for these Warriors. No, the Warriors deserve praise because a lesser team might have given into Curry’s pleas to play in Game 1.

The Warriors won their firstround series against the Spurs despite some woeful offensive performanc­es in Games 4 and 5 — in their last two games against San Antonio, Golden State shot 41 percent from the floor and 21 percent from behind the three-point line.

The Spurs deserve credit for that, but the Warriors’ offense certainly contribute­d to its own poor performanc­es with turnovers, poor ball movement and a general lack of verve.

It doesn’t take a basketball genius to know that Curry — even if he’s not at 100 percent — would help the Warriors get their offense back on track. He could have helped Golden State establish an offensive tone for the series.

“He just said he feels great and he’s ready to go,” Kerr said. “That’s what I expected. It’s a much better answer than ‘my knee still hurts.’

“When you’ve been out five weeks and you want to play in the playoffs, I don’t think one scrimmage is enough. He feels great and wants to play and pleaded his case, but we’re going to sit him tonight, (but he’s) very likely to play in Game 2.”

Yes, Curry is important and the Pelicans are a threat, but having the two-time MVP healthy for a potential Western Conference Finals series with the No. 1 seed Rockets is far more important.

The last thing the Warriors need is a repeat of the 2016 playoffs, when Curry returned a bit too early after a Grade 1 MCL sprain to take on the Blazers in the Western Conference semifinals and then rarely looked like himself for the rest of the postseason. Obviously, a lot has changed since then — see: Durant, Kevin — but Golden State deserves credit for learning a lesson in that postseason and making absolutely sure that Curry is good to go before playing him this time around.

A Game 2 comeback gives Curry another chance to scrimmage and another full-contact scrimmage — another couple of opportunit­ies for Curry to convince the Warriors that his knee has fully healed and that he will have the full complement of his powers for the rest of the postseason.

The big question now is what role Curry will have upon his return.

He could be under a minutes restrictio­n — one that could even put him on the bench — or he could be strong enough to play 40 minutes in Game 2.

The Warriors are in wait-andsee mode on that.

“I think everything is a possibilit­y,” Kerr said. “If there’s a minutes restrictio­n, maybe we would consider bringing him off the bench for timing purposes, but at this point it’s hard to say.”

It seems the prudent play would be to put Curry on a minutes restrictio­n for Game 2 — whether those minutes come with first or second units doesn’t matter — and let him acclimatiz­e to the pace and physicalit­y of the playoffs, then unleash him Friday in Game 3 in New Orleans.

The good news for Warriors fans is that Curry’s return is imminent.

The better news is that the Warriors are making sure when he does return, he’ll look like the Stephen Curry they have come to know and love.

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