Austin American-Statesman

CEDRIC GOLDEN: ARE HORNS READY FOR A TURNAROUND?

Warriors look strong, but other contenders include Cavs, Spurs.

- By Brian Mahoney

Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors have the best record, an unmatched home-court advantage and the understand­ing that means nothing now.

“We had a great home re- cord and did some historic things, but that doesn’t get you any extra points in the playoffs,” Curry said.

The Warriors (67-15) were the NBA’s best this seas on. LeBron James has been on top before, though never in Cleve- land. And don’t forget the Spurs, even though you have to look far down the West standings to find them.

When the NBA postseason opens this weekend, there will be plenty of championsh­i p contenders but perhaps no clear favorite.

“I got no idea who’s going to win the championsh­ip. This is the most convoluted I’ve ever seen the NBA,” Hall

of Famer and TNT analyst Charles Barkley said.

With James gone from Miami, so are the days of penciling in one half of the NBA Finals matchup. The Heat reached the last four finals, winning two of them, before James returned to Cleveland.

The Cavaliers don’t even have the best record in the Eastern Conference, finishing behind Atlanta. But they have rolled through the second half of the season so easily that it’s hard not to consider No. 2 as the one.

“We have an opportunit­y to do something special and that kicks off this weekend,” James said.

The Cavaliers start Sunday against Boston, a familiar foe for James and the one that ended his last postseason in a Cavaliers uniform.

The playoffs begin Saturday. Washington visits Toronto in the opener before the Warriors, 392 at home during the regular season, host Anthony Davis and the New Orleans Pelicans. After that come two short trips: Milwaukee travels to Chicago and Dallas heads to Houston.

Elsewhere Sunday, Atlanta hosts Brooklyn, Portland visits Memphis, and the Los Angeles Clippers welcome San Antonio for the opener of what appears to be the marquee series.

The Spurs’ beautiful basketball overwhelme­d James and the Heat in last year’s finals and carried them to 21 wins in their final 25 games this season — and couldn’t put a dent in their deficit in the West standings. They ended up with the No. 6 seed after losing in New Orleans on the final night of the regular season, with a 5527 record that was a game worse than the Clippers, who surged to 56-26 with seven straight victories.

“We’d love to have been in the 2 or 3 seeds — whatever it may be — and started at home,” the Spurs’ Tim Duncan said. “But we have been on just about every route possible throughout the years. This will be another journey, and hopefully it will be a fun one.”

Some other things to watch in the playoffs:

Texas two-step: The reward for James Harden and the Rockets after earning the No. 2 seed? A matchup against a Dallas team that won 50 games. The Rockets outscored the Mavericks just 402398 in four meetings.

Kidd’s kids: Jason Kidd’s team won a firstround series as a No. 6 seed last year in Brooklyn. He’s back in that spot after his first season coaching in Milwaukee with a young team that will try to overcome its playoff inexperien­ce.

Who wins? James is trying to finally win one in Cleveland. The Spurs are trying to finally win back to back. And the Warriors and Hawks were better than both teams over the course of the season, so even the experts are having a hard time with that question. “This year, I’ve got to be honest with you,” Barkley said, “there’s probably seven teams that could actually win the championsh­ip and I’d be like, ‘I’m not surprised they won it.’”

 ?? AL BELLO / GETTY IMAGES ?? Tim Duncan says the Spurs would have liked a higher seed.“But we have been on just about every route possible throughout the years. This will beanother journey,” he said.
AL BELLO / GETTY IMAGES Tim Duncan says the Spurs would have liked a higher seed.“But we have been on just about every route possible throughout the years. This will beanother journey,” he said.
 ?? SCOTT HALLERAN
/ GETTY IMAGES ?? James Harden and Rockets earned a No. 2 seed — and were rewarded with a potentiall­y tough matchup with Dallas.
SCOTT HALLERAN / GETTY IMAGES James Harden and Rockets earned a No. 2 seed — and were rewarded with a potentiall­y tough matchup with Dallas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States