Oroville Mercury-Register

Success depends on depth, Curry

Golden State’s 4 things to watch as season set to start

- By Wes Goldberg

With the 2020-21 NBA regular season about to tip, Stephen Curry enters the season as the headliner for a Warriors team aiming to return to the playoffs.

But there are many more compelling story lines around this team as it enters a pandemic-impacted 72-game season.

Here are the five biggest things to watch before today’s opener in Brooklyn.

1. CURRY’S SOLO ACT » This time a year ago, Curry was supposed to be in the midst of an MVP-caliber campaign. But after missing most of last season recovering from a broken left hand, Curry is back, healthy and being asked to do the same thing. If the preseason was any indication, Curry should be back to his two-time MVP ways after posting per-36-minute averages of 31.3 points on 39.4% shooting (6 of 15.2) from 3-point range.

The question is whether or not Curry will have enough support from a new-look supporting cast and without Klay Thompson, who is sidelined for the second straight season with an Achilles tear. Golden State’s starting five — Curry, Kelly Oubre Jr., Andrew Wiggins, Draymond Green and, eventually, James Wiseman — is better than that of last season’s. With their length, speed and defense-first mentality, there’s at least a budding identity with this group.

But it still needs Curry cranking his gravity to 11 and spacing the floor from well beyond the 3-point line. Green, the only other high-level playmaker on the roster, has missed the entire preseason and will miss the season

opener with a right foot injury.

Although Oubre is a good slasher, confident shooter and aspires to be a good defender, he’s never posted a positive plus-minus in any of his four seasons. Maybe he’ll find more success and force fewer shots in the space Curry provides. Wiggins has shown flashes in the preseason of being able to lead the Warriors’ second unit -- and was quietly a plus- 5.5 in 400 minutes with Golden State last season -- but consistenc­y has always been the concern with him.

Kent Bazemore and Brad Wanamaker are reliable bench contributo­rs, but they aren’t Andre Iguodala and Shaun Livingston. Unlocking those small-ball lineups with Green at center will be dicier with one of them filling a wing spot.

Steve Kerr could go with Green and Eric Paschall in the frontcourt. Such a move gives up height, but they are both strong (and, in Paschall’s case, very strong) and can theoretica­lly switch, score and rebound. The Warriors were outscored by 98 points in the 398 minutes that duo played together last season, but that was a small sample played without Curry. Still, one of those guys needs to shoot at league average from 3-point range (35.8% last year), and neither has inspired much confidence that will happen this season.

Does any lineup have enough shooting to take some shot-making responsibi­lity off Curry, or enough play-making to make Curry’s job easier? Curry has elevated worse offenses during the biggest moments in the past, but can he do it for an entire season? Either someone needs to emerge as a bona fide No. 2 scorer, or Kerr needs to out-scheme opposing coaches and coax enough 3-point shooting out of this roster to get back into the top half of the league on offense.

2. IS A TOP-10 DEFENSE REALISTIC? » After posting the fifth-worst defense in the league last season, the Warriors prioritize­d size and length when adding personnel this offseason. Since February, they’ve swapped the defense-averse D’Angelo Russell for Wiggins, drafted Wiseman with the No. 2 pick and traded for Oubre. Although this team doesn’t have the experience and savvy of the dynastic defenses, it does feature many long limbs and a penchant for chaos. The path to a top-10 defense is clear: deflection­s and blocked shots. 3. WISEMAN’S DEVELOPMEN­T » At first, Wiseman will play a simple role as a rim-runner on offense and rim-protector on defense. But as the season goes on, the Warriors will ask more of him, including playmaking and switching. Though he’s already been named the eventual starter, how Wiseman develops will determine how many minutes he plays per game.

The best- case scenario for the Warriors would be Wiseman playing at least 25 minutes a night. If he can, it means he’s making a tangible impact and that Golden State’s front office nailed the second- overall pick.

4. CAN THE WARRIORS AVOID THE PLAY-IN TOURNAMENT? » There’s a clear top six teams in the Western Conference: the Lakers, Clippers, Nuggets, Trail Blazers, Jazz and Mavericks. The Warriors rank somewhere in the next tier, with the Suns and Pelicans.

This season, the top six teams in each conference get automatic bids to the playoffs. Teams with the seventh- through tenthbest record enter a play-in tournament. The winner between the seventh- and eighth-place teams gets the No. 7 seed. The loser of that game plays with the winner of the 9-10 game for the No. 8 seed.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Warriors guard Stephen Curry is expected to be back at MVP-level play after recovering from a broken hand.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Warriors guard Stephen Curry is expected to be back at MVP-level play after recovering from a broken hand.
 ?? EZRA SHAW — GETTY IMAGES ?? The Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) reacts after making a three-point basket against the Sacramento Kings in the first quarter at Golden 1 Center last week in Sacramento.
EZRA SHAW — GETTY IMAGES The Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) reacts after making a three-point basket against the Sacramento Kings in the first quarter at Golden 1 Center last week in Sacramento.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States