San Francisco Chronicle

For the Warriors, a stiffer test ahead

- Bruce Jenkins is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. Email: bjenkins@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter @Bruce_Jenkins1

When history proclaims that something is impossible, certain assumption­s can be made. The Warriors will be playing New Orleans in the second round of the playoffs, because no team in NBA history has come back from a 3-0 deficit. It’s more than just the numbers, though. The Spurs and Trail Blazers are beaten, emotionall­y, to the point where nothing seems more appropriat­e than a summer of reflection.

It was truly inspiring to watch the Spurs play with such ferocity in the first half of Thursday night’s Game 3, and to get a look at Ettore

Messina, the classy and highly respected coach who took over for Gregg Popovich. But the death of Popovich’s wife,

Erin — coupled with the mysterious Kawhi Leonard saga — has left the Spurs without a breath. This series should end quietly, and with little drama, on Sunday.

Nothing crushes the spirit of Damian Lillard, the Oakland-raised mainstay of the Trail Blazers, but he looked a bit discourage­d after Game 3 in New Orleans. As much as he resists the notion — as well as any thoughts of leaving Portland to join some type of superstar “dream team” — the Blazers have nothing beyond Lillard and his backcourt partner, CJ McCollum. The Pelicans double-teamed Lillard without mercy, and unlike so many of the league’s great point guards — Stephen Curry, James Harden and Russell Westbrook come quickly to mind — Lillard isn’t left with a world of options under that kind of pressure. The Blazers have lost nine consecutiv­e playoff games, and if they don’t make major changes in the offseason, the depth-laden Western Conference will leave them behind. They’ve been dismally ineffectiv­e against New Orleans, a team that left a lasting impression in Oakland on April 7, the Warriors’ last home game of the regular season.

The Warriors weren’t terribly motivated during that 126-120 loss, but they’re not forgetting the sight of Anthony Davis (one of the most well-rounded offensive big men the league has ever seen),

Rajon Rondo, who dealt 17 assists that night, or Nikola

Mirotic, who finished with 28 points.

Davis is launching the first significan­t playoff statements of his career, and they couldn’t be more forceful. Rondo, who always steps up his game in the playoffs, might be the smartest and most creative passer in the league. And although it seems a bit silly, Mirotic really has been a different player since shaving off his beard, nailing 12 of 15 shots Thursday night in his latest masterpiec­e.

That’s a lot for the Warriors to worry about — and don’t forget guard Jrue Holiday, getting long-overdue recognitio­n as a bullish force to the basket and a relentless defender. The Warriors will win that series, even if Curry’s ongoing rehabilita­tion keeps him out of the first game or two, but it will be a test, and quite pleasing to the eye.

The Embiid effect

Philadelph­ia-Miami has been the most intense playoff series so far and credit Heat coach Erik Spoelstra for keeping his team competitiv­e despite a distinct talent disadvanta­ge and some rampant immaturity. The 76ers’ Joel

Embiid had some problems keeping his face mask on (to protect an orbital injury), and when it fell to the floor in the second quarter of Game 3,

Justise Winslow blatantly stepped on it — somehow drawing no reaction whatsoever from the officials. (He was fined $15,000 by the NBA on Friday). Then there was Heat center Hassan Whiteside, kept mostly on the bench due to minimal contributi­ons (and terrible body language) but accusing Spoelstra of poor strategy. The dominant Embiid is deeply inside Whiteside’s head, promising he’ll be a “nightmare” for anyone who dares to challenge him ... The A’s home attendance is an ongoing issue, but credit NBCSCA for showing pulled-back views of the Coliseum crowds at game time. If the A’s have tried to discourage such exposure, they haven’t eliminated it altogether ... Interestin­g take from former Sporting Green writer Tim Keown, on espn.com: “His legacy is up to you, knock yourself out, but I know this: The best baseball player I ever saw was Barry

Bonds, and the best baseball season I ever witnessed, in terms of sustained excellence and everyday astonishme­nt, was Bonds in 1993. It was a six-months-long siege (.336, 46 homers, 123 RBIs, 1.136 OPS), and despite all the dominance that came afterward, it stands alone — in my mind, anyway — as the singular achievemen­t of his career.” San Francisco’s Bianca

Valenti, now recognized worldwide as a force in giant surf, is one of five nominees for Women’s Best Performanc­e in the World Surf League’s Big Wave awards, to be announced April 28 . ... The San Jose stop on the women’s tennis tour (July 30-Aug. 5 on the San Jose State campus, replacing the Bank of the West at Stanford) has early commitment­s from Maria

Sharapova and two semifinali­sts from last year’s U.S. Open: Madison Keys and

CoCo Vandeweghe ... The NFL isn’t just going ahead with Thursday Night Football — a major health risk to its players and a visual disaster — but also insists on teams wearing single-color uniforms, reducing all of them to clown acts. The new contract with Fox includes many attractive matchups, including Raiders-49ers on Nov. 1. Once you get past the league’s blind spot to safety and good taste, this is a fine Bay Area developmen­t. Those teams should play each other every year, along with Giants-Jets and Rams-Chargers ... Odell

Beckham and Dez Bryant on the same New York Giants team? Rumors are flyin’ in the wake of a video showing the two working out together. Simply put, this has to happen. The patrons of grand theater demand it ... While we’re dreaming: Texas plays the Giants at AT&T Park in a three-game series starting Aug. 24. In the Rangers’ rotation: Bartolo Colon, who pitched seven perfect innings against Houston the other night at the age of 44, and Tim Lincecum.

 ?? Sean Gardner / Getty Images ?? Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard has been hounded by the Pelicans, who lead the Western Conference series 3-0.
Sean Gardner / Getty Images Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard has been hounded by the Pelicans, who lead the Western Conference series 3-0.

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