San Francisco Chronicle

Warriors stagnate when they rely too heavily on Durant.

Durant’s bail-outs coming at a cost

- By Connor Letourneau

HOUSTON — During the Warriors’ blowout loss to the Rockets in Game 2 of the Western Conference finals Wednesday night, Mary Babers-Green — the mother of Golden State forward Draymond Green — took to Twitter to criticize Kevin Durant for dominating the ball.

When someone contended that Durant needed only 22 shots to score 38 points, Babers-Green pointed out that there is “more to a game than shots! It left everyone else standing around never to get into position. SWING THE BALL.”

It was an astute observatio­n: Though Durant is one of the best one-on-one scorers in NBA history, the Warriors’ offense stagnates when players

stop to watch his one-man show.

In Wednesday’s 22-point drubbing at Toyota Center, Durant again tried to will his

team to victory, only to remind Golden State about the perils of over-reliance on a player. The Warriors’ movement-heavy system gave way to Durant’s repeated isolation situations. Without their teammates making the extra pass, Klay Thompson (eight points, 3-for-11 from the field), Stephen Curry (16 points, 1-for-8 from three-point range) and Green (six points) settled for contested jumpers and never got into a rhythm.

“We didn’t play well, obviously, at either end of the floor,” head coach Steve Kerr said. “I thought their defense was great. This is a team that’s gotten much better defensivel­y this past year. I thought they did a really good job putting us on our heels.”

After each game, Kerr checks Golden State’s passing totals. Three hundred passes suggest solid ball movement, but 320 is the goal. The Warriors had 272 passes Wednesday. With Durant again and again trying to beat his man off the dribble, Golden State tallied 21 assists — well below its league-leading regularsea­son average of 29.3 per game and its league-leading postseason average of 27.8 per game.

Two nights earlier, in their Game 1 win over Houston, the Warriors weren’t zipping the ball around the floor as much as normal either, finishing with 24 assists. The difference was that they were still working off screens and getting in position. When Durant kicked out of isolation plays, he often found Thompson wide open along the perimeter.

With that in mind, Golden State will try to return to its movement-happy ways in time for Game 3 on Sunday at Oracle Arena.

“For the entirety of the game, we’ve just got to be a little bit more aggressive, a little bit more assertive on the offensive end,” Curry said after Game 2. “When the ball is in your hand, make a play for yourself or your teammate, and that will soften them up a little bit.”

Durant has long valued team assists more than any other statistic. Dating to his early years in Seattle and Oklahoma City, he checked box scores to see whether his club had reached the 30-assist mark.

In his second season with the Warriors, Durant averaged 5.4 assists per game, just shy of his career high. But Durant is more than willing to bail Golden State out, and sometimes the team becomes too reliant on his one-on-one brilliance.

There is no such thing for the Rockets. As ball movement becomes a league-wide trend, Houston head coach Mike D’Antoni refuses to deviate from the isolation-heavy offense that his team rode to an NBA-best 65 wins this season.

The Rockets showed Wednesday that it’s the execution of the system, not the system itself, that matters. For the Warriors to be at their best, they must stay in constant motion and not draw the ire of Babers-Green.

“This is an every-possession game,” Durant said. “We’ve got to be locked in every possession against these guys.”

 ?? Carlos Avila Gonzalez / The Chronicle ?? Kevin Durant goes at Houston’s Trevor Ariza in Game 2. Durant scored 38 points on 13-for-22 shooting, but often found himself one-on-one with defenders, with teammates standing around.
Carlos Avila Gonzalez / The Chronicle Kevin Durant goes at Houston’s Trevor Ariza in Game 2. Durant scored 38 points on 13-for-22 shooting, but often found himself one-on-one with defenders, with teammates standing around.
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 ?? Michael Ciaglo / Houston Chronicle ?? With the other Warriors stars struggling, Kevin Durant, here shooting over Houston’s Clint Capela and Trevor Ariza, has often taken things upon himself on offense in the first two games.
Michael Ciaglo / Houston Chronicle With the other Warriors stars struggling, Kevin Durant, here shooting over Houston’s Clint Capela and Trevor Ariza, has often taken things upon himself on offense in the first two games.

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