The Mercury News Weekend

Latest injury the cruelest fate for Warriors dynasty

- Dieter Kurtenbach COLUMNIST

This isn’t how it ends, right? Forgive me for thinking that one of the great dynasties in NBA history — a team that has given so much to the game — deserves a better fate. That this great Golden State core of Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Klay Thompson deserves a more ceremoniou­s fade. That the Warriors deserved another chance to prove their greatness.

The news Thursday that Thompson tore his right Achilles tendon in a pickup game in Los Angeles portends something else.

The injury will keep Thompson out for another year; he missed all of last season with a torn ACL.

And while circumstan­ces will no doubt evolve over that period of time, if the Warriors wait it out and stick with their core three, they’ll enter the 2022 playoff push with Curry at 34 years old, Green with excessive mileage at age 32 and Thompson also at 32 and coming off two unquestion­ably cata

strophic injuries.

Is that a team with enough firepower to compete in a relentless­ly difficult Western Conference?

Is this Warriors team without Thompson for another year good enough to allow Golden State to wait and see?

There’s something deeply cruel about this fate .

hetherWthe Warriors were the true creators of the movement or not, there’s no question that they ushered in a better era of profession­al basketball. Willing ball and player movement, relentless switching defense, and lights- out shooting from the two best to ever do it, Curry and Thompson, made Golden State a powerhouse that was also a joy to watch. The Splash Brothers were the backcourt envy of the league. So many around the league have tried to replicate their chemistry and success. No one has come particular­ly close.

The good times weren’t going to last forever. The Warriors were no doubt going to have to work harder than they had worked in a half-decade to reach the NBA Finals for the sixth time in seven years.

Could they still reach those highs from a few years ago? Did they have enough around them? Had age and all those miles caught up to them? Had the league — which has been fully Warrior-fied — caught up to them?

The three core Warriors — Curry, Klay and Draymond — deserved a shot to answer those questions. To go out and show if championsh­ip minds could overcome the inevitable and accelerate­d degrading of championsh­ip bodies.

Now an even greater load is placed on the shoulders of Curry and Green. The NBA playoffs, while limited in the number of games, are so intense that players are effectivel­y fronting themselves minutes from the back ends of their careers. To contend in the West this season, that duo will need yet another advance, this time in the regular season.

The Warriors will also need Andrew Wiggins to be more than a big-salary placeholde­r. Whatever his final form is in the NBA, the Warriors need it now. And they’re hoping that’s the form of an All-Star caliber wing.

James Wiseman, the 19-year- old first-round pick the Warriors selected Wednesday, won’t receive an easy onboarding, either. To help make up for some of the loss of Thompson, they’ll need produc

tion from him right away. On defense, in particular, the Dubs have an immediate need for the rim protection his talent promises. As incredible a shooter as Thompson is, it was his defensive acumen and his ability to guard the opposing team’s point guard, in lieu of Curry, that was arguably just as critical to the Dubs’ title success as his three-point prowess.

The Warriors will have to approach free agency with a bit more urgency than was already in place, too. Without salary cap space, the Dubs have limited avenues for adding players before the season starts, but they will have to use every one of them and find a few more side streets along the way.

The $17.2 million Andre Iguodala trade exception was supposed to be used to bring in an important depth piece (or two) to augment the Warriors’ core. Now, the Dubs need to use it to acquire a starting shooting guard. That’s a big change.

The Warriors can’t miss with the player they add with their midlevel exception, either. Nor the guys who will join the team on a minimum-value contract — though interest in coming to San Francisco might not be as high given that the Warriors’ title chances dropped significan­tly with word of Thompson’s injury.

And all of this needs to be done in the next couple of days.

Months — arguably a full year — of planning has gone out the window.

All while a dynasty’s championsh­ip window is likely being shut.

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Klay Thompson, left, and Stephen Curry celebrate after the Warriors won the NBA Western Conference championsh­ip in 2016.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF ARCHIVES Klay Thompson, left, and Stephen Curry celebrate after the Warriors won the NBA Western Conference championsh­ip in 2016.
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 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? The Warriors’ Klay Thompson grimaces after tearing the ACL in his left knee in the third quarter of Game 6 of the NBA Finals at Oracle Arena in Oakland on June 13, 2019.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF ARCHIVES The Warriors’ Klay Thompson grimaces after tearing the ACL in his left knee in the third quarter of Game 6 of the NBA Finals at Oracle Arena in Oakland on June 13, 2019.

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