The Mercury News

BRINGING HOME THE HARDWARE

Hold villain talk, Warriors are making league better

- Dieter Kurtenbach Columnist

The Warriors — the darlings of profession­al sports not more than three years ago — have become villains.

Before, and especially after, they had claimed their second straight title and third championsh­ip in four years, the cries rang out:

“The Warriors are making the NBA boring.”

“Competitiv­e balance is dead.”

“They ruined the game.”

The complaints came from members of the

media, players (past and current), and a oodles of “fans.” These were narratives, fueled by social media and jealousy, are so prevalent that Under Armour, the shoe company repped by Stephen Curry, ran a celebrator­y commercial after Friday night’s championsh­ip game addressing the claims with a simple retort:

“If you don’t like it, do something about it.”

Criticism of the Warriors is a byproduct of them being collective­ly brash on the court and politicall­y outspoken off it — and winning too damn much. All the Warriors do is win, on their own terms.

But “ruining the game?” Nothing could be further from the truth.

Yes, the Warriors cemented themselves as a dynasty with a sweep of LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers, but to say that they are bad for basketball and the NBA is ludicrous.

Since the beginning of their incredible four-year run — the winningest four-year run in NBA history — the Warriors have pushed the NBA to new

heights by raising the bar for the league’s other 29 teams.

Many — perhaps most — will fail to notice it, but the axiom is true: a rising tide lifts all boats.

Right now, the Warriors, having won three of the last four championsh­ips and back-to-back titles after adding Hall of Fame scorer Kevin Durant in a shock move in the summer of 2016, seem to have an unfair advantage. But those who are complainin­g and ascribing a larger value to the Warriors’ dominance are failing to see the big picture.

There is a larger value, but it’s not negative: the Warriors are the best thing that ever happened to the NBA.

Through innovation, ingenuity, and — yes — luck, the Warriors have elevated the level of play and competitio­n in the NBA. It might not have been in evidence these last two NBA Finals, but you will notice it next year and beyond.

And that massive, “unfair” talent advantage the Warriors have been accused of having? It’s becoming more fair by the year.

As such, the upcoming offseason is massive for not only the rest of the league, but also for the

Warriors. Golden State can’t afford to rest on its laurels — the competitio­n around them stands to be too formidable in 2019 and beyond.

It should be noted, though, that the man tasked with putting together these Warriors — general manager Bob Myers — does not care if he is “ruining the league” by assembling a prepondera­nce of talent. After all, that’s what he has been tasked to do — literally — by team owner Joe Lacob.

“It’s not in my job descriptio­n to please NBA fans. It’s to win,” Myers said evenly the day before Game 4 in Cleveland. “I don’t need to be entertaine­d. I just need to win. That’s all it is. That’s what I was hired to do. Everyone’s entitled to how that looks to them or feels — I get to decide how it feels for me.”

And how it feels for Myers isn’t anything like how it feels for those crying that the Warriors are an unbeatable juggernaut. To Myers, it seems so precarious.

“Most of it is not stable,” Myers said. “An NBA team, any organizati­on can change overnight, it seems. Sometimes good luck, sometimes bad luck — it’s a fast-moving league.”

This summer will prove that point.

The Warriors will resign Durant to keep their core four players together. But the salary capstrappe­d team will attempt to revamp its bench with younger, more dynamic players.

“You have to stay as young as you can,” Myers said.

At the same time, the rest of the league is going to be making moves, and the Warriors — even with the attempts to become better this offseason — are effectivel­y sitting ducks. They can add role players and young projects, but they cannot add a marquee free agent without massively disrupting the core of a team that is still inside a championsh­ip-winning window.

The Warriors have dethroned The King — James — with back-toback NBA Finals wins against overmatche­d Cavaliers teams, and those wins may have tacitly convinced him to leave Ohio this summer, when he will be a free agent.

There’s heavy speculatio­n that he lands in Los Angeles, likely with the Lakers, a move that would single-handedly revive one of the NBA’s strongest brands and put them

in the NBA championsh­ip conversati­on.

Even if league officials were seriously concerned about the Warriors’ dominance — and there’s no indication they are — the possibilit­y of a meaningful Warriors-Lakers rivalry, the chance those two teams could meet in the playoffs, maybe with a spot in the NBA Finals at stake, well, who could complain about that?

(And if James leaves Cleveland and goes to an establishe­d contender? Even better.)

At the same time, the Houston Rockets — whose iconoclast­ic general manager Daryl Morey has openly admitted that he’s “obsessed” with beating the Warriors and is confused by any team in the league that isn’t — pushed Golden State to seven games in the Western Conference finals last month. They’ll be hellbent this summer on getting over that hump and are in a solid position to make that happen.

The San Antonio Spurs — viewed as the Warriors’ top rival in the Western Conference in 2016 — will likely return their perennial MVP candidate, Kawhi Leonard next year. It’s hard to see the Warriors beating them in five

easy games in next year’s playoffs, should they meet.

In the Eastern Conference, the Boston Celtics — who gave the Warriors trouble the regular season and pushed the Cavs to seven games in the Eastern Conference Finals — will likely get back two All Stars, Kyrie Irving and Gordon Hayward, who between them missed 140 games last season. The upstart Philadelph­ia 76ers have cap space to add a free agent who can help their prodigious young talents make a leap next year.

No matter how you look at it, the competitio­n is closing in on the Warriors. If anyone thought the Warriors had it too easy this season (Golden State’s players, coaches, and executives would vehemently disagree), there’s no doubt 2018-19 will prove more difficult.

Eventually, another team will finish the job the Rockets could not last month — they will knock off these “unfair” Warriors. That day is inevitable, even if Myers, Warriors coach Steve Kerr and the Golden State players are paid handsomely to avoid such a fate.

And when that day comes, I doubt anyone will complain about these Warriors “ruining the league.”

 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Warriors’ guard Stephen Curry holds the Larry O’Brien NBA Championsh­ip Trophy as he exits their plane as they arrive back in Oakland.
ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Warriors’ guard Stephen Curry holds the Larry O’Brien NBA Championsh­ip Trophy as he exits their plane as they arrive back in Oakland.
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