The Mercury News

Sports: Kurtenbach: Should Warriors worry?

With Curry, Green sidelined, the Warriors look like just another team

- Dieter Kurtenbach Columnist

OAKLAND >> Without Stephen Curry and a healthy Draymond Green in the lineup, the Warriors look like just another NBA team. Maybe they’d be the sixth seed in the Western Conference playoffs — maybe worse.

Either way, it’s pretty jarring to see. Curry has been out for the past six games, Green has missed the past two games and five of the last seven. The Warriors have lost four of their past seven, incidental­ly, and three in a row.

Even with Kevin Durant and Klay Thompson — two future Hall of Famers

and current All-Stars — on the floor, this team finds itself in a funk. Given the much-ballyhooed sideline tiff between Durant and Green nine days ago, the Warriors’ recent slide will be cited as confirmati­on of the end days for the Warriors.

It isn’t that, though no one would dare call this stretch encouragin­g. No, this is the byproduct of Curry and Green being out of the lineup.

We’ve known for years how important both players are to this team. They’re revolution­ary forces on different sides of the court: Curry ushered in the 3-point revolution while Green should be seen as the key harbinger of the era of positionle­ss basketball.

But now we’re now seeing exactly how important they are. Without those two players, the Warriors simply aren’t The Warriors.

Like all things Warriors, we must start with Curry, the most impactful player since Shaquille O’Neal.

When Curry is on the court, shooting rapid-fire 3-pointers from prepostero­us range and finishing at the hoop with a similar efficiency to LeBron James, it requires a concerted five-man defensive effort to stop him.

You know who that makes life easy for? The four other Warriors on the court.

Curry’s “gravity” is so immense that it’s like his teammates are playing a different sport when he’s between the lines. There’s space for days, the ball moves around with ease, and every shot seems to be wide open.

The Warriors play the beautiful game with Curry.

Without him, the Warriors look constipate­d. Forgive the wordchoice, but it’s apt.

Coach Steve Kerr has said that the Warriors get too much credit for the five-out style of basketball that’s becoming ubiquitous around the NBA in recent seasons. They’ve never really been a five-out team, they just have two of the greatest long-distance shooters of all time so it hides the fact that they’re often playing two-in.

Well, without Curry — the greatest shooter of all time — it’s pretty obvious that this team has problems getting up and making shots from distance. What are they, a two-out team (at best)?

The Warriors have played 470 minutes without Curry this season. During that stretch, they’ve posted

a negative net rating (-0.9) and have played at a glacier-like pace (97.83) for them.

That’s because so much of the offense when Curry is out is Durant post-ups and Thompson floppy actions. The Warriors are putting their success solely on the hope that those two players will not just be prolific, but efficient, too.

Again, this is how some teams exist between October and April. What a world...

But in 399 minutes with Curry this season, the Warriors have an outstandin­g 119 offensive rating, a net rating of 13.5, and play at a pace of 106.2.

The 3-point shooting numbers are stark, too. The Warriors average nearly seven fewer 3-point attempts per 100 possession­s when Curry isn’t playing and they shoot nearly 10 percentage points worse from beyond the arc.

In the modern NBA, that kind of disparity — that kind of ineptitude — from 3 is death. When it comes to offense, Curry is the Warriors’ sun; his presence separates night and day.

Factor in the loss of Green, whose absence over the last two games has been evident in every missed rotation and uncovered back-cut, and the Warriors look downright pedestrian.

“We’ve lived a charmed existence … this is the real NBA,” Kerr said Sunday. “We haven’t been in the real NBA the last few years. We’ve been in this dream. And so now we’re faced with real adversity, and we got to get out of it ourselves.”

Some of this is to be expected. The Warriors’ bench has played

well this season, but in year three of the four All-Star-era (soon-to-be five) the Warriors are as top-heavy as ever. Alfonzo McKinnie being out for the past two games was evidenced in the team’s play. You don’t miss McKinnie unless you’re really lacking a middle class to your roster, but that’s what happens when you have this much star power (and pay them market value).

Some of this is Durant being in his own head. That altercatio­n with Green last Monday really messed him up, but now he’s being asked to carry the load? That has bad news written all over it. Cue the hero ball and mid-range jumpers. The unflappabl­e Thompson needs to get in on this less-than-desirable action, too. Outside of his record-setting game against the relegation-worthy Bulls, Thompson is shooting 26 percent from beyond the arc. He’s simply not himself, and one has to wonder if he even can be without Curry around.

Now, the Warriors had chances to win both Saturday and Sunday night. They didn’t play terribly, as they did Thursday in Houston. But those opportunit­ies to win close games weren’t taken. Shots didn’t fall, the whistle wasn’t kind, or a bounce didn’t go their way. You know, the kind of stuff that happens to other teams, which, by the way, have All-Stars, too.

Perhaps Durant should take note. If he indeed wants out of Golden State at the end of the season, these past few games are the standard of basketball he’ll be playing in the years to come.

Call me elitist if you must, but I don’t know why anyone would have interest in that.

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 ?? RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Without Draymond Green, left, and Stephen Curry, because of injury or suspension, the Warriors have been in a funk the past two weeks.
RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Without Draymond Green, left, and Stephen Curry, because of injury or suspension, the Warriors have been in a funk the past two weeks.
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 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? With Stephen Curry out of the lineup, the Warriors have struggled with their shooting and tempo.
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS With Stephen Curry out of the lineup, the Warriors have struggled with their shooting and tempo.

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