The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Finals teams built through draft

- By Josh Dubow

When Steve Kerr looks at the way the Boston Celtics built a championsh­ip-caliber team he sees plenty of similariti­es to how his Golden State Warriors got to the NBA Finals in 2015.

Boston built a core through the draft by taking Marcus Smart, Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum during a four-year span from 2014-17 and added the necessary pieces to get over the hump this year to make it to the Finals.

Waiting for the Celtics in Game 1 on Thursday night will be Kerr’s Warriors, who are making their sixth trip in eight years led by the homegrown core of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green.

“Traditiona­lly, this is how it’s supposed to work in the NBA,” Kerr said. “If you look over the years, you grow a team through the draft, you take your lumps through the playoffs, you

climb up and then you get to the Finals. Our team was built somewhat the same way . ... I think that’s good for the sport.”

That approach bucks a growing trend around the league of megastar movement as teams have tried to build more through free agency and trades than in the draft.

Both teams have eight players on the roster acquired originally in the draft and this is the first Finals

since Chicago-Utah in 1998, according to ESPN, when the top three playoff scorers from both teams made their NBA debuts with their current teams.

The similariti­es between the teams isn’t complete, with the biggest discrepanc­y being experience. Led by Curry, Thompson and Green, the Warriors have a total of 123 games played in the Finals on their roster compared to none for the Celtics, who lost in the

Eastern Conference finals three times in the previous five years.

“There are obviously nerves and adrenaline and anxiety and nerves — like everything in terms of the emotions of playing at this stage,” Curry said about his first Finals appearance. “That first game is sometimes all over the place because of that. And once you settle in, it does become about basketball, like it normally is.”

Celtics coach Ime Udoka, who was an assistant on two teams that went to the Finals in San Antonio, isn’t overly concerned, citing the experience his top players have gotten in the postseason in recent years.

Boston won two Game 7s just to get here this season, beating Milwaukee at home in the second round and winning at Miami.

 ?? JED JACOBSOHN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Stephen Curry and the Warriors play the Celtics in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on June 2.
JED JACOBSOHN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Stephen Curry and the Warriors play the Celtics in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on June 2.

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