Houston Chronicle

Curry back at some point to face Pelicans

Injured guard might return for Game 1, or Game 3 at latest

- By Connor Letourneau cletournea­u@sfchronicl­e.com

OAKLAND, Calif. — Shielded from reporters by a blue curtain, Stephen Curry participat­ed in his first 5-on-5 contact scrimmage Friday in more than a month.

It was yet another sign of progress for a player who hasn’t checked into a game since he sprained his left MCL on March 23. Now, as they prepare for Game 1 of their second-round series Saturday night against New Orleans, the Warriors are eager to get Curry back in the lineup.

The two-time NBA MVP is officially listed as questionab­le, but circumstan­tial evidence suggests he probably has more than a 50 percent chance of returning for Game 1. Curry feels no pain in his knee when working through the cuts and turns he’ll make in games. After participat­ing in back-to-back, fullcontac­t practices with no issues, he was downgraded from a balky knee brace to a protective sleeve.

“A big part of this is how he turns up tomorrow after a night’s rest,” Golden State coach Steve Kerr said. “It’s the first time he’s scrimmaged in six weeks, five weeks. It’s not as simple as, ‘He looks good, let’s throw him out there.’ You give him a few days, and you see how he responds to that.”

This much is certain: Golden State will continue to be cautious with Curry, who has logged only 25 total minutes since March 8 due to ankle and knee injuries. With a trip to the conference finals hanging in the balance, the Warriors would rather hold their franchise player out of another game or two to make sure he is at full strength than put him at risk of reinjury.

The league has yet to announce the full second-round schedule, but Golden State expects to host Game 2 on Monday and Game 3 in New Orleans next Friday. Odds are that, if he doesn’t come back Saturday, Curry would return Monday. On the off chance he misses the series’ first two games, Curry would almost definitely be ready by Game 3.

It is unclear whether Curry will be on a minutes restrictio­n when he comes back. Two years ago, when he returned from a sprained right knee in Game 4 of the Western Conference semifinals in Portland, Curry expected to play about 25 minutes off the bench.

However, Curry was forced to shoulder a heavier load after Shaun Livingston — the starter in his absence — was ejected in the second quarter for picking up two technical fouls. It was Curry’s NBA-record 17 points in OT that propelled the Warriors past the Trail Blazers.

“It’s part of the conversati­on,” Curry said of a minutes restrictio­n. “The hardest thing is trying to monitor minutes, build up that game experience and whatnot, and not mess up flow in the sense that guys have been in certain roles for the last 10 games of the regular season, first round of the playoffs.”

Without Curry, Golden State had little trouble with San Antonio in the first round, closing out the series in five games. However, New Orleans figures to present far more challenges.

The Pelicans boast the league’s fastest pace, a dominant big man (Anthony Davis), a capable backcourt duo (Jrue Holiday and Rajon Rondo) and perhaps the NBA’s top midseason acquisitio­n (Nikola Mirotic). To sweep Portland in the first round, they showcased their defensive creativity, repeatedly trapping All-Star point Damian Lillard with multiple defenders.

When Curry returns could dictate the course of this secondroun­d series. The Warriors went 41-10 with him on the floor this season but just 17-14 without him.

“When you get him on the court going through everything with us, his energy just kind of lights up the whole team,” Kevin Durant said. “To have him out there the last few days, I know it’s been great for him mentally. But for us, it’s been great to see him progress and get back to what he loves to do.”

 ?? Michael Macor / San Francisco Chronicle ?? Warriors superstar Stephen Curry won’t be loitering on the sideline in street clothes much longer. His recovery from a sprained MCL is almost complete, and he should see action
Michael Macor / San Francisco Chronicle Warriors superstar Stephen Curry won’t be loitering on the sideline in street clothes much longer. His recovery from a sprained MCL is almost complete, and he should see action

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