Oroville Mercury-Register

Kurtenbach

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ning a championsh­ip.

But this Warriors team keeps falling through the trap door they built on their floor, and that’s anything but a championsh­ip characteri­stic.

Some ugly wins on top of ugly losses make it feel as if this Warriors team is not a model for sustainabl­e postseason success. The truth is found in the margins and the Warriors’ margins indicate that they’re operating on borrowed time.

And that’s not even taking into account this team’s injury woes, which were added to Wednesday with Otto Porter proving unable to play in the second half with a foot injury.

This goes beyond mere fallibilit­y — a new concept for Dubs fans in this playoff run.

No, this speaks to this team’s collective mentality.

The Warriors seem intent on showing their fundamenta­l flaws on a nearnightl­y basis.

They simply can’t get enough of early deficits and the necessity of late comebacks.

Are they bored daredevils or a flawed operation?

I’m sure someone will make the case for the former, but the Warriors’ truth is that they don’t deserve that benefit of the doubt. No, this Dubs team is running on a past reputation that simply doesn’t apply to the year 2022.

These 2022 Warriors are a deeply unserious basketball team. They have averaged 18 turnovers per game against the Grizzlies. The forced change of head coach has only further exposed this lack of focus over the last two games. This is a Warriors team that needs active coaching. That’s why Steve Kerr has aged as much in this past season as he did between 2015 and 2019. Junk defenses and proactive timeouts are part of the Dubs’ game plan now. This Dubs team that’s a mix of

young and old but altogether flawed needs to be coached up.

Meanwhile, in the last two games, acting head coach Mike Brown has fulfilled the stereotype of the substitute teacher. He had a great view of Thursday’s game from the sideline, though. I wonder if he ever thought “maybe the Warriors coach should call a timeout” as the contest slid further and further into oblivion. It’s hardly all Brown’s fault that the Warriors had their teeth kicked in Wednesday, but bad coaching was part of the problem. With Kerr sidelined by Covid, Brown is expected to stay in this oxymoronic “acting head coach” role for the remainder of the series.

When the Warriors come back and win games they mess around in, it’s so often attributed to their “championsh­ip DNA.”

And while their unflappabi­lity is a positive quality, it should be noted that champions also know how to start a game strong. They certainly know that you don’t miss opportunit­ies to end a series — the Warriors have dropped two eliminatio­n games this postseason. They dropped three, total, in the Kevin Durant years of the Dubs dynasty.

Regardless of who the Warriors might play — and I still expect them to win one of the next two games — the next round of the playoffs will only bring

steeper competitio­n and a slimmer margin for error.

For a Warriors team that has become used to serious leniency over the course of this season, it’s hard to imagine that going well.

If the Warriors are going to make this season an extension of their dynastic run, they will have to get serious starting Friday. A first punch would be a welcome concept.

Now, everyone can get a slice of this blame pie following the most embarrassi­ng loss of the season Thursday — Steph Curry, Klay Thompson, Jordan Poole, Brown, the full lot.

But special attention needs to be paid to Draymond Green.

The Warriors’ heartbeat has been faint this series.

We can all empathize with the personal tragedy Green experience­d before Game 4 — the tragic killing of his college teammate Adreian Payne — but this is the playoffs and no one is graded on the curve.

And in this series, the Warriors forward is averaging 4.8 points, 5.6 assists, and 4 turnovers per game, all while Memphis has been able to defend him like Tony Allen in the 2015 playoffs.

Defensivel­y, Green has flashed, but the unmistakab­le impact that he can make on that side of the court has not been present.

This is not winning basketball.

 ?? KAREN PULFER FOCHT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Memphis Grizzlies’ Dillon Brooks (24) and the Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) chase a loose ball in the first half of Game 5 of a second-round playoff series Wednesday in Memphis, Tenn.
KAREN PULFER FOCHT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Memphis Grizzlies’ Dillon Brooks (24) and the Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) chase a loose ball in the first half of Game 5 of a second-round playoff series Wednesday in Memphis, Tenn.

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