USA TODAY US Edition

Champion Warriors ring in new year

- Martin Rogers Columnist USA TODAY

It really takes something for the most chill team in the most hip league in sports to be the central figure in something cheesy and awkward, but that’s what happened when the Warriors were presented with their championsh­ip rings.

It’s not their fault, nor the NBA’s. It’s just that for some reason the home opener for the defending champions each year, specifical­ly the bit where the jewelry is doled out and the banner is unfurled, always gets kind of cringy.

It is “honestly the weirdest night of the year,” said none other than Steph Curry recently, and he should know, this being the third time, sigh, when he has had to suffer through being lauded as a world champion.

But why?

The root of the weirdness might be that pro athletes have short memories when it comes to their success. So, too, do fans of the teams that work themselves into a position to be classified as a dynasty. As enjoyable as winning the title and sweeping the Cavaliers was for Golden State, by Tuesday night it already felt like not just yesterday’s news, but early June’s.

For the past four months, Curry, Kevin Durant, Draymond Green and company celebrated, rested, reset and eventually worked themselves into a mind-set where the only target was doing it all over again. Then, seconds before the tip-off of a new campaign with equally lofty aspiration­s, “Hey boys, it’s time for the prizes.”

“You’re celebratin­g something that happened four months ago,” Curry said in September. “And then you’ve got to appreciate the moment, see the banner fall, feel the energy from the crowd. And then you’ve got to put the rings back, go warm up and then play an NBA game when the other team is salivating, waiting to get a hold of you after seeing the ring ceremony.”

The whole fuss is probably outdated, but it is what it is. The NBA embraces modernity often enough to be given a pass on this one. The good news for the league is that it got the cheesiest part of its entire season out of the way on night one.

The ceremony had its moments, none especially memorable. Curry counted down from “five” for the banner to fall, and there was a sweet little segue when an equipment manager of three decades’ service was wheeled out and given his ring on court.

It dragged on a bit. The rings are quite something. It is a rare sight to see a large man wear a ring the size of his fist. On his pinkie.

But the event was kind of like the opening ceremony of the Olympics, although thankfully shorter. By the end you just wanted the games to begin. And soon enough, they did. Warriors coach Steve Kerr joked on TNT: “If we win, we are going to say we rode the emotion of ring night. If we lose, we are going to say we were emotionall­y spent.”

The Warriors haven’t always come out of such situations firing, likely for the reasons Curry laid out. But they quickly hit their stride against an undermanne­d Thunder squad and within a few minutes Durant had heard something he didn’t like.

There he was, staring down benchridde­n ex-teammate Russell Westbrook on the sideline over a comment that didn’t meet his approval, fire and fury in his eyes, and probably not a thought of last year’s ring on his mind.

Ah, there we go, that’s more like it. The season is really underway.

 ?? KYLE TERADA/USA TODAY ?? The Warriors received their championsh­ip rings Tuesday.
KYLE TERADA/USA TODAY The Warriors received their championsh­ip rings Tuesday.
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