USA TODAY US Edition

Collapse pushed Warriors to top form

- Martin Rogers Columnist USA TODAY

LOS ANGELES – Order is swiftly being restored in these once-unpredicta­ble NBA playoffs, and there is no finer example than the team that gets talked about more than any other.

The Warriors looked like they were getting their ankles stuck in a muddy mess of a first-round series at the start of last week, yet they ended it possibly reflecting that things could not have worked out better.

Sure, in different circumstan­ces, Game 4 Sunday at Staples Center might have brought the curtain down on a series sweep of the Clippers. As it turned out, it merely led to a 3-1 advantage, but it is worth considerin­g that a whitewash would not have offered the kind of stinging wake-up call that has invigorate­d the defending champions’ push for a third consecutiv­e title.

How strange it is that for all of the motivation­al efforts of coach Steve Kerr, for all of the profession­alism and incessant penchant for winning the franchise has built, for all of the blueprints of ongoing excellence, it took a failure of historic proportion to put the Warriors’ minds back in equilibriu­m.

Their Game 2 meltdown and wanton disposal of a resounding 31-point lead made the Warriors squirm with embarrassm­ent, which is the rarest of emotions for a team that has journeyed to four consecutiv­e NBA Finals.

Since then, Kevin Durant has scorched all before him — 38 points on Thursday night and a game-high 33 on Sunday, as the Warriors notched a 113105 victory that was never a blowout but they never lost control. Draymond Green is throwing himself around physically, while Stephen Curry won’t be overly bothered by a rare poor shooting performanc­e. Klay Thompson, outstandin­g here, is also hitting top form — after taking an unusual approach the day before the game.

“I did a couple of things,” Thompson said. “I didn’t have any big games, and I told Jonas (Jerebko), ‘I am just going to go jump in the ocean. I know that will reset my mind.’ And it worked.”

The Clippers, one of the grittiest and most cohesive teams in the NBA, have thrown everything in their armory at the Warriors. The upshot? They have played Golden State into form, sharpening the Warriors’ focus and whetting their competitiv­e spirit after a snoozy regular season.

“They don’t stop, man,” Durant said. “They are one of those teams that are going to make you feel them all game. Even when you go home after the game you are going to be thinking about them because they are tough.”

And by associatio­n, the Warriors have found their inner, well, warrior.

Assuming Los Angeles does not have another miracle in its locker up at Oracle Arena on Wednesday, next up for the title holders will be a near-certain showdown with the Rockets, when all of their aptitude will be needed.

These Warriors have more of a snarl than their previous incarnatio­ns. They are an ever-smiling, happy-go-lucky group no longer. There is more of an edge, possibly an inevitable result of the inherent pressure of trying to defend a legacy instead of building one.

Yet here is the rub. That reality doesn’t offer much solace for the small pack of genuine contenders that are chasing them. For if an angry Golden State team is able to channel that ire effectivel­y, it could be just what is required for the final push this time.

The NBA is top heavy and the big teams are in no mood to relinquish their positions of power.

Golden State, Toronto and Philadelph­ia all had their stumbles but got things righted swiftly and emphatical­ly.

Even Denver, with little playoff experience, reclaimed home-court advantage.

But there is a club within a club even at the very top of the NBA. It is a club of one. The Warriors, when fully dialed in, are untouchabl­e. Right now they look like they’ve found their mojo. They’re still as moody as they’ve been all season, but now they’re taking it out on their opponents.

 ?? GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY ?? Klay Thompson scored 32 Sunday, a day after he told a Warriors teammate he was going to go jump in the ocean to reset his mind.
GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY Klay Thompson scored 32 Sunday, a day after he told a Warriors teammate he was going to go jump in the ocean to reset his mind.
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