HotRocks34 wrote:Phreak50 wrote:Quick note to the 'Warriors have been unfairly hated' crap echoed a bit in here.
We loved you guys as underdogs but you let success get to your head and become the most cocky, hypocritical team in the league.
It's all justified.
Correct. To reference something I posted from a previous KD thread that was written by a person from GQ shortly after the 2016 Finals:
http://www.gq.com/story/steph-curry-backlash-lebronFor the first time in what seemed forever, Curry (who, like LeBron, was born in Akron) was officially a loser again, just another Icarus who flew too close to the sun with his stupid mouthpiece dangling out. In a year that saw much of the formerly besotted public violently reject and repudiate Curry and the Golden State Warriors, this was the only acceptable conclusion, that of maximum dishonor and a vicious public humbling.
So, just as Phreak50 said, the "formerly besotted public" (a public that liked and was taken with the Warriors) turned on the Warriors last year. And that turning seems to have particularly taken place during the playoffs.
If you are capable of turning LeBron into a hero, then you're probably doing something wrong.
I recall seeing a poll (can't find it now and I have looked for it) taken either before the Finals started or before Game 7, from ESPN I believe it was, which I think showed an overwhelming number of USA states rooting for the Cavs. That never happens until late last year. The Warriors were the darlings of the league, but then people turned on them.
Sure, "Light Years" and all of that. But it wasn't just that. It was the shimmying, it was the arrogance that showed up on the court and in media sessions. It was the "best team of all time?" stuff that put the cart before the horse. It was Ayesha. It was Mychal. It was Draymond hitting people in the groin and not getting suspended during the OKC series. It was Klay talking about LeBron. It was Klay saying the Warriors were better than the Showtime Lakers after like Game 2 of the 2016 FInals. It was the sense of unearned entitlement that seemed to permeate the entire Warriors organization. It was the multiple comments from a supposed Curry source(s) about how hurt Steph was during the playoffs. It was Steph hitting a fan with his thrown mouthpiece in the Finals.
The hate was real, too. And it's still real. There's no way around it. This is from someone -- someone who himself fell prey to the foolish Warriors arrogance in tweets saying during the 2015-16 season that there was no way the Cavs could beat the Warriors in a series, I believe -- who covers the Warriors. It was written after the Durant signing.
http://www.mercurynews.com/marcus-thompson/ci_30089628/thompson-kevin-durant-makes-warriors-most-hated-teamNot that long ago, the Warriors were the epitome of lovable. A bunch of nice-guy underdogs who had obvious fun and played an entertaining style of basketball. Those days were clearly over after they won a championship, followed by their chase for 73 turning them into one of the most hyped teams ever.
CEO Joe Lacob's comments about the Warriors being "light years" ahead of the NBA gave credence to the anti-Warriors crowd's bemoans of arrogance. People grew weary of the Warriors and their rampant love. The once-cute, inspirational, play-the-game-the-right-way squad that brought beauty back to basketball officially became antagonists.
That was never more evident when the Warriors choked away a 3-1 lead in the NBA Finals. It was hard to tell if some were more happy about the Warriors' demise or impressed by the Cavaliers' impressive feat.
The Warriors, and their media, and the national media who defended them (I'm looking at you here, ESPN) earned their Darth Vader status.
I think the Warriors, collectively, are trying to start walking back from "villain road" now. KD was concerned about being the villain for leaving OKC and that's likely where the Player's Tribune piece came from. The leak about Steph's texts to Durant are almost certainly from a Curry source and seem clearly intended to paint Steph in a flattering light. Draymond Green just did an interview with Sports Illustrated and it seemed to contain none of what people have seemed to feel is Green's previous arrogance.
I agree with this amazing post. While Kerr is very likable Lacob, Thompson and Draymond definitely have not been. They've mostly been poor sportsmans who cry about their lack of recognition. Curry's showboating (just like Cam Newton) has put him way up there. He's a bigger show-boater than any MVP I can remember since Iverson. And yes more than Lebron. It's unfortunate, because many players on that team (Livingston, Barbosa and Iggy despite his foul face) are great guys. I know people will say we're just spewing hate, but save Lebron and Reily, that heat team was pretty likable and even at a time when superteams were unprecedented didnt get as much hate as the Warriors are about to get. Add in a guy who for years has been the humble player who loved loyalty, criticized Lebron, and pretended to want to be the good guy superstar, and you have the ingredients for the most hated team ever.
I mean even in a vacuum, with no talent or success I think this team would take a lot of crap.
























