Texas Chuck wrote:PaulieWal wrote:Some of you need to cool it on the Curry/Warriors superlatives and hyperbole. They are up 2-0 on a crumbling Denver team in the 1st round which is looking to be a terrible match-up for them. They don't have the defensive personnel to slow it down or a superstar who's just grinding out every possession (LeBron did this against the Warriors in 2015 & 2018).
Yeah, the Warriors look good as many expected and should be getting to WCF against the Suns but reading this thread it would seem like they are up 3-0 in the WCF or the Finals or something

Say it louder for those in the back. Ignoring that Curry and Green were healthy all last year and sat out the playoffs....
To be fair, there's no duo in history that has been able to do it by themselves. We all love superlative players and performances, but we also love basketball as a team game where a quality, cohesive team can overcome a superlative player or duo.
I mean, even this season we have LeBron and Anthony Davis not making the playoffs and KD and Kyrie having to get in through the play-in.
Now I have all the respect in the world for them as a duo. Their record speaks for itself. But it also shows they weren't ever doing it alone. And hell last year the Warriors fans spent all year telling us Wiggins was all-D and he had his most efficient offensive season ever and they still were sitting and watching the playoffs.
Now I get it. They are the darlings because people decided it was the way they played rather than their overwhelming talent advantage that led to all the winning, but last year should have forever put that notion to bed. It was always about the players, not that Steve Kerr solved basketball and all that silliness that went on around here.
I'd argue that it's a combination of players and system/coaching, but there's no doubt that the Warriors roster is hugely upgraded over last season. There's two parts to that:
-- Of 18 players who got minutes last season, half are no longer on the roster. The additions have been a significant positive (Otto Porter, Jr., Bjelica, Klay, Kuminga) and the subtractions were negatives last season, some significant (Oubre, Wiseman, Wannamaker, Bazemore, Mulder, Paschall)
-- The players they kept are better. Jordan Poole is obviously much better. Gary Payton II had only 40 minutes in 10 games last season and has been an impactful contributor this season.
There's obviously a lot of noise around the Warriors system under Kerr, but the roster they have now is maximized to perform in that system.
And this Denver team is like 1.5 guys right now. This would be like the Jazz declaring themselves champions for beating Dallas without Luka in game 1....
I completely agree that the Nuggets have turned out to be a weak opponent and aren't a true test to gauge how good the Warriors are going to be this PS. But it's still worth something that the Warriors have been this good and that they've been able to give the death.0 lineup a test drive. To me, the Warriors ability to keep Jokic in check is more about how lousy the Denver supporting cast has been than Jokic not playing well.
We'll see if the Warriors defense can hold up against a better opponent. We'll see if the offense-heavy death.0 lineup can defend and rebound well enough against a better opponent. Denver is not the test that Memphis or the Suns will be.
If you're not outraged, you're not paying attention.