Just before Klay Thompson headed to the Oracle Arena media room to discuss his latest playoff feat, a 37-point outing against the Portland Trail Blazers on Sunday in which he became the first player in NBA history to hit seven or more three-pointers in three consecutive postseason games, the Golden State Warriors’ other Splash Brother saw something even more rare.
A Stephen Curry miss — from point-blank range.
Klay Thompson scored a game-high 37 points in the Warriors' Game 1 win.
The injured MVP was sitting at his locker when it happened, chatting with Thompson about how the Warriors dominated yet again without him in a 118-106 win that put them up 1-0 in the Western Conference Semifinals. Sporting black street clothes and a care-free smile, he fired an empty sports drink bottle toward the nearby trash can and ... brick.
Maybe they don’t need this guy after all. At least not this round.
Draymond Green leads Warriors to Game 1 rout
When Curry went down like a melting Gumby doll in Houston on April 24, you never would have guessed that their prospects for a title defense would be so promising one week later.
A second-round matchup with the Clippers was still in play back then, as the basketball world didn’t learn until two days later that Chris Paul (broken hand) and Blake Griffin (quadriceps tendon tear) were out for the postseason. Enter a Blazers team that is your classic happy-to-be-here group, having lost four of five starters last offseason and severely overachieved to even get to this point, and the Warriors’ fortunes had taken a turn for the better just when it seemed like it couldn’t get any worse.
From then until now – halftime of Game 4 against the Houston Rockets all the way through Sunday — the Warriors have outscored the Rockets and the Blazers by a combined 82 points (307-225) while Curry cheers with all the spirit of a mascot from the bench.
The right MCL sprain he suffered in Game 4 against Houston isn’t as bad as feared, either, as he even hinted to ESPN’s Lisa Salters during an in-game interview that he could be back for Game 3 against Portland. What’s more, the beauty of Curry’s absence is that, with the spotlight having shifted, it has forced us to appreciate Thompson’s special talent.
Amid all the Curry madness, it’s often forgotten that some wondered whether he was the best player on his team just two summers ago. During Team USA’s gold medal run at FIBA World Cup in Spain, the combination of Thompson’s shooting and relentless defense was enough to make it a conversation. That same summer, even the Warriors were guilty of not fully knowing what they had.
As has been well-chronicled, they gave serious thought to trading Thompson to the Minnesota Timberwolves in a deal that would have landed them Kevin Love. They ultimately declined, in large part because of concerns about what it would do to their defense. From owner Joe Lacob on down, they’ve been reminded why it was such a wise move to keep him ever since.
Curry resumes light shooting on injured right knee
"Not many guys in the league who could chase Damian Lillard around for 37 minutes and score 37 points, too," Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. "Klay is a tremendous two-way player, and that was really an amazing night for him just in terms of his all-around play. ... That’s a big burden to have to play both ways like that. He was awesome."
Thompson not only led a high-powered offensive effort but spent 37 minutes smothering one of the game’s best point guards in Damian Lillard (8-of-26 shooting for 30 points and a minus-19 plus-minus rating). He called Lillard the Blazers’ “head of the snake” afterward — as good a clue as any that there will be more where this came from in the coming games. On the other end, he did the kind of Curry impression that few, if any, other shooters could pull off.
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