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Warriors Set New NBA Season Record With 73 Wins

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  • Warriors Set New NBA Season Record With 73 Wins

    Warriors match 1995-96 Bulls record with 72nd win, history in sight - Golden State Warriors Blog- ESPN

    SAN ANTONIO -- History was made with the Golden State Warriors beating the San Antonio Spurs 92-86 on Sunday night. The Warriors joined the ranks of Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls, with a chance to surpass them with a historic 73rd win on Wednesday against the Memphis Grizzlies, while also exorcising what has haunted them in Texas.

    Has a game with no playoff implications carried so much weight? Technically, the Warriors and Spurs met on Sunday night to play a game sans meaning. What transpired has as much tangible impact on playoff seeding as an exhibition game.

    And yet, there was a desperation to the affair. Even if, as Spurs coach Gregg Popovich declared of his team's undefeated home record, "I don't think they give one damn," the Spurs were searching against the Warriors. They've yet to be able to score consistently in this matchup, which bodes poorly for their playoff chances.

    For the Warriors, the motivation was clear and, increasingly, admitted. The majority of the players and most especially Draymond Green want 73 wins. Their coach, Steve Kerr, would be pleased to reach the benchmark, but he has other considerations in managing the team. The choice to chase comes from labor.

    While the Spurs searched to end their offensive issues against the Warriors, Golden State had its own issues to work out. Simply put, they don't play well in San Antonio. More recently, Stephen Curry had been slumping by his standards, not quite conjuring the early-season magic. That looked to continue as the Warriors began the game on Sunday, struggling to get clean looks against San Antonio's top-ranked defense. After one quarter, Golden State had garnered a mere 14 points.

    While this was another great team defensive effort from Golden State, sometimes Warriors success feels as simple as, "Steph Curry does stuff." When Curry isn't trending transcendent, they're beatable. When he's making the kinds of attempts he goaded in during the second half, they're impossible.

    In a matchup where he has been run off the 3-point line so often, Curry has lately managed to find answers on the interior. He closed out the Spurs on an array of absurd floaters from physics-taunting angles as his team hit its stride.

    History is replete with people feeling foolish for doubting the Spurs, but the Warriors have made such doubt logical, at the very least. San Antonio likely has to go though Golden State to get a sixth title. So far, they've yet to score. Compounding that issue, they're facing a player who can score from anywhere, at trajectories that shouldn't be feasible.

  • #2
    Stephen Curry, Golden State Warriors surpass NBA record for wins - Golden State Warriors Blog- ESPN

    OAKLAND, Calif. -- This wasn’t supposed to happen. No team was ever supposed to eclipse the Jordan Bulls’ hallowed 72 wins benchmark, much less this one. In winning 125-104 over the Memphis Grizzlies, the Golden State Warriors, again, jumped the line and seized something the league still struggles to believe. They, and not Michael Jordan, now boast history’s best regular season.

    The season-capper featured more than just win 73. Going in, Curry needed eight 3-pointers to reach 400 on the season, 41 points for a 30 ppg average. Reaching those benchmarks seemed like a stretch, and yet Curry did it in 30 minutes. Yet again, he made the extraordinarily difficult look wonderfully easy. Again, records fell with the loose flick of his wrist.

    Wednesday was planned far in advance, set up to be a highly honorific “Mamba Day” to commemorate Kobe Bryant’s last game. But Steph Curry and the Warriors do not wait for history. Kobe’s game was moved from ESPN to ESPN2 because that’s what you do when a simultaneous event might feature a team’s 73rd win. And so Golden State had crashed yet another party and made it theirs.

    That’s fitting with how it’s gone. Steph Curry’s brash, imperious Warriors didn’t wait to disrupt LeBron James’ fairytale ending in Cleveland. They didn’t pause for Oklahoma City’s steady ascent to an inevitable title. They stepped up and took accomplishments few thought them entitled to.

    First, there was the championship itself -- a feat almost nobody expected the summer before it happened. The next summer, there were doubts, a pervasive sense that luck had informed this unexpected rise. Curry was tied for the fifth-most likely MVP in a poll of NBA GMs. In that poll, the Warriors fared worse in the predictions than any team coming off a title.

    That was the set up for Curry delivering quite possibly the greatest individual season we’ve seen, combined with his team doing the same. From fall through winter and spring, the Warriors achieved a crushing validation.

    All that receded into the background during the delirium of Curry’s 46-point, 24-shot game Wednesday, though. He made a carnival out of Oracle early in this one, sinking seven first-quarter 3-pointers and 20 points in the stanza.

    One of these 3s, with 3:49 left in the first quarter, was especially deft. With Xavier Munford guarding, Curry set up his dribble as though going left, roped the ball behind his back going right while turning his body 180 degrees, then swung his body square to the hoop while flicking the ball at a steep arc. From there, it lightly floated to its target to the shimmering net. The swish was met with teammates Andre Iguodala throwing his arms up, Brandon Rush turning away in disbelief, and Marreese Speights soaking up the crowd along the baseline. The game was more party than competition, with a coronation thrown in.

    An entire playoffs is needed needed to finish what might become the greatest NBA season. It wasn’t supposed to be Steph Curry. It wasn’t supposed to be the Warriors. Theirs has been an impatient greatness that only grows more greedy.

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