How the Warriors' Unselfishness Has Led to Success in the Postseason

In the past few years fans and media alike have declared that Stephen Curry is one of the most unselfish superstars in the NBA. This was put on full display in 2016-17 when Kevin Durant joined the team and Curry along with his splash brother both took an offensive dip in production. In doing so, it allowed the team to basically say, we have three guys who can score at any time but they all are willing to defer to one another.

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Steph Curry Speaks on Starting Lineup

The saying goes “if it isn’t broken, don’t bother trying to fix it”. While that can be taken a myriad of different ways, when it comes to basketball, the meaning behind it is “don’t mess up what already works well”. When it comes to the playoffs, that’s especially the case: There is no need to tinker when something is going right, regardless of circumstances.

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Draymond Green's Defense Key to Stopping Jokic

The Denver Nuggets won 3 of the 4 in-season matchups between them and the Warriors. Reigning MVP and likely repeater for that award Nikola Jokic averaged an efficient 28 points, 15 boards, and just under 9 assists. It figured that Jokic would be a major matchup problem for Golden State if they met in the playoffs, as his size and skill were something the Warriors just have no answer to with their tallest active player being 6’9.

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Jordan Poole Shines in Playoff Debut

Winning in basketball at any level is not easy. A lot of guys who make all-league teams in high school go from star to rotation guy to even benchwarmer sometimes in college, and with so many NCAA universities, a 64-team pool for March Madness is daunting to even get into. And then, after finding success at the collegiate level, the lights only get brighter in the NBA.

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