Why Draymond Green could be facing his last grand opportunity vs. Kawhi Leonard originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
Stephen Curry playing a team-high 29 minutes in the regular-season finale was an encouraging sign for one of the two pivotal factors the Warriors will take into the postseason.
The Warriors hope Curry’s efficient 24-point effort in a loss to the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday was a preview of what’s to come, as his presence and performance will be critical when the teams meet Wednesday for an NBA play-in tournament game in Los Angeles.
The second factor that figures to be at least as impactful was invisible on Sunday. The matchup of Golden State’s defensive savant Draymond Green vs. LA’s offensive ace Kawhi Leonard did not materialize.
Green and Leonard were listed as questionable early Sunday afternoon, Green with a lingering lower-back issue and Leonard with a left ankle sprain. When the Clippers downgraded Leonard to out four hours before tipoff, the Warriors downgraded Green a couple hours later.
Maybe each team had a valid reason. Or, more likely, both coaches took a tactical approach to a low-consequence game three days before a high-consequence rematch.
Draymond wants this. Wants to prove that even now, at age 36, he remains among the league’s premier defenders. Moreover, he needs it for his psyche.
Green has admitted to being less than enthusiastic about the Warriors finishing as the 10th seed in the Western Conference and therefore having to survive two detours to get to the real playoffs. This game within the game, however, surely is a source of motivation.
Green’s desire to make the All-Defensive team won’t be affected, as ballots for NBA postseason awards will have been submitted long before Wednesday. But a strong defensive performance against an opponent bound for the Hall of Fame is an opportunity to make a statement to his teammates and any observers who doubt his defense still can shine on a big stage.
History suggests that’s enough for Green to summon his best. Is his best still good enough?
“With a guy like Kawhi you can play the best defense that you want, and he still can get his numbers,” Curry told reporters Sunday night at Intuit Dome. “It’s about how he gets them and making him work. I feel it all the time. We’ve got to be able to impose our will, even if he still gets his because that’s the challenge to try to beat those guys.”
Years of evidence indicate Green’s defense, individually and within the team framework, is every bit as important to Golden State’s postseason fortunes as Curry’s offense. Kerr understands that as much as anyone.
“Defensively, he’s obviously our guy,” Kerr told at Intuit Dome. “We’re able to do more things with him out there. He’s a playoff player. He’s a guy who loves the challenge. He loves the situation when you’re in a must-win (game), so I know he’ll play well.”
The last time Green faced Leonard, March 2 at Chase Center, he requested the assignment. Kerr agreed. Draymond won his battle, but the Clippers won the game. They prevailed by rallying behind Leonard while Green was on the bench for a breather.
The Warriors had a 71-61 lead when Green was subbed out with 4:37 left in the third quarter. Leonard at that point had 12 points on 5-of-9 shooting. Leonard scored four points over the next 53 seconds, igniting LA’s 16-8 run to close the quarter and pull within two. The momentum swung during the non-Draymond minutes.
“Kawhi went on a great run and that kind of put it away,” Golden State center Al Horford said after that game.
For the better part of three quarters, Green had minimized Leonard mostly by with spirited ball-denial defense and the occasional trap. Kerr after that game said he had to give Draymond a break, that he “can’t play the whole game.”
The coach will be a lot more flexible Wednesday.
“Draymond will be well rested,” Kerr said in LA. “He’s been playing a lot of minutes and a lot of games, so it was good for him to get a night off tonight. He’ll be ready to go. He’ll help set a tone for us defensively.
“We know it’s going to be tough. These guys are really good and, obviously, Kawhi will be back. And we’re excited about them challenge.”
If Leonard scores 40 points but needs 30 shots, that bodes nearly as well for Golden State as 22 points on 20 shots. The overarching goal for Green and his teammates is to keep Kawhi from taking over the game.
The Warriors will be clear underdogs, and they’ve earned that status. They’ve been slipping backward on ice for almost three months. Their 37-45 regular-season record is the worst of the 12 teams assured of making the playoffs or the other seven teams still trying to win their way there.
Whether the Warriors can beat the odds and beat the Clippers on the road, something they have not done since Nov. 28, 2021, almost certainly will be determined by the winner of the game within the game.