Why Steve Kerr is confident having Warriors' identity built on aging superstars originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
The Warriors are zigging while the rest of the NBA zags, but coach Steve Kerr remains confident Golden State’s foundation built on older superstars still is a recipe for success.
Kerr detailed why the duo of Steph Curry and Jimmy Butler remains a lethal pairing during an exclusive interview with NBC Sports Bay Area’s Kerith Burke on “Dubs Talk.”
“Steph is our solar system. He’s the sun. Everything else revolves around the sun,” Kerr told Burke. “We have Steph Curry. He is one of the all-time great players. We thrive – and Steph thrives – when there’s spacing, ball movement, flow. This is why we have built our team around Steph, and then Jimmy arrived last year and gave Steph another threat next to him. Jimmy is the best isolation player in the league, analytically. When you give him the ball and you space the floor, you give him a good shot.”
Curry’s credentials need no introduction, with the two-time NBA MVP spending the last decade as one of the most feared offensive players in league history. While Curry’s gravitational pull is generational, the addition of Butler gives Golden State a different one-two punch than the Warriors had throughout their dynastic run.
The Warriors felt Butler’s immediate impact after acquiring him from the Miami Heat, posting a 23-7 record in the six-time All-Star’s 30 regular-season appearances with Golden State during the 2024-25 NBA season.
Kerr explained that Butler’s isolation value isn’t limited to just scoring, but also by creating opportunities for others, which creates a need for plus shooting on the floor around him.
“A lot of that, though, is [Butler] creating a shot for someone else, and so we need spacing,” Kerr said. “The combination of Steph and Jimmy last year, once those two guys were together, I think we went like 26-8. [We] beat Houston in the first round of the playoffs, the No. 2 seed. Our identity is built around those two guys, and we have a chance to be really good. Everyone else on the team has to see that, embrace it and find a role within that. That could be difficult at times for certain players, easy for others. But as a coaching staff, we just have to do whatever we think to win each game.”
While Butler’s instant integraton into the Warriors’ roster certainly was impressive, Kerr also highlighted the benefits of having the five-time All-NBA selection experiencing an entire training camp with Golden State.
“I think having Jimmy from the start will help with our chemistry, our continuity, just the guys getting used to one another,” Kerr said. “The good thing: it was an immediate fit last year, but we didn’t even put anything in. We just gave them the ball and it kind of cleared out. He was really good with that. I don’t think we’re going to do anything earth-shattering offensively, changing our attack a ton. But I do think Jimmy will get more and more comfortable with the stuff that we already do and with the teammates around him.”
Butler averaged 17.9 points, 5.9 assists and 3.2 rebounds per game with Golden State last season while also providing a boost with his leadership and high-IQ play that can’t be quantified in a traditional box score.
Based on the track record in a relatively small sample size, there’s plenty of reason to be optimistic Curry and Butler can pick up right where they left off. The question remains: can the duo stay healthy and contribute at that level for a full season and the grind of postseason basketball?
If, and it’s a big if, they are able to, there’s no reason to think Golden State won’t be right in the thick of things among NBA title contenders this season.