Warriors look to be forming identity via defense, Steph Curry scoring

Warriors look to be forming identity via defense, Steph Curry scoring

INDIANAPOLIS — Maybe if Klay Thompson were on the bench Steph Curry would have approached the game a little differently.

Thompson would have been the one in Curry’s ear after he hit all of his first six 3-point attempts in the first quarter, reminding him that Thompson’s own NBA single-game 3-point record of 14 made was within reach.

But Thompson was out of pocket, away from the bench and out of the game dealing with an illness and Curry’s mind was fixated on the game plan, not on himself.

“It wasn’t until the third quarter that I realized I was making some adjustments to slow the pace down a little bit,” Curry said. “Klay wasn’t around so I didn’t think about it much at all, which was weird.”

Curry’s game plan at tipoff was to outpace a Pacers squad that ranks second in the league in pace (102.69); Indiana runs and guns the second-best-rated offense in the league behind newly minted All-Star Tyrese Haliburton. Curry countered with 18 points in eight minutes to lead the team’s season-high 45-point first quarter, outscoring Indiana by 11.

In the record books, it matters that Curry finished with a season-high 11 3-pointers, three shy of the record, for his 25th career game with at least 10 made 3s. It matters more that Curry only needed to play 30 minutes to score 42 points on the tail of a back-to-back en route to the Warriors’ second-straight win by at least 20 points.

In a season mired by lows, it matters that Curry’s individual high plays a second fiddle to the team’s collective growth on this five-game trip.

The Warriors appear to have formed an identity during their 4-1 trip east, beating the Memphis Grizzlies comfortably, losing to the Atlanta Hawks in overtime, taking care of the Brooklyn Nets and beating down the Philadelphia 76ers and Indiana on a back-to-back when, logically, exhaustion would have caught up after a week on the road.

Containing Indiana’s offense didn’t need Curry to chase records; it required him to flex his explosiveness. He’s the pioneer of this modern, fast-paced, shot-happy offense Indiana uses and, at age 35, can still beat up on the next generation following his path.

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