Warriors’ slide to play-in tournament doesn’t bode well for playoffs

Warriors’ slide to play-in tournament doesn’t bode well for playoffs

SAN FRANCISCO — Welcome to basketball purgatory, Warriors.

Or should I say, “Welcome back”?

Yes, the Warriors will participate in the NBA’s play-in tournament for the third time in five years.

They only have themselves to blame for that.

It was all so avoidable, this extra game or two the Warriors will have to play this upcoming week.

And regardless of the outcome of this weeknight mini-tournament that leads into the playoff tournament, it’s all so terribly inauspicious for the Warriors’ fast-fading title hopes (can you even see a flicker?).

This team could not take care of business when the business proved to be the most important.

How does that portend good things for the playoffs, if the Dubs even make it?

The Warriors lost to the Clippers 124-119 in overtime on Sunday in a regular-season finale that was every bit as intense as a playoff game.

It was a bad loss for the Warriors, who had a four-point lead with just under two minutes left in the fourth quarter, but it didn’t speak to a larger issue. Their opponent was a playoff-worthy basketball team with two Hall of Famers — longtime Warriors foils Kawhi Leonard and James Harden — playing at All-NBA levels. Leonard scored 33 points Sunday. Harden went for 39 points.

No, you can’t freak out about coming out the wrong side of a high-level game like Sunday’s — even if the Warriors (rightfully) hated their late-game offensive execution.

The Warriors’ issue was that they left the fate of their season to Sunday’s game.

Less than a week ago, we were having reasonable conversations about the Warriors landing a top-four seed in the Western Conference and hosting Game 1 of a first-round playoff series — such was the team’s ascendancy since acquiring Jimmy Butler from the Miami Heat at the NBA’s trade deadline.

The Warriors were celebrating and were celebrated for their excellence amid a stretch of truly “meaningful basketball.”

They might have gotten a bit high on their own supply.

Because when the games carried the most meaning, they slipped. The finish line is still in front of them, even after 82 regular-season games.

Again, Sunday’s loss is understandable, perhaps even acceptable, if you squint hard enough.

But Wednesday’s home loss to the San Antonio Spurs? That has proven to be unforgivable.

The Warriors lost their last three home games of the season, with poor late-game execution in each.

After Wednesday’s loss to the Spurs, Warriors star Steph Curry said, “A good team takes care of business the next two [games] and goes from there. We have to prove we’re a good team.”

So what does that make the Warriors heading into an extra game on Tuesday?

We know where it leaves the Warriors: in desperation mode.

Source: Paradise Post