\n Through two games, Klay Thompson is averaging just 13 points on 30 percent shooting (27 percent from three). Poole broke out for 17 points on Sunday, but his final 8 points di lui came in the fourth, with the game already out of reach and the Celtics’ entire starting lineup on the bench. Andrew Wiggins, who had a stout 20 points in Game 1, followed with 11 points in Game 2.<\/p>\n
In prior runs, the Warriors were powered by Curry and Thompson’s shooting, then by Curry and Kevin Durant (with a nice dash of Thompson on top). But now? Now each game is a mystery. Can Wiggins consistently get to the basket? Can Poole recapture the magic of April and early May? Can Thompson \u2014 who spent two years recovering from major surgeries before returning in January \u2014 regain his pop in this series?<\/p>\n\n \u201cI think it’s different,\u201d Curry said, \u201cjust because of the way the team is constructed. There’s always the need for me to be aggressive, try to play-make, try to score. \u2026 I guess you compare it to years past, with the depth that we had, with the heavy load of scoring me, KD, Klay had, obviously looks a little different, and the game flows a little different. “<\/p>\n\nScroll to Continue<\/span><\/p>\n<\/section>\n The good news for the Warriors? Curry is clearly up to the task. He put up 34 points in Game 1, which might have been enough had the Warriors’ defense not collapsed in the fourth quarter. But it’s also worth noting that Curry scored just 4 points in that fourth quarter, and the Warriors had nowhere else to turn.<\/p>\n\n\n\nWatch the NBA Finals online with fuboTV: Try for free!<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n \u201cI think our offense is always a lot of Steph,\u201d said Draymond Green, who had 9 points on Sunday. \u201cEven when KD was here, our offense still started with Steph. That’s the way it’s going to be. ” But, Green quickly added, \u201cWhen you’re playing against a team like (Boston), you have to get offense from other places and not just Steph. I think for the most part we did a pretty good job of that. “<\/p>\n
It helped that the Celtics’ offense thoroughly sputtered, outside of Jayson Tatum (28 points). Jaylen Brown, the hero of Game 1, had just 17 points on 5-of-17 shooting in Game 2. Al Horford, Marcus Smart and Derrick White all came back to Earth, as Green kinda-sort predicted they would.<\/p>\n\n Still, with the Finals shifting to Boston for the next two games, the question becomes how much more Curry can do, and whether he’ll get enough help to steal a road win and take back the home-court advantage in the series.<\/p>\n
\u201cThere’s plenty of concern about plenty of things,\u201d coach Steve Kerr said. \u201cBoston is a hell of a team. They have a great defense. They have got guys who are athletic and powerful and can get to the rim. We’re going to need contributions from a lot of people, and I think we’re perfectly capable of winning games where Steph doesn’t have a huge night. “<\/p>\n\n\n\n That’s been their history, anyway. Seven years ago, the rallying cry was Strength in Numbers-with guys like Draymond Green, Harrison Barnes and Andre Iguodala providing enough collective pop to support Curry and Thompson. And of course, it was Iguodala who won MVP \u2014 averaging 16.3 points to go with his defense of him on LeBron James \u2014 of that first championship in 2015. Thompson averaged 15.8 points in that series.<\/p>\n
In 2016, the Warriors got 19.6 points per game from Thompson and 16.5 per game from Green. In the 2017 Finals, it was Curry (26.8 points per game) supporting Durant (35.2 points), with Thompson adding 16.4. In 2018: Durant 28.8, Curry 28.5, Thompson 16. Even in their 2019 Finals loss to Toronto, the Warriors got a strong offensive push from Curry (30.5) and Thompson (26), with Durant missing much of the series.<\/p>\n\n Once, the Warriors were defined by Curry and Thompson’s twin attack from the arc. They were the Splash Brothers, dazzling everyone with their lethal shooting, burying teams under a hailstorm of threes. At the moment, Curry looks like a solo splasher, an only child. He’s on track to claim his first Finals MVP \u2014 if the Warriors can just give him enough help to win three more games.<\/p>\n\n\n\nMore NBA Coverage: <\/strong><\/p>\n<\/div>\n