OAKLAND, Calif. — Confetti lay strewn under the seats
throughout Oracle Arena well after the final buzzer. Taio Cruz sang
about putting his hands up in the air. For Golden State fans, a late-night celebration 82 games in the making had only just begun.
Inside the Warriors' dressing room, however, whatever celebration occurred there had dissipated by the time media members entered, replaced by the relatively mundane sight of 15 guys sitting in front of their lockers checking their phones.
It's not like they didn't care about breaking the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls' NBA record with their 73rd win Wednesday, a 125-104 drubbing of the Memphis Grizzlies. On the contrary, Steph Curry had set up a little shrine on his chair with his game jersey signed by his teammates, his shoes and the net.
But it's hard to hold a full-on celebration when, as the PA announcer reminded the fans afterward, "We'll see you back here this weekend for the playoffs."
"It's history," center Andrew Bogut said of the accomplishment. "But there is added pressure on us now to win the championship. With great things comes more responsibility and this is one of those things."
"It would suck," Curry said, "to not finish the job off."
The Warriors know they won't be able to fully enjoy 73 if they don't parlay it into 89 over the course of the next two months, beginning with Saturday's Game 1 against the Houston Rockets. Which is too bad, because their journey to this point has been so much fun.
And win No. 73 was no exception.
There was little doubt coming in that the Warriors would handle undermanned Memphis, which could have turned Wednesday's game into an anticlimactic coronation. Curry assured otherwise.
The presumptive MVP came in needing eight three-pointers to notch 400 on the season, a previously incomprehensible number given no one had ever gotten to 300. That little subplot quickly rose to the forefront when Curry hit six of them in the first quarter, including a stretch of three straight possessions.
By that point, the anticipation in the arena was palpable every time he touched the ball anywhere outside the arc. The roars were thunderous when his shots fell through the net, and the groans ever deeper any time he missed.
Curry added his seventh in the second quarter before missing two last-second tries for elusive No. 8 just before the half. But that came soon enough, 42 seconds into the third quarter, on a contested shot from the right arc.
When the ball went down, Curry, well aware of the moment, turned to the crowd and raised his arms. A couple of minutes later he added 401. Soon it was 402.
Mind you, his previous record — set just a year earlier — was a measly 286.
"I'm amazed by Steph, especially as a shooter, to get 400 threes in a seaon," Klay Thompson said. "That's so hard to do. People don't realize it. And he makes it look easy."
source
Inside the Warriors' dressing room, however, whatever celebration occurred there had dissipated by the time media members entered, replaced by the relatively mundane sight of 15 guys sitting in front of their lockers checking their phones.
It's not like they didn't care about breaking the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls' NBA record with their 73rd win Wednesday, a 125-104 drubbing of the Memphis Grizzlies. On the contrary, Steph Curry had set up a little shrine on his chair with his game jersey signed by his teammates, his shoes and the net.
But it's hard to hold a full-on celebration when, as the PA announcer reminded the fans afterward, "We'll see you back here this weekend for the playoffs."
"It's history," center Andrew Bogut said of the accomplishment. "But there is added pressure on us now to win the championship. With great things comes more responsibility and this is one of those things."
"It would suck," Curry said, "to not finish the job off."
The Warriors know they won't be able to fully enjoy 73 if they don't parlay it into 89 over the course of the next two months, beginning with Saturday's Game 1 against the Houston Rockets. Which is too bad, because their journey to this point has been so much fun.
And win No. 73 was no exception.
There was little doubt coming in that the Warriors would handle undermanned Memphis, which could have turned Wednesday's game into an anticlimactic coronation. Curry assured otherwise.
The presumptive MVP came in needing eight three-pointers to notch 400 on the season, a previously incomprehensible number given no one had ever gotten to 300. That little subplot quickly rose to the forefront when Curry hit six of them in the first quarter, including a stretch of three straight possessions.
By that point, the anticipation in the arena was palpable every time he touched the ball anywhere outside the arc. The roars were thunderous when his shots fell through the net, and the groans ever deeper any time he missed.
Curry added his seventh in the second quarter before missing two last-second tries for elusive No. 8 just before the half. But that came soon enough, 42 seconds into the third quarter, on a contested shot from the right arc.
When the ball went down, Curry, well aware of the moment, turned to the crowd and raised his arms. A couple of minutes later he added 401. Soon it was 402.
Mind you, his previous record — set just a year earlier — was a measly 286.
"I'm amazed by Steph, especially as a shooter, to get 400 threes in a seaon," Klay Thompson said. "That's so hard to do. People don't realize it. And he makes it look easy."
source

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