Curry’s 23-minute playoff gem puts Dubs up 2-0

SAN FRANCISCO — Stephen Curry squared up Monte Morris before crossing him up. After the Golden State Warriors star made it past Morris, Nikola Jokic remained between Curry and the basket. But before Jokic or Morris could stop him, Curry split them on a spin more and finished with a layup as he crashed to the ground.

The Denver Nuggets called timeout, and as Curry made his way down the court, you could read his lips saying three very clear words: “I’m f—ing back.”

“[There was a little] pep in my step and the body felt good,” Curry said after the Warriors beat the Nuggets 126-106 on Monday at Chase Center to take a 2-0 lead in their first-round playoff series. “You make certain shots, feels a little bit different and more normal and more emotion comes out, especially with that layoff. It was a nice feeling.”

Perhaps the Warriors didn’t need Curry to be back in that form. They managed just fine with his quieter night in Game 1, his first game back since March 16. Ahead of Game 2, a source told ESPN that the Warriors were hoping Curry would start to find his groove but wouldn’t be concerned if he didn’t. But when he did, it gave a taste of what this Warriors team can look like fully healthy and clicking on all cylinders — like a serious contender in the postseason for the first time in years.

With Curry coming off the bench again and still playing under a 22- to 23-minute restriction, he said it was his goal Monday to simply make his minutes impactful.

Curry finished the night with 34 points, four assists, three rebounds, one block and one assist for a plus-32 net rating.

“Jesus,” Draymond Green said when he saw Curry’s net rating on the stat sheet.

“He was incredible,” Green said. “He just kept driving, and I think that broke their defense. Once he did that, you’ve got him into the paint kicking out and flying back off for 3s. That’s when Steph is at his most dangerous — off the ball. The way he came in and settled our offense, it’s what you expect from Steph. … To be plus-32 in 23 minutes, it doesn’t get much better than that.”

Curry shot 12-for-17 (71%) from the field, the highest field goal percentage of his playoff career. It’s the first time in his career he scored 30-plus points in fewer than 25 minutes (regular season or playoffs), even though it was the 48th time he played 25 minutes or less.

“Curry is the greatest sixth man ever in the playoffs,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said.

He continued: “The most dangerous guy on the floor is the guy who just passed the ball, and Steph Curry is the embodiment of that. And he’s been doing it for years. He gives the ball up, you relax, and he’s flying off another screen, and he makes you pay.”

Warriors star Stephen Curry scored 34 points in only 22:57 on Monday night against the Nuggets. That’s the fewest minutes in a 30-point playoff game in the shot-clock era (since 1954-55).

The Nuggets have faced the same conundrum through the first two games. They want to defend Curry hard, maybe even throw a double-team his way, which isn’t uncommon. But what do they do about Klay Thompson? And now, they are forced to confront Jordan Poole as well.

“The problem is, you have three players that are capable of putting up 30, 40 points,” Malone said. “You have three players that can get it on their own, and they do such a great job of passing, moving and making plays for each other.”

Thompson finished with 21 points on 9-of-19 shooting, while Poole followed up his stellar playoff debut with 29 points on 10-of-16 shooting, including 5-of-10 from 3, eight assists and five rebounds.

Poole joined Wilt Chamberlain as the only two players in franchise history with 25 points in each of their first two career playoff games. Poole’s 82.8 effective field goal percentage through his first two playoff games is the second highest of any player in the shot-clock era.

“The maturation of his game in these three years has been unbelievable,” Curry said of Poole. “Just his confidence in himself to be able to take it up another notch at this stage, it’s extremely impressive. … That can’t be taught. That’s something you either have or you don’t. I’m glad that he has it.”

Watching the way the trio has performed so far in the first round, it’s hard not to think of the way the Warriors — specifically Curry, Thompson and Kevin Durant — toyed with their opponents during the latter years of their dynastic run.

It’s all they did with the Nuggets for the middle two quarters Monday when the game completely shifted in favor of Golden State. It was almost a replica of how they took control of Game 1.

The Warriors’ newest small-ball lineup — comprising Curry, Poole, Thompson, Andrew Wiggins and Green — checked in at the six-minute mark of the second quarter and put together a 22-8 run. Over the first two games of the series, that lineup has outscored Denver 42-14 in 10 minutes.

“That’s two games in a row when you’re in a game, then snap of a finger, you’re out of the game,” Malone said.

On Monday, the Warriors closed the half on a 26-8 run — 24 of those points were scored by Curry, Thompson and Poole.

Through the first two games of this series, Curry, Thompson and Poole have combined for 149 points and are shooting a combined 56% from the field (52-of-93) and 51% from deep (26-of-51).

“You’re going to game plan for Steph and you’re going to game plan for Klay, but now you’ve got to game plan for Jordan,” Green said. “That’s a different beast.”

Poole has picked up certain nuances of Curry’s game, particularly the way Curry gets his looks throughout the Warriors’ offense, creating space, taking advantage of mismatches and moving fluidly off the ball.

Teams often plan on trapping Curry but now have to revise their defensive plans to trap Poole as well.

“It’s hard to game plan against because you have to give something up,” Curry said. “There’s just a lot of options. And for teams to make those decisions on the fly, it’s difficult, especially when we are playing fast.”

Curry came off the bench for the second consecutive game, and this will continue as long as he is under a tighter minutes restriction. Curry isn’t in any particular rush to get back into the starting lineup, saying it’s more important to manage the lingering discomfort in his left foot than to rush to start games.

His teammates support that decision. And with Poole performing as he has, they aren’t feeling any pressure to rush Curry either. But, when asked if it matters who starts, Green said it does. Ultimately, Green said, they need Curry back out there. But he had a quick follow up:

“Jordan’s probably going to have to start, too. … Great problem to have.”

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