The Warriors have run into a simple problem against the Thunder - and it can't be solved
For the second straight game, the Warriors looked flummoxed at how to stop the Thunder and how to score on them, committing 21 turnovers and shooting just 41% from the field, 30% from three.
While the Thunder are clearly clicking at the right time, finding an unusual harmony this late into the season, they're also utilizing a simple advantage that the Warriors can't seem to overcome: athleticism.
The Warriors are often viewed as a physical matchup nightmare for any team. They're a group of long-limbed, quick, versatile, multi-skill players who baffle teams with their positional pliancy. That all pales in comparison to what the Thunder are showing in the Western Conference Finals.
Going into the series, the NBA world knew, of course, that nobody on the Warriors can match Russell Westbrook's athleticism. Many people knew there's no answer for stopping Kevin Durant, and analysts figured the Thunder could hang around by going to "big" lineups and smashing the Warriors on the boards. But what's surprised many is how the collective length, size, and speed of the Thunder are dismantling the Warriors.
This can be seen in simple stats - the Thunder outrebounded the Warriors in Game 4, 56-40, and forced 21 turnovers, with 16 steals and eight blocks. As a result, the Thunder scored 21 second-chance points and 18 points off turnovers.
Yet even when the Thunder aren't just forcing turnovers, offensive rebounds, and easy baskets, their length is suffocating the Warriors, tipping passes to break up the offense and beating them to the so-called "50-50 balls" that are increasingly bouncing the Thunder's way.
Here, Curry, one of the NBA's best ball-handlers, simply has the ball poked away by Durant's long arms, and then it's off to the races.
Steve Kerr acknowledged these problems after the game, saying, "This is probably the longest team in the league that we're facing, and we are continuing to try to throw passes over the top of their outstretched arms. It's probably not a great idea. So 21 turnovers, many of them unforced, and then, of course, they're taking care of business on the boards. We're forcing stops, we're getting stops, but we're not going and getting the ball, and we have to be able to chase down loose balls and long rebounds. Otherwise they're getting just way too many possessions compared to us."
This Thunder team has molded into something different than the 55-win outfit from the regular season. They've found the proper way to function on both ends of the ball, utilizing both their tremendous skill and physical superiority to take down a 73-win Warriors team. The series isn't over, and as Kerr mentioned, the Warriors would help themselves by playing smarter. But no adjustment from the Warriors is going to change the fact that the Warriors are outmatched physically.