NBA Finals 2019: How Draymond Green elevates Golden State against Toronto – with or without Kevin Durant

Matthew Blum

NBA Finals 2019: How Draymond Green elevates Golden State against Toronto – with or without Kevin Durant image

The Golden State Warriors have joined the Boston Celtics as just the second franchise in NBA history to reach five-consecutive Finals. It’s an incredible achievement, made even more remarkable by the fact they did so by sweeping the Portland Trail Blazers without Kevin Durant.

Stephen Curry was incredible in the Western Conference Finals, averaging 36.5 points, 8.3 rebounds and 7.3 assists. Klay Thompson was solid on both ends and Andre Iguodala locked down the Blazer guards before missing Game 4 with a calf injury. But the true catalyst of Golden State’s return to pre-Durant form was Draymond Green.

The lighter, faster Green averaged 16.5 points, 11.8 rebounds and 8.8 assists in the series, adding two triple-doubles and once again looked like the Defensive Player of the Year.

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The Blazers deserve credit for getting as far as they did but it was clear they couldn’t handle the vintage Warrior onslaughts. The Raptors are far better equipped to counter what the Warriors do best.

MORE: What did we learn from the Warriors-Raptors regular season series?

The Toronto Raptors are just one of three teams to have a better record than Golden State since 2015. They are one of two teams to finish this season among the  top-five in both  offensive and defensive rating. They have a two-way superstar in Kawhi Leonard, enough shooting to blow you out and an elite defence capable of winning low-scoring games.

If you’re looking for a team capable of withstanding Warrior runs, the Raptors are pretty close to the blueprint.

With Durant yet to return to basketball-related activates, the Warriors have announced that he will miss the opening game of the NBA Finals at the very least. If Golden State is without the two-time reigning Finals MVP for an extended period of time, Curry, Thompson and Green, in particular, will have to continue their excellence.

Against the Blazers, Green had what might be his best defensive series of the past three years. He was comfortable leaving an inconsistent shooting Moe Harkless open on the perimeter in order to create havoc around the rim, averaging 2.8 blocks and 2.3 steals in the series. The other Warriors were also comfortable playing up on Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum because they knew Green was behind them to clean up.

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Against the Raptors, that strategy is somewhat riskier.

While Toronto has spacing, Green’s likely assignment, Pascal Siakam, is shooting under 30% from three in the playoffs. Green can’t fully leave Siakam as he is a far more dangerous driver than Harkless, but he’s not the spot-up threat that will prevent Green from helping at all.

Green, who has always been an outstanding defender, plays elite defence regardless of the opponent. Where he truly elevated his game in the WCF – and where the Warriors need him to continue to be great – is on the offensive end.

Against Portland, Steve Kerr reintroduced a heavy dose of the Curry-Green pick-and-roll, a hallmark of the pre-Durant offence. In Game 1, Portland dropped their big man and allowed Curry to shoot open three after open three. They understandably adjusted in Games 2 through 4, trapping Curry up top and putting the onus on Green to make them pay.

For the most part, he did just that.

While he’s a famously inconsistent shooter, Green is a very dangerous roll man. If the defence traps or hedges Curry, Green can lead a four-on-three with the option to finish himself, toss a lob up to whichever big man is in the dunker spot or kick to the opposite wing where Thompson is always ready to shoot.

What made this play truly catastrophic for the Blazers was that Green was a real threat to finish at the rim. He shot 86.4% inside five feet  against the Blazers, an astronomical improvement on his career average of just above 60%.

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That play was the Warriors’ bread and butter in the WCF, but it will be significantly tougher sledding in the Finals. Marc Gasol, Serge Ibaka and Siakam make for a formidable defence in the restricted area, holding opponents to the fifth-worst rate of 60.9% in that part of the court.

The Raptors have advantages on the defensive end, as well as a key cog of the 2016 Thunder's defence in Ibaka, who helped lead OKC to a 3-1 series lead with his defensive efforts. Toronto has the length and size to slow down Curry and Green as well as contest Thompson’s shots, but how Nick Nurse utilizes Kawhi Leonard will be the key.

If Durant isn’t available, Leonard wouldn’t have a true threat to defend. Toronto might put him on Thompson, but Danny Green is capable in that role. Instead, Toronto could use Leonard similar to how Golden State used Green against Portland — put him on one of the Warriors’ limited offensive wings and allow the two-time DPOY to help on drives and muck up everything Green wants to do on the roll.

As the Steve Kerr-led Warriors meet a new opponent Finals, it will be a fascinating challenge. They are not a better team without Durant, but the system they run in his absence can be more conducive to their talents, and they’ve proven capable of winning without him.

Golden State passed the first two tests without Durant with flying colours, but the final one may be the hardest yet.

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Matthew Blum