After his team was thoroughly defeated again Monday, capping Golden State's Western Conference finals sweep and keeping the Warriors undefeated in the postseason, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich went out of his way to compliment the Warriors not only for their talent but for the way they play beautiful, unselfish basketball.
Pop was right (as he almost always is). The Warriors are a team with a comically unfair amount of talent after adding Kevin Durant to a squad that last season won an NBA-record 73 games. But they also are a group of players likely to make the extra pass and execute to perfection. They play with such ease that their head coach, Steve Kerr, has missed the past 10 playoff games because of complications from a back surgery and they haven't missed a beat.
It's gorgeous to watch, but it will all be coming to an end soon. Because the Warriors, in this era of sports, can't possibly hope to keep all these players paid and happy.
Wait. Check that. They can.
There's a good chance there will be several more years of this beautiful, championship-caliber basketball coming out of the Bay Area.
That's great news if you love great basketball. It's terrible news if you're a Timberwolves fan.
This conclusion was reached after taking an admiring/depressing look at Golden State's salary cap situation. First off, there is basically no meaningful dead weight to be found anywhere on their cap — no expensive buyouts, no long-term contracts they regret. All of their highest-paid players are key contributors.
Ah, but Stephen Curry will cash in this offseason when he's a free agent. He's "only" making $12 million this year — a sum that still probably lets him afford a one-bedroom condo in San Francisco but only the 73rd-highest total of any NBA player this season.