2017–18 Golden State Warriors season

The 2017–18 Golden State Warriors season was the 72nd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and its 56th in the San Francisco Bay Area. The Warriors entered the season as the defending NBA champions and repeated, beating the Cleveland Cavaliers 4–0 in the Finals. It was the first time in NBA history and in North America's four major professional sports leagues that two teams had met to compete for a Championship for a fourth consecutive year.[1] It was the Warriors' third championship in four years, and sixth overall. Golden State won the Pacific Division title and Western Conference Championship for the fourth consecutive season. In the playoffs, the Warriors defeated the San Antonio Spurs in the First Round 4–1 and the New Orleans Pelicans 4–1 in the Semi-finals. They beat the top-seeded Houston Rockets 4–3 in the Western Conference Finals.

2017–18 Golden State Warriors season
NBA champions
Conference champions
Division champions
Head coachSteve Kerr
General managerBob Myers
OwnersJoe Lacob
Peter Guber
ArenaOracle Arena
Results
Record5824 (.707)
PlaceDivision: 1st (Pacific)
Conference: 2nd (Western)
Playoff finishNBA Champions
(Defeated Cavaliers 4–0)

Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Local media
TelevisionNBC Sports Bay Area
Radio95.7 The Game

The Warriors finished second in the Western Conference with a record of 58–24, their fifth most wins in franchise history. Golden State set the NBA record of 16 consecutive home wins in the playoffs, surpassing the 1990–91 Chicago Bulls.[2] Stephen Curry set the NBA record for three-pointers made in an NBA Finals game with nine. Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant, Draymond Green, and Klay Thompson were all named to the All-Star Game, the first time in NBA history that a team has had four All-Stars in consecutive seasons, and just the ninth time in NBA history a single team has had four players in the game.[3] Curry was named captain, being the leading vote getter from the Western Conference.[4] The Warriors ended the regular season with a slew of injuries to all four of their All-Stars, including an MCL sprain for Curry that kept him out for six weeks, and lost ten of their last seventeen games. For the first time since the 2013–14 season, they did not clinch first place for home-court advantage for the playoffs and failed to win 60 games for the first time under Steve Kerr. This season marked David West's final season in the NBA. He retired on August 30, 2018, having won two NBA championships with the Warriors.

Draft picks

The 2017 NBA draft was held on June 22, 2017, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn. The Warriors didn't have a pick, but acquired the Chicago Bulls 38th pick in the second round for cash. They chose power forward Jordan Bell out of Oregon. After the draft, the team signed Bell's former Oregon teammate, Chris Boucher, to a two-way contract.[5]

Preseason

On July 1, 2017, Stephen Curry agreed to re-sign with Golden State on a super-max five-year/$201m deal. The Warriors also resigned Kevin Durant, and their veteran core of Shaun Livingston, David West, Andre Iguodala, Zaza Pachulia and JaVale McGee. Golden State also added Nick Young and Omri Casspi on one-year deals.

Records

Stephen Curry broke multiple three-point records this season, including most made in an NBA Finals game with nine.[2]

NBA records

As of June 8, 2018

Individual

  • Most three-pointers made in a Finals game: 9 (Stephen Curry, Game 2 of 2018 NBA Finals)[2]
  • Most consecutive playoff games with a made three-pointer: 90 - ongoing streak (Stephen Curry, has made a three-pointer in every playoff game he's played in)[2]
  • Most three-pointers made in a four-game Finals series: 22 (Stephen Curry, previous record was 11 (jointly held by Robert Horry and Penny Hardaway)[2]
  • Most consecutive playoff games with a made three-pointer at home: 46 - ongoing streak (Stephen Curry)[2]
  • Most consecutive playoff games with a made three-pointer on the road: 44 - ongoing streak (Stephen Curry)[2]
  • Most three-pointers made in a quarter in the Finals game: 5 (Stephen Curry, Game 2 of 2018 NBA Finals. Tied with Kenny Smith.)[2]
  • Most points scored by a player in a Western Conference Finals series: 213 (Kevin Durant, previous record of 212 points jointly held by Hakeem Olajuwon (1995) and Shaquille O'Neal (2002))[2]
  • 10 or more three-pointers made in a game: 9 times (Stephen Curry). Klay Thompson (4 times) and J. R. Smith (3 times) are the only other players in NBA history with more than one game with ten made threes.[2]

Team

  • Largest average point differential in a Finals series: +15.00 PPG (vs Cavs)[2]
  • Highest postseason winning percentage over a four-year-span: 63–20 (.795) from 2015 to 2018, the Chicago Bulls are second with 51–17 (.750) from 1991 to 1994.[2]
  • Most consecutive playoff home wins: 16 (surpassing the 1990–91 Chicago Bulls record of 15. The Warriors record dates back to 2017, where they went 9–0 at home)[2]
  • Most consecutive playoff series with a road win: 19 (tied with the Miami Heat)[2]
  • Half-time comebacks: First team in NBA history to come back from 20+ point deficits at half-time twice in the same season (22 against the Philadelphia 76ers and 20 against the New Orleans Pelicans)[2]
  • Largest comeback by a road team at halftime in a Game 7 in the playoffs: 11 points down (vs. the Rockets, won 101–92)[2]
  • First team in NBA history to win multiple elimination games in the same series despite trailing by 10-or-more at halftime: Western Conference Finals vs Rockets[2]
  • Highest +/- scoring differential in the 3rd quarter during the playoffs: Outscored opponents in the 3rd quarter by 153 points[6]

Individual

  • Most triple-doubles in franchise history: 22 (Draymond Green, he broke Tom Gola's record of 20)[2]
  • Most three-pointers made in the playoffs: 378 (Stephen Curry, Ray Allen holds the NBA record with 385)[2]
  • First Warriors player to average a triple-double in a playoff series: Draymond Green (14.8 points, 11.8 rebounds and 10 assists) vs the Pelicans, only the 13th time in NBA history a player has averaged a triple double in a series[2]
  • Most triple-doubles in the post-season: 4 (Draymond Green, surpassed Tom Gola's record of 3)[2]
  • Most consecutive regular season games with a made three-pointer: 95 (Klay Thompson, third best in NBA history behind Stephen Curry (157) and Kyle Korver (127)[7]
  • Most playoff games played: 102 (Klay Thompson)[2]

Team

  • Most consecutive road wins: 14 (tied, also achieved in the 2015–16 season)[2]
  • Largest winning margin in the playoffs: 41 points (126–85, Game 3 against the Rockets)[2]
  • Fewest points allowed in a half in the playoffs: 25 points (Second half, Game 6 against the Rockets)[2]
  • Fewest points allowed in a quarter in the playoffs: 9 points (Fourth quarter, Game 6 against the Rockets)[2]
  • Most consecutive Western Conference Finals appearances: 4 (only the second team in NBA history to reach the Finals four times in a row. The Los Angeles Lakers appeared eight times in a row between 1982 and 1989)[2]
  • Road trip sweep: Six games (first Warriors team to sweep a six-game road trip, only the 11th team in NBA history to do so)[2]
  • Most points scored in the first half of a playoff game: 76 (against the Pelicans)[2]
  • Most consecutive trips to the NBA Finals: 4 (The Warriors are the fifth franchise in NBA history to reach the Finals in four-straight seasons, joining the Boston Celtics (10, 1957–1966; 4, 1984–87), Cleveland Cavaliers (4, 2015–18), Los Angeles Lakers (4, 1982–1985) and Miami Heat (4, 2011–2014))[2]

Roster

2017–18 Golden State Warriors roster
Players Coaches
Pos.No.NameHeightWeightDOBFrom
F/C 2 Bell, Jordan 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 224 lb (102 kg) 1995–01–07 Oregon
F 25 Boucher, Chris (TW) 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1993–01–11 Oregon
G 4 Cook, Quinn 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 179 lb (81 kg) 1993–03–23 Duke
G 30 Curry, Stephen (C) 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 1988–03–14 Davidson
F 35 Durant, Kevin 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 240 lb (109 kg) 1988–09–29 Texas
F 23 Green, Draymond 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 230 lb (104 kg) 1990–03–04 Michigan State
G/F 9 Iguodala, Andre 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1984–01–28 Arizona
C 15 Jones, Damian 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 245 lb (111 kg) 1995–06–30 Vanderbilt
G 34 Livingston, Shaun 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 192 lb (87 kg) 1985–09–11 Peoria Central HS (IL)
F 5 Looney, Kevon 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1996–02–06 UCLA
G 0 McCaw, Patrick 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1995–10–25 UNLV
C 1 McGee, JaVale 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 270 lb (122 kg) 1988–01–19 Nevada
C 27 Pachulia, Zaza 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 270 lb (122 kg) 1984–02–10 Georgia
G 11 Thompson, Klay 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1990–02–08 Washington State
F 3 West, David 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 250 lb (113 kg) 1980–08–29 Xavier
G/F 6 Young, Nick 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 1985–06–01 USC
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (GL) On assignment to G League affiliate
  • (TW) Two-way affiliate player
  • Injured Injured

Roster
Last transaction: 2018–04–10

Standings

Division

Pacific DivisionWLPCTGBHomeRoadDivGP
yGolden State Warriors5824.70729–1229–1213–382
Los Angeles Clippers4240.51216.022–1920–2112–482
Los Angeles Lakers3547.42723.020–2115–266–1082
Sacramento Kings2755.32931.014–2713–285–1182
Phoenix Suns2161.25637.010–3111–304–1282

Conference

Western Conference
#TeamWLPCTGBGP
1zHouston Rockets *6517.79382
2yGolden State Warriors *5824.7077.082
3yPortland Trail Blazers *4933.59816.082
4xOklahoma City Thunder4834.58517.082
5xUtah Jazz4834.58517.082
6xNew Orleans Pelicans4834.58517.082
7xSan Antonio Spurs4735.57318.082
8xMinnesota Timberwolves4735.57318.082
9Denver Nuggets4636.56119.082
10Los Angeles Clippers4240.51223.082
11Los Angeles Lakers3547.42730.082
12Sacramento Kings2755.32938.082
13Dallas Mavericks2458.29341.082
14Memphis Grizzlies2260.26843.082
15Phoenix Suns2161.25644.082

Game log

Preseason

2017 pre-season game log
Total: 2–2 (Home: 1–2; Road: 1–0)
Pre-season: 2–2 (home: 1–2; road: 1–0)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
1 September 30 Denver L 102–108 Stephen Curry (11) Draymond Green (8) Draymond Green (4) Oracle Arena
19,596
0–1
2 October 5 Minnesota L 97–111 Kevin Durant (20) Curry, Green, Pachulia (6) Draymond Green (8) Shenzhen Universiade Sports Centre
17,495
0–2
3 October 8 @ Minnesota W 142–110 Stephen Curry (40) Stephen Curry (6) Stephen Curry (8) Mercedes-Benz Arena
N/A
1–2
4 October 13 Sacramento W 117–106 Stephen Curry (18) Jordan Bell (11) Klay Thompson (6) Oracle Arena
19,596
2–2
2017–18 season schedule

Regular season

2017–18 game log
Total: 58–24 (Home: 29–12; Road: 29–12)
October: 5–3 (home: 2–2; road: 3–1)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
1 October 17 Houston L 121–122 Nick Young (23) Draymond Green (11) Draymond Green (13) Oracle Arena
19,596
0–1
2 October 20 @ New Orleans W 128–120 Klay Thompson (33) Zaza Pachulia (9) Draymond Green (9) Smoothie King Center
18,171
1–1
3 October 21 @ Memphis L 101–111 Stephen Curry (37) Kevin Durant (13) Draymond Green (6) FedExForum
17,794
1–2
4 October 23 @ Dallas W 133–103 Stephen Curry (29) Kevin Durant (8) Curry, Green (8) American Airlines Center
19,875
2–2
5 October 25 Toronto W 117–112 Stephen Curry (30) Draymond Green (11) Draymond Green (6) Oracle Arena
19,596
3–2
6 October 27 Washington W 120–117 Kevin Durant (31) Kevin Durant (11) Stephen Curry (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
4–2
7 October 29 Detroit L 107–115 Klay Thompson (29) Draymond Green (13) Stephen Curry (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
4–3
8 October 30 @ L.A. Clippers W 141–113 Stephen Curry (31) Draymond Green (9) Curry, Thompson, Green (6) Staples Center
19,068
5–3
November : 11–3 (home: 6–1; road: 5–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
9 November 2 @ San Antonio W 112–92 Klay Thompson (27) Curry, Durant (8) Draymond Green (6) AT&T Center
18,418
6–3
10 November 4 @ Denver W 127–108 Kevin Durant (25) Omri Casspi (8) Stephen Curry (11) Pepsi Center
19,711
7–3
11 November 6 Miami W 97–80 Kevin Durant (21) Draymond Green (9) Kevin Durant (6) Oracle Arena
19,596
8–3
12 November 8 Minnesota W 125–101 Klay Thompson (28) Stephen Curry (8) Stephen Curry (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
9–3
13 November 11 Philadelphia W 135–114 Kevin Durant (29) Draymond Green (10) Stephen Curry (9) Oracle Arena
19,596
10–3
14 November 13 Orlando W 110–100 Kevin Durant (21) David West (11) Kevin Durant (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
11–3
15 November 16 @ Boston L 88–92 Kevin Durant (24) Green, Casspi (8) Curry, Green (5) TD Garden
18,624
11–4
16 November 18 @ Philadelphia W 124–116 Stephen Curry (35) Green, West (7) Draymond Green (8) Wells Fargo Center
20,848
12–4
17 November 19 @ Brooklyn W 118–111 Stephen Curry (39) Stephen Curry (11) Draymond Green (8) Barclays Center
17,732
13–4
18 November 22 @ Oklahoma City L 91–108 Stephen Curry (24) Omri Casspi (6) Curry, Green (6) Chesapeake Energy Arena
18,203
13–5
19 November 24 Chicago W 143–94 Stephen Curry (33) Stephen Curry (7) Zaza Pachulia (6) Oracle Arena
19,596
14–5
20 November 25 New Orleans W 110–95 Stephen Curry (27) Draymond Green (7) Draymond Green (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
15–5
21 November 27 Sacramento L 106–110 Klay Thompson (21) David West (7) Draymond Green (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
15–6
22 November 29 @ L.A. Lakers W 127–123 (OT) Kevin Durant (29) Draymond Green (11) Draymond Green (9) Staples Center
18,997
16–6
December : 13–2 (home: 7–2; road: 6–0)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
23 December 1 @ Orlando W 133–112 Klay Thompson (27) Zaza Pachulia (8) Curry, Green (10) Amway Center
18,846
17–6
24 December 3 @ Miami W 123–95 Stephen Curry (30) Draymond Green (7) Draymond Green (9) American Airlines Arena
19,600
18–6
25 December 4 @ New Orleans W 125–115 Stephen Curry (31) Draymond Green (9) Stephen Curry (11) Smoothie King Center
17,004
19–6
26 December 6 @ Charlotte W 101–87 Kevin Durant (35) Kevin Durant (11) Kevin Durant (10) Spectrum Center
19,334
20–6
27 December 8 @ Detroit W 102–98 Kevin Durant (36) Kevin Durant (10) Draymond Green (13) Little Caesars Arena
20,491
21–6
28 December 11 Portland W 111–104 Kevin Durant (28) Casspi, Durant (9) Durant, Iguodala (5) Oracle Arena
19,596
22–6
29 December 14 Dallas W 112–97 Kevin Durant (36) Casspi, Durant (11) Andre Iguodala (10) Oracle Arena
19,596
23–6
30 December 18 @ L.A. Lakers W 116–114 (OT) Kevin Durant (36) Kevin Durant (11) Kevin Durant (8) Staples Center
18,997
24–6
31 December 20 Memphis W 97–84 Klay Thompson (29) Durant, McCaw (8) Bell, Thompson (5) Oracle Arena
19,596
25–6
32 December 22 L.A. Lakers W 113–106 Kevin Durant (33) Draymond Green (11) Durant, Green (7) Oracle Arena
19,596
26–6
33 December 23 Denver L 81–96 Kevin Durant (18) Jordan Bell (10) Andre Iguodala (7) Oracle Arena
19,596
26–7
34 December 25 Cleveland W 99–92 Kevin Durant (25) Draymond Green (12) Draymond Green (11) Oracle Arena
19,596
27–7
35 December 27 Utah W 126–101 Kevin Durant (21) Jordan Bell (13) Draymond Green (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
28–7
36 December 29 Charlotte L 100–111 Kevin Durant (27) Draymond Green (11) Draymond Green (16) Oracle Arena
19,596
28–8
37 December 30 Memphis W 141–128 Stephen Curry (38) David West (11) Kevin Durant (9) Oracle Arena
19,596
29–8
January : 11–3 (home: 4–1; road: 7–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
38 January 3 @ Dallas W 125–122 Stephen Curry (32) Kevin Durant (12) Stephen Curry (8) American Airlines Center
20,212
30–8
39 January 4 @ Houston W 124–114 Stephen Curry (29) Draymond Green (14) Draymond Green (10) Toyota Center
18,055
31–8
40 January 6 @ L.A. Clippers W 121–105 Stephen Curry (45) Draymond Green (12) Green, Iguodala (7) Staples Center
19,068
32–8
41 January 8 Denver W 124–114 Stephen Curry (32) Jordan Bell (8) Draymond Green (10) Oracle Arena
19,596
33–8
42 January 10 L.A. Clippers L 106–125 Kevin Durant (40) Draymond Green (10) Durant, Green, Livingston (4) Oracle Arena
19,596
33–9
43 January 12 @ Milwaukee W 108–94 Kevin Durant (26) Draymond Green (10) Draymond Green (7) Bradley Center
18,717
34–9
44 January 13 @ Toronto W 127–125 Klay Thompson (26) Curry, Durant (6) Stephen Curry (9) Air Canada Centre
20,078
35–9
45 January 15 @ Cleveland W 118–108 Kevin Durant (32) Draymond Green (16) Draymond Green (9) Quicken Loans Arena
20,562
36–9
46 January 17 @ Chicago W 119–112 Klay Thompson (38) Zaza Pachulia (11) Kevin Durant (7) United Center
21,372
37–9
47 January 20 @ Houston L 108–116 Kevin Durant (26) Durant, Green (7) Stephen Curry (8) Toyota Center
18,055
37–10
48 January 23 New York W 123–112 Stephen Curry (32) Kevin Durant (14) Stephen Curry (6) Oracle Arena
19,596
38–10
49 January 25 Minnesota W 126–113 Kevin Durant (28) Kevin Durant (10) Kevin Durant (11) Oracle Arena
19,596
39–10
50 January 27 Boston W 109–105 Stephen Curry (49) Draymond Green (11) Curry, Green (5) Oracle Arena
19,596
40–10
51 January 30 @ Utah L 99–129 Stephen Curry (26) Kevin Durant (11) Draymond Green (8) Vivint Smart Home Arena
19,911
40–11
February : 8–3 (home: 5–1; road: 3–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
52 February 2 @ Sacramento W 119–104 Kevin Durant (33) Zaza Pachulia (13) Curry, Durant, Green (6) Golden 1 Center
16,583
41–11
53 February 3 @ Denver L 108–115 Kevin Durant (31) Zaza Pachulia (8) Draymond Green (8) Pepsi Center
20,103
41–12
54 February 6 Oklahoma City L 105–125 Kevin Durant (33) Draymond Green (8) Draymond Green (7) Oracle Arena
19,596
41–13
55 February 8 Dallas W 121–103 Kevin Durant (24) Draymond Green (10) Stephen Curry (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
42–13
56 February 10 San Antonio W 122–105 Klay Thompson (25) Draymond Green (8) Draymond Green (11) Oracle Arena
19,596
43–13
57 February 12 Phoenix W 129–83 Stephen Curry (22) Omri Casspi (10) Stephen Curry (7) Oracle Arena
19,596
44–13
58 February 14 @ Portland L 117–123 Kevin Durant (50) Draymond Green (12) Draymond Green (7) Moda Center
19,520
44–14
All-Star Break
59 February 22 L.A. Clippers W 134–127 Stephen Curry (44) Draymond Green (8) Stephen Curry (10) Oracle Arena
19,596
45–14
60 February 24 Oklahoma City W 112–80 Kevin Durant (28) Stephen Curry (9) Draymond Green (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
46–14
61 February 26 @ New York W 125–111 Klay Thompson (26) Kevin Durant (9) Draymond Green (6) Madison Square Garden
19,812
47–14
62 February 28 @ Washington W 109–101 Kevin Durant (32) Andre Iguodala (7) Draymond Green (11) Capital One Arena
20,356
48–14
March : 7–7 (home: 4–4; road: 3–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
63 March 2 @ Atlanta W 114–109 Curry, Durant (28) Draymond Green (7) Draymond Green (9) Philips Arena
16,728
49–14
64 March 6 Brooklyn W 114–101 Stephen Curry (34) Curry, Durant, Iguodala (6) Draymond Green (9) Oracle Arena
19,596
50–14
65 March 8 San Antonio W 110–107 Kevin Durant (37) Draymond Green (12) Draymond Green (10) Oracle Arena
19,596
51–14
66 March 9 @ Portland L 108–125 Kevin Durant (40) Draymond Green (12) Durant, Green (6) Moda Center
19,487
51–15
67 March 11 @ Minnesota L 103–109 Kevin Durant (39) Kevin Durant (12) Draymond Green (7) Target Center
18,978
51–16
68 March 14 LA Lakers W 117–106 Kevin Durant (26) Zaza Pachulia (12) Kevin Durant (6) Oracle Arena
19,596
52–16
69 March 16 Sacramento L 93–98 Quinn Cook (25) Draymond Green (10) Draymond Green (7) Oracle Arena
19,596
52–17
70 March 17 @ Phoenix W 124–109 Quinn Cook (28) Draymond Green (11) Draymond Green (8) Talking Stick Resort Arena
18,055
53–17
71 March 19 @ San Antonio L 75–89 Quinn Cook (20) Kevon Looney (8) Quinn Cook (5) AT&T Center
18,418
53–18
72 March 23 Atlanta W 106–94 Stephen Curry (29) Zaza Pachulia (9) Cook, Iguodala (6) Oracle Arena
19,596
54–18
73 March 25 Utah L 91–110 Quinn Cook (17) JaVale McGee (9) Quinn Cook (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
54–19
74 March 27 Indiana L 81–92 Nick Young (12) Kevon Looney (11) Quinn Cook (7) Oracle Arena
19,596
54–20
75 March 29 Milwaukee L 107–116 Quinn Cook (30) Green, Iguodala (5) Durant, Green (6) Oracle Arena
19,596
54–21
76 March 31 @ Sacramento W 112–96 Kevin Durant (27) Kevin Durant (10) Draymond Green (7) Golden 1 Center
17,583
55–21
April : 3–3 (home: 1–1; road: 2–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
77 April 1 Phoenix W 117–107 Kevin Durant (29) Kevin Durant (11) Draymond Green (12) Oracle Arena
19,596
56–21
78 April 3 @ Oklahoma City W 111–107 Kevin Durant (34) Kevin Durant (10) Draymond Green (8) Chesapeake Energy Arena
18,203
57–21
79 April 5 @ Indiana L 106–126 Kevin Durant (27) Klay Thompson (7) Kevin Durant (7) Bankers Life Fieldhouse
17,923
57–22
80 April 7 New Orleans L 120–126 Kevin Durant (41) Durant, Green (10) Draymond Green (9) Oracle Arena
19,596
57–23
81 April 8 @ Phoenix W 117–100 Klay Thompson (34) Cook, Green, Looney (6) Kevin Durant (9) Talking Stick Resort Arena
18,055
58–23
82 April 10 @ Utah L 79–119 Klay Thompson (23) Zaza Pachulia (6) Shaun Livingston (4) Vivint Smart Home Arena
18,306
58–24
2017–18 season schedule

Playoffs

2018 playoff game log
Total: 16–5 (Home: 10–1; Road: 6–4)
First Round: 4–1 (home: 3–0; road: 1–1)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 April 14 San Antonio W 113–92 Klay Thompson (27) Durant, Green (8) Draymond Green (11) Oracle Arena
19,596
1–0
2 April 16 San Antonio W 116–101 Kevin Durant (32) Iguodala, McGee (7) Durant, Green (6) Oracle Arena
19,596
2–0
3 April 19 @ San Antonio W 110–97 Kevin Durant (26) Kevin Durant (9) Draymond Green (7) AT&T Center
18,418
3–0
4 April 22 @ San Antonio L 90–103 Kevin Durant (34) Draymond Green (18) Draymond Green (9) AT&T Center
18,418
3–1
5 April 24 San Antonio W 99–91 Kevin Durant (25) Draymond Green (19) Draymond Green (7) Oracle Arena
19,596
4–1
Conference Semifinals: 4–1 (home: 3–0; road: 1–1)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 April 28 New Orleans W 123–101 Klay Thompson (27) Draymond Green (15) Draymond Green (11) Oracle Arena
19,596
1–0
2 May 1 New Orleans W 121–116 Kevin Durant (29) Draymond Green (9) Draymond Green (12) Oracle Arena
19,596
2–0
3 May 4 @ New Orleans L 100–119 Klay Thompson (26) Draymond Green (12) Draymond Green (9) Smoothie King Center
18,551
2–1
4 May 6 @ New Orleans W 118–92 Kevin Durant (38) Durant, Green (9) Draymond Green (9) Smoothie King Center
18,513
3–1
5 May 8 New Orleans W 113–104 Stephen Curry (28) Draymond Green (14) Draymond Green (9) Oracle Arena
19,596
4–1
Conference Finals: 4–3 (home: 2–1; road: 2–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 May 14 @ Houston W 119–106 Kevin Durant (37) Draymond Green (9) Draymond Green (9) Toyota Center
18,055
1–0
2 May 16 @ Houston L 105–127 Kevin Durant (38) Stephen Curry (7) Stephen Curry (7) Toyota Center
18,119
1–1
3 May 20 Houston W 126–85 Stephen Curry (35) Draymond Green (17) Durant, Green (6) Oracle Arena
19,596
2–1
4 May 22 Houston L 92–95 Stephen Curry (28) Draymond Green (14) Draymond Green (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
2–2
5 May 24 @ Houston L 94–98 Kevin Durant (29) Draymond Green (15) Stephen Curry (6) Toyota Center
18,208
2–3
6 May 26 Houston W 115–86 Klay Thompson (35) Draymond Green (10) Draymond Green (9) Oracle Arena
19,596
3–3
7 May 28 @ Houston W 101–92 Kevin Durant (34) Draymond Green (13) Stephen Curry (10) Toyota Center
18,055
4–3
NBA Finals: 4–0 (home: 2–0; road: 2–0)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 May 31 Cleveland W 124–114 (OT) Stephen Curry (29) Draymond Green (11) Curry, Green (9) Oracle Arena
19,596
1–0
2 June 3 Cleveland W 122–103 Stephen Curry (33) Kevin Durant (9) Stephen Curry (8) Oracle Arena
19,596
2–0
3 June 6 @ Cleveland W 110–102 Kevin Durant (43) Kevin Durant (13) Draymond Green (9) Quicken Loans Arena
20,562
3–0
4 June 8 @ Cleveland W 108–85 Stephen Curry (37) Kevin Durant (12) Kevin Durant (10) Quicken Loans Arena
20,562
4–0
2018 playoff schedule

Player statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field-goal percentage  3P%  3-point field-goal percentage  FT%  Free-throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game

Regular season

Golden State Warriors statistics
Player GP GS MPG FG% 3FG% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
Stephen Curry 515132.0.495.423.9215.16.11.6.226.4
Kevin Durant 686834.2.516.419.8896.85.4.71.826.4
Klay Thompson 737334.3.488.440.8373.82.5.8.520.0
Draymond Green 707032.7.454.301.7757.67.31.41.311.0
Nick Young 80817.4.412.377.8621.6.5.5.17.3
David West 73013.7.571.375.7593.31.9.61.06.8
Andre Iguodala 64725.3.463.282.6323.83.3.8.66.0
Shaun Livingston 71715.9.501.000.8201.82.0.5.35.5
Zaza Pachulia 695714.1.564.000.8064.71.6.6.25.4
JaVale McGee 65179.5.621.000.7312.6.5.3.94.8
Jordan Bell 571314.2.627.000.6823.61.8.61.04.6
Patrick McCaw 571016.9.409.238.7651.41.4.8.24.0
Kevon Looney 66413.8.580.200.5453.3.6.5.84.0
Damian Jones 1505.9.500.600.9.1.1.21.7
Chris Boucher 101.0.000.0001.0.0.0.0.0
Quinn Cook 331822.4.484.442.8802.52.7.4.09.5
Omri Casspi 53714.0.580.455.7253.81.0.3.45.7

After all games.[8]
Waived during the season
Traded during the season
Acquired during the season

Playoffs

Golden State Warriors statistics
Player GP GS MPG FG% 3FG% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
Kevin Durant 212138.4.487.341.9017.84.7.71.229.0
Stephen Curry 151437.0.451.395.9576.15.41.7.725.5
Klay Thompson 212137.8.465.427.8714.11.8.8.319.6
Draymond Green 212139.0.432.266.79610.68.12.01.510.8
Andre Iguodala 151226.7.494.378.7064.52.71.4.58.1
Shaun Livingston 21017.2.536.000.8802.21.5.3.06.7
JaVale McGee 13912.2.672.000.6673.2.3.2.86.5
Quinn Cook 17010.3.448.226.8241.4.6.2.14.8
Kevon Looney 21518.4.542.000.3814.2.9.7.44.1
David West 1809.7.600.5001.0002.11.8.3.63.3
Nick Young 20210.3.302.298.750.6.2.1.02.6
Jordan Bell 17010.2.531.000.5002.8.9.4.52.4
Zaza Pachulia 703.7.571.7501.7.1.4.12.4
Damian Jones 402.8.500.667.8.0.0.01.0
Patrick McCaw 602.7.500.0001.000.5.0.3.0.7

Transactions

Trades

June 22, 2017 To Golden State Warriors
Draft rights to Jordan Bell[9]
To Chicago Bulls
Cash considerations

Re-signed

Player Signed
Stephen Curry[10] 5-year contract worth $201 million
Shaun Livingston[10] 3-year contract worth $24 million
David West[10] 1-year contract worth $2.3 million
Andre Iguodala[10] 3-year contract worth $48 million
Kevin Durant[10] 2-year contract worth $53 million
Zaza Pachulia[10] 1-year contract worth $3.5 million
JaVale McGee[11] 1-year contract worth $2.1 million

Additions

Player Signed Former team
Nick Young[12] 1-year contract worth $5.2 million Los Angeles Lakers
Omri Casspi[13] 1-year contract worth $2.1 million Minnesota Timberwolves
Chris Boucher[14] Two-way contract Oregon Ducks
Quinn Cook[15][16] Two-way contract New Orleans Pelicans

Subtractions

Player Reason left New team
Ian Clark[17] 1-year contract worth $1.6 million New Orleans Pelicans
James Michael McAdoo[18] Two-way contract Philadelphia 76ers
Matt Barnes[19] Retired
Omri Casspi[20] Waived

Awards

Recipient Award Date awarded Ref.
Kevin Durant Western Conference Player of the Week December 11, 2017 [21]
Steve Kerr Western Conference Coach of the Month (December) January 3, 2018 [22]
Stephen Curry Western Conference Player of the Week January 8, 2018 [23]
Stephen Curry Western Conference Player of the Week January 29, 2018 [24]
Stephen Curry Western Conference Player of the Month (January) February 1, 2018 [25]
Kevin Durant Finals Most Valuable Player June 8, 2018 [26]

References

  1. Stein, Marc (May 28, 2018). "Warriors Dispatch Rockets, Setting Up Fourth Finals Against Cavs". The New York Times. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  2. "Warriors" (PDF). nba.com. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  3. "Warriors Forward Draymond Green and Guard Klay Thompson Named All-Star Reserves". Warriors.com. January 23, 2018.
  4. Smith, Sekou. "LeBron James, Steph Curry named captains as All-Star starters are revealed". NBA.com. Retrieved January 18, 2018.
  5. Slater, Anthony (June 23, 2017). "What is this two-way contract the Warriors used to sign Oregon's Chris Boucher?". The Mercury News. Retrieved June 23, 2017.
  6. Songco, Paolo (June 9, 2018). "3rd quarter-point differential proves Golden State is the best in such period since 1955". The Mercury News.
  7. "NBA Individual Regular Season Records for 3-Point Field Goals". basketball-reference.com. Retrieved February 11, 2016.
  8. "2017-18 Golden State Warriors Roster and Stats". basketball-reference.com. Retrieved March 1, 2021.
  9. "Warriors acquire draft rights to Jordan Bell from Chicago for cash considerations". NBA.com/warriors. June 22, 2017. Retrieved June 22, 2017.
  10. "Warriors re-sign Curry, Durant, Iguodala, Livingston, Pachulia and West to contracts". NBA.com/warriors. July 25, 2017. Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  11. "Warriors re-sign center JaVale McGee". NBA.com/warriors. August 1, 2017. Retrieved August 1, 2017.
  12. "Warriors sign free agent guard Nick Young". NBA.com/warriors. July 7, 2017. Retrieved July 7, 2017.
  13. "Warriors sign free agent forward Omri Casspi". NBA.com/warriors. July 12, 2017. Retrieved July 12, 2017.
  14. "Warriors sign free agent rookie Chris Boucher to two-way contract". NBA.com/warriors. July 14, 2017. Retrieved July 14, 2017.
  15. "Warriors sign Quinn Cook to Two-way contract". NBA.com/warriors. October 17, 2017. Retrieved October 17, 2017.
  16. "Warriors sign guard Quinn Cook to multiyear contract". NBA.com/warriors. April 10, 2018. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  17. "Pelicans sign Ian Clark". NBA.com/pelicans. August 3, 2017. Retrieved August 3, 2017.
  18. "Sixers sign McAdoo, Blackmon Jr". NBA.com/sixers. August 30, 2017. Retrieved August 30, 2017.
  19. "Matt Barnes announces retirement". NBA.com. December 11, 2017. Retrieved December 11, 2017.
  20. "Warriors waive Omri Casspi". NBA.com/warriors. April 7, 2018. Retrieved April 7, 2018.
  21. Kevin Durant Named Western Conference Player of the Week
  22. Steve Kerr Named Western Conference Coach of the Month
  23. Stephen Curry Named Western Conference Player of the Week
  24. Stephen Curry Named Western Conference Player of the Week
  25. Stephen Curry Named Kia Western Conference Player of the Month
  26. Golden State Warriors forward Kevin Durant claims second Finals MVP
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