So how does Kerr keep a group of on-court workers focused through the season and continue to build the Warriors culture through injuries, interpersonal conflicts and responsibilities that can shift game to game or quarter to quarter?
“There’s no formula for this stuff,” Kerr said. “You just try to feel it as a coach.”
Calling last season “a grind,” Kerr wants to keep that year in its own compartment so Steph Curry, Draymond Green, Andre Iguodala, Shawn Livingston, Durant, Thompson, Cousins and others can focus on a brand-new season.
“We are playing with some house money,” Kerr said. “We won three of the last four championships. Our place in the history of the league is pretty secure. I don’t think our guys should feel a ton of pressure. I think they should feel the importance of trying to do it again, because this may be the last time we have this current iteration of the Warriors, just given all the free agents and the money crunch and everything else.
“So we don’t know what’s going to happen, so why not just go all out and enjoy every step of the way?”
That message is being carried by Warriors veterans to newcomers and younger players.
Andre Iguodala: Good personnel.
“Our front office and basketball operations do a great job of bringing in good personnel, good kids who want to learn, who want to be in this league for a very long time,” Iguodala said. “So they’re open and they all come in with an open mind, and it’s not just me. It’s Draymond, it’s Steph, it’s KD, it’s Klay.”
General Manager Bob Myers, the architect of turning the Warriors from basketball laughingstocks to undisputed champions, sees Kerr’s management as the key.
“If you enjoy going to work and you’re talented and you’re in a good culture, hopefully good things come of that,” Myers said. “So Steve’s good at that. Steve’s a great captain to lead us in the right direction. He’s got a great pulse of what the team needs.”



