The N.B.A. Finals’ Big Moment Finds Andre Iguodala, an Unselfish Warrior
OAKLAND, Calif. — On the morning of what would prove to be their final day of the postseason, the Golden State Warriors held a voluntary shootaround at their practice site. Everyone showed up. At one point, Coach Steve Kerr made his way over to Andre Iguodala and asked him a simple question: “How many minutes you got?”
The Warriors were a few hours from facing the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 5 of the N.B.A. finals. In truth, Kerr’s question was more of a plea. He desperately wanted to close out the Cavaliers at home, and he hoped he could rely on Iguodala — even more than usual — to help make that happen.
“Whatever you need,” Iguodala recalled telling Kerr. “I’ll be ready.”
It was a subtle exchange that stuck with Iguodala, 33, as he prepared for the game. It gave him a good feeling, he said, knowing that his coach planned to lean on him. Sure enough, Iguodala went out Monday night and assembled one of the finest games of his career. He defended LeBron James. He hopped into his time machine and soared for dunks. He encouraged his teammates and enthralled the crowd.
“Andre lives for the big moment,” his teammate Draymond Green said.
By the end of the evening, Iguodala was a champion for the second time: Warriors 129, Cavaliers 120. He also made good on his pledge to Kerr, contributing 38 minutes 7 seconds of near-flawless playing time off the bench. He scored 20 points and shot 9 of 14 from the field. The Warriors outscored the Cavaliers by 18 points when he was on the court.
“I’ve been so stressed the last three, four weeks,” Iguodala said. “I told my wife right after the game, like: ‘I’m so sorry. It’s just been so stressful.’”
If nothing else, Iguodala has a unique ability to channel that stress for the greater good.
In Game 5, Kerr shortened his rotation. Ian Clark and JaVale McGee, who had been steady reserves throughout the postseason, did not shed their warm-ups. Instead, Kerr broke the emergency glass and summoned Iguodala to supply the most minutes he had in a game since December. In so many ways, Iguodala held it all together.
“You have to embrace it,” he said. “It’s really just sacrificing to make sure everybody else is eating. But then you want to look for yourself sometimes. Like, you want to show people what you can do.”
Iguodala is as much a symbol of the Warriors’ willingness to sacrifice as anyone on the team. At the start of the 2014-15 season, which was Kerr’s first as the Warriors’ coach, Kerr persuaded Iguodala, a former All-Star, to give up his role as a starter and come off the bench. Iguodala agreed to do it, and the Warriors went on to defeat the Cavaliers in the finals that season.
Not only that, Iguodala was named the 2015 finals’ most valuable player, thanks in large part to his defense on James.
With another player, especially one of Iguodala’s caliber, Kerr’s decision could have caused problems — or at least some drama. Some players do not want to be known as reserves. But Iguodala was willing to do it if he thought it would help the team. The experiment worked, of course. Iguodala has thrived as an anchor on the Warriors’ second unit ever since.
When Kevin Durant joined the Warriors this season, he came to regard Iguodala as a tangible example of their team-first approach. Iguodala also made sure to vocalize that message at times. Given the collection of talent on Golden State, there were games in which some All-Stars did not get as many shots as other All-Stars.
“But nobody cared as long as we won,” said Durant, who spotted Iguodala at the back of the room during his news conference late Monday night. “Andre Iguodala, who is right there — he continued to preach that every single day: It’s all about the group. If your intentions are good, then that means, as a team, that we’re moving in the right direction.”
The twist is that Iguodala tweaked his own advice for Durant as the playoffs moved forward.
“Andre told me all the time: ‘It’s your time. Go take it. It’s about you,’” Durant said. “But I’m like: ‘No, it’s about us. It’s about us. But I’m still going to be me.’”
On Monday, Durant scored 39 points to cap his dominant postseason run. He was named the finals’ M.V.P.
Iguodala had one last assist in the game’s final minute. With the Warriors up by 14, Durant paused at one end of the court to collect himself. The moment was weighing on him. Iguodala reminded him to keep playing, to push through the emotion for at least a few more seconds.
“Bro,” Durant recalled responding to Iguodala, “we’re about to win the title.”
The experience, of course, was new to Durant. Iguodala had been through it all before: the anxiety and the expectation, and then the relief mixed with joy.
“This is history,” Iguodala said. “We’re going down as one of the best teams ever, and that’s a special thing you cannot take away from us.”
Ai is really the key and glue of whole golden state warriors. After he got blocked by lebron james last year, he really gave it back 200%, what about the clutch steal on lebron james when toward the end of the game and that last game performance? And now it is said that he is willing to take pay cut to stay. What a guy.
It was really the factor - x on this match of the finales!
He played well
Exactly and one know that he is very strong in the moments clutchs, he already has was MVP the finales it is already a big performance!
I'm not really a fan of the Warriors, but I really have a lot of respect for Iggy. Good article, followed!