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BANG/Rubin: Klay Thompson showing layers to his evolution as Warriors ride win streak

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Feb 15, 2024, 10:26:22 PMFeb 15
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Klay Thompson showing layers to his evolution as Warriors ride win streak
Golden State Warriors: Klay Thompson's up-and-down year is evening out

>SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH – FEBRUARY 12: Klay Thompson #11 of the Golden
State Warriors goes up for a shot against Keyonte George #3 of the Utah
Jazz during the first half at Delta Center on February 12, 2024 in Salt
Lake City, Utah. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees
that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to
the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo
by Alex Goodlett/Getty Images)
By SHAYNA RUBIN | sru...@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News Group
PUBLISHED: February 12, 2024 at 11:11 p.m. | UPDATED: February 13, 2024
at 12:23 p.m.
https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2024/02/12/warriors-klay-thompsons-evolution-is-showing-itself-after-win-in-utah/


SALT LAKE CITY — The 3-pointer wasn’t swishing, so Klay Thompson had to
switch things up.

Against a mediocre Utah Jazz defense, Thompson settled in, went mostly
off-ball and found his mid-range shot. Eight of his 11 makes were
2-pointers for an easy team-leading 26 points. To secure a 129-107 win,
their fifth straight, the Warriors didn’t need Thompson to go
scorched-earth from beyond the arc; on two surgically repaired legs in
his 34th year, Thompson’s teammates need him to embrace what the game gives.

“Looked really good tonight. He looked composed. Not forcing anything,”
Draymond Green said. “He looked like he was just at peace.”

This hasn’t been a peaceful year for Thompson. At its peaks, Thompson
plays like he did in Utah — as an evolved version of himself that can
lay low on nights he doesn’t have his legs, but keeps defenses
preoccupied as a threat to pop off into a scoring frenzy on a dime. In
its valleys, Thompson grows visibly upset that he’s not always the
bonafide second option, the go-to closer and scorer he was before his
two major injuries.

His frustrations bubbled to the surface when coach Steve Kerr benched
him to close games while he struggled. He kicked chairs and threw
objects after being benched late in a loss to Phoenix in November. He
expressed a realization that he’d gone from “one of the best players” to
a mere mortal in crunch time when rookie Brandin Podziemski and G League
call-up Gui Santos got to close over him in a win over the Brooklyn Nets
last week.

After not closing a win against the Suns on Saturday, Thompson sat fully
dressed in his game-worn jersey with a towel over his head, staring
daggers at the inside of his locker. Jerome Robinson gave him a shoulder
squeeze of encouragement on his way out and Thompson chucked his phone
into his locker in frustration — not with Robinson, but with himself.

It may be deduced that Thompson’s frustrations signal a refusal to
accept his new reality. But it only reveals Thompson’s outlier
competitiveness as a double-edged sword.

“I feel like I’m handling it good. I understand there will be ups and
downs,” Thompson said. “You want to be as consistent as possible, but at
least I’m out there playing and healthy.”

Thompson’s future with the Warriors may depend on how he balances his
passion with reason. Will he go searching for a contract that rewards
the player he used to be and, perhaps, still thinks is somewhere in him?
Or will he settle into something that suits how he’s matured?

Despite his outward dismay, Thompson told The Ringer he knows he will
have to accept a lesser role in the last part of his career. Thompson
referenced his idol Ray Allen, a superstar who embraced a lesser role
with the Miami Heat late in his 30s.

“Yeah, there’s nothing wrong with that,” Thompson told The Ringer. “I’ll
be 35 next year. At 35, coming off the ACL and an Achilles (tear) and
still have the ability to be a really good player. Maybe not the guy who
scored 60 in three quarters and scored an NBA record 37 points in a
quarter, but still a great threat out there.

“I’ve modeled my game after Reggie (Miller) and Ray and those guys were
incredibly effective until their late 30s. So I plan on kind of
following that mold.”

Green saw that quote floating around online and brought it up after the
game in Utah.

“That’s great,” Green said. “You see young guys taking these next step
they’re taking — the JKs, the BPs — you have to allow that growth and
you have to be OK with that growth. Klay is growing into that. That’s an
interesting position to be in. To see him settling in is big for this
team. We need Klay. We need a very good Klay, which allows us to make a
run.”

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Thompson’s 17.1 points per game average is his lowest since the 2012-13
season and his 37.3 percent from 3 is well below his 41.3% career
average. All said, what might matter most is that Thompson has shown he
can evolve from his past. That’s something Thompson and the Warriors can
benefit from — as they saw in Utah.

“For him to be able to show up the way he did tonight speaks to his
confidence in himself and competitive nature,” Steph Curry said. “He
would say it’s not been easy all year, but life ain’t easy. Your work
isn’t easy so you have to take the highs with the lows. Whatever peace
of mind you can find to enjoy basketball, that’s where he thrives the
most. We’re encouraging him to do that and that’s what he’s telling
himself.”
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