There’s something quietly telling about the way the Golden State Warriors are talking about their do-or-die play-in game against the Los Angeles Clippers on Wednesday night.
Externally, they’re saying all the right things. They’re competitors. They want to win and extend the season. Postseason opportunities are precious and valuable.
But they’re also subtly hinting that it might not be the worst outcome in the world if they were to lose.
“It’s not exciting,” Draymond Green admitted last week, almost shrugging off the very idea of being in the play-in tournament. “As a competitor, you want to rise to the challenge, but I’m not going to sleep tomorrow night like, ‘Man, we’ve got the play-in next week.’”
That’s not just brutal honesty. That’s a tell.
Because real contenders would live for moments like this. A do-or-die game with their season on the line? Urgency. Desperation. Pressure. That’s what you play for. This is when you pound your chest and quote Kevin Garnett, “Anything is possible!”
Instead, the Warriors are treating the play-in game like a midweek obligation. Like a delayed flight. Something that they have to endure, not that they’re actively chasing.
Warriors’ head coach Steve Kerr revealed as much when he said that Steph Curry, Al Horford, and Kristaps Porzingis would all be on a minutes restriction on Wednesday.
For context, the Warriors and Rockets played in a Game 7 in the first round of the NBA Playoffs last season. Four of their five starters played over 40 minutes, including Curry who played 46.
So for Kerr to admit that none of the above will play anywhere near 40 minutes on Wednesday sounds like the acceptance of an ending. Not, putting it all out on the line for a do-or-die game.
Nobody inside the Warriors locker room will say it outright, nor should they.
Speaking exclusively to the California Post on Monday, Curry still wanted to win.
“We’re still trying to be competitive obviously,” said Curry. “We still have expectations that we can win.”
And he means it.
But organizations don’t run on emotion. They run on math.
And frankly, the math is better if they lose.
If the Warriors win on Wednesday, and again on Friday, they’re rewarded with a two-week road gauntlet that eventually leads to a first round date with the reigning champion Oklahoma City Thunder — a team that swept them in four games this season by an average margin of victory over 20 points. The betting odds that they can beat the Thunder are less than 2%, their current odds of winning the NBA title are 0.1% (1000/1).
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Lose on Wednesday, and suddenly the future cracks open enough to matter. They would finish with the 11th best lottery odds. A 9.4% chance at a top-four pick and a 2% chance at winning the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft. And in the NBA, that’s currency.
Just ask the Dallas Mavericks.
A year ago, they walked this same tightrope, lost at the right time, and walked away with Cooper Flagg — the likely NBA Rookie of the Year winner and a franchise-altering presence. The kind of reset you don’t plan for, but absolutely capitalize on when it finds you.
Golden State should be treating the play-in game like it’s a Game 7. The players should empty the tanks and finish on trembling legs. You don’t manage minutes in a do-or-die game. You survive it at all costs.
Unless, of course, survival isn’t the real goal.
When Jimmy Butler suffered a season-ending torn ACL on January 19, things changed. When Curry went down with a knee injury 11 days later, the Warriors realized they were chasing a version of itself that no longer existed. Throw in Horford and Porzingis and this current roster is worn down, patched together and limping across the finish line. Another two weeks on the road would be prolonging the inevitable while risking something worse.
So what exactly are the Warriors chasing here? A gentleman’s sweep? A symbolic appearance in the first round of the NBA Playoffs? The illusion of contention?
Because the alternative — stepping back, embracing the lottery, retooling for one final, fully-armed run with Curry, Green and Butler — might actually be the boldest competitive move left.
That’s the part fans don’t want to hear. Losing can be strategic. Losing can be honest. Losing can let you hit the beach or the golf course sooner than you had originally planned.
And right now, the Warriors sound like a team that has already done the math, stared in the mirror, and quietly decided that Wednesday night might not be about extending the season.
It might be about ending it on their own terms.
