The Warriors of this season represent everything that is good and everything that is bad about modern basketball. The good is that they play together better as a team better than any NBA team and are changing the culture as others try to emulate them. The bad is that now their season may end early due to key injuries, which is a pattern in basketball now, with so many teams in college and pro having their dreams ended due to an injury to one or more key players.
Durant, Thompson, Cousins, Looney, Iguodala, and more this season. Cleveland had Lebron, but when Kyrie Irving went down, they had trouble winning games. Our own memory of getting knocked out of the NCAA due to Wallace injuring his hand in practice, and Jabari Bird's freak back spasms right before the game. Bird could easily have left Cal early, but for so many injuries he suffered over his 4 years at Cal, hampering his play and limiting his playing time. Harper Kamp missing a year with injury, and the same for Theo Robertson. Ricky Kreklow had never ending stress fracture injuries, just to name a few.
John Madden said that injuries in sport may be caused by players working so hard to add more muscle to their bodies, and he thinks it is too much for their frames. Some think that modern players try too hard, they try to go all our and more, striving for a jump that is maybe 110% of what they are capable of. John Havlicek was known as a player with an incredible motor, but he said that he only played at 85% of what he was capable of. The game used to be about getting the ball in the basket, not showing up the defense. I watched Cal basketball seriously for about 20 years in the 1950s and 1960s, and I don't ever remember a player getting injured so seriously that he would miss a game or more. Earl Robinson played with a knee guard and seemed to favor his knee, but he never missed a game. Wilt Chamberlain averaged over 48 minutes a game one season as he played every minute of every game including overtimes. And nobody worked harder in the weight room to add muscle and strength. When I saw him play for Kansas, he weighed about 230 lbs. I few years later he was up to 260, then 275. When he last played for the Lakers, his responsibilities were down to rebounding, passing, and defense, and he had bulked up to 310-315 lbs. And he never got hurt. The Warriors of '75 had no injuries, as I remember, though Rick Barry injured a knee in the ABA a couple years later.
So I don't know what the problem is, but basketball today is filled with tragedy, as so many teams have their seasons ruined by an injury, not to mention the personal injury to the player. In college, scholarships are now limited to 13 per team, which is not sufficient to cover for the injuries that may happen. And the talent level in high school is not enough to stock more than a few teams to make them championship-worthy. The players today could learn a few things from the Havliceks about how to play hard and stay healthy, and still win championships.
SFCityBear