ehhh... kinda.
Yes, they collected Curry and Thompson at great draft values.
But they brought Iggy in on a max deal when they luckily whiffed on DHoward.
They have been big spenders and above the cap for a good while now.
Teams "doing it the right way" means a long grind at the bottom.
So I fully support buying free agents.
But more has to be done to differentiate salaries.
A star taking a couple mil a year hit to go to a winner is ACTUALLY MAKING money.
Between playoff money and endorsements, his REAL earnings increases.
When the salary cap blew through the roof this happened. Guys with stars like Curry locked up longish term had lots of extra money to spend.
Guys want to play for winners so if money is near even it's a recipe for roster stacking.
Again, as I stated, kinda.
http://www.businessinsider.com/how-warriors-built-their-team-2017-6
They hit on Curry and signed him before he hit MVP form. They got Thompson signed before the large cap escalations.
Green, I am not giving them special credit for. Mainly because I watched Green play at MSU in the NCAA Tourney and would have drafted him by pick 20. No kidding. Getting him in round 2 was insane. So that was dumb luck.
So they've now signed two max guys in Iggy and KD. And they had a huge assist from salary cap timing.
Great team, but they got lucky too.
from above link:
As Lowe mentioned on his podcast, "The Lowe Post," in May, the league must have some regret for not imposing the cap smoothing, particularly with the way the Warriors have run through the playoffs.
"That foundation, combined with several other lucky variables, like the cap spike — which the league absolutely has to regret at this point, not smoothing it out, and the [players] union maybe, too, though I don't think so — and Steph Curry's ankles, which made his extension ridiculously cheap — that foundation gave them the ability to sign Kevin Durant. And here we are, they haven't lost a game. They've lost one game in 70-something days."
NBA commissioner Adam Silver recently shot down the idea that the Warriors' dominance is bad for the NBA, noting there have always been teams that dominate the league — the Celtics and Lakers in the 1980s, the Bulls in the '90s, the Lakers and Spurs in the '00s.
But this Warriors team seems different. They appear unguardable. Their games haven't even been competitive. The offensive talent is so great that even against good defense (which the Cavs haven't played), they can reliably turn broken plays into efficient offense.
Furthermore, they have a plan to keep the team together. Curry, Durant, Andre Iguodala, and Shaun Livingston are all free agents this summer. The Warriors can retain all four players, so long as
Durant takes slightly less than a max salary, which he is reportedly willing to do.
If all goes according to plan for the Warriors, the reigning champions will lock up a core of four All-Stars in their primes, with nearly a pitch-perfect supporting cast, long term. As ********'s Tom Ley argued, the NBA might be broken.