And of course, the Rockets aren't doing themselves any favors in this series by constantly leaving him wide open. He's doing some incredible shyt this series but for some ridiculous reason the Rockets don't stick with him on broken plays. If I'm coaching the Cavs I tell Iman Shumpert to follow Steph Curry around and that's it on defense; don't go for steals, don't go for rebounds, don't leak out, don't go for a fast break, nothing.
I just don't get why more teams don't do this.
I wasn't a dominant defender against drivers when I played basketball, but I always shut down shooters. You know how? If I ever faced a team who had a shooter as their biggest scoring threat, I took the defensive assignment and didn't leave him. Ever. Stayed in his face when he didn't have the ball, denied him the ball if at all possible, stayed in his face when he did have the ball. No help defense, no reaching in, fought around every screen to stay with him, box the hell out of him on rebounds so I don't lose contact, no cherry-picking.
Now, the Warriors are good enough and deep enough on offense that they could still score enough to win even if Curry is mostly contained. But if I am taking my chances on losing to Curry hitting shots or losing to Klay/Barnes/Green, I'm going to take my chances with those other guys. Not saying that I'd double Curry to leave them open or anything, but I'm not leaving Curry to guard anyone else, ever.