Golden State made the playoffs once in the last two decades prior to the last couple seasons.
I'm tired of hearing about this team as if they're the model franchise. You throw **** against the wall for 20 years eventually something will stick.
Two things about Golden State. (1) They've accumulated stars and role players through the draft
Curry and Thompson were both first round picks and are all-star level players with Curry a legit MVP candidate, Udoh was part of the Bogut trade,Ezeli, and Barnes are solid roleplayers and Green is an ultimate glue guy and an absolute gem of a pick in the 2nd round And that's with them losing their 2013 1st rounder due to the terrible 2008 Marcus Williams trade and not having a 2014 pick because they used it to land Iguodala.
Over that same time period the Kings have drafted:
Tyreke (gone)
Cousins (team foundation and IMO the best big man in the league)
Whiteside (gone)
Fredette (gone)
Thomas (gone)
Honeycutt (gone)
Robinson (gone)
Orlando Johnson (gone)
Ben McLemore (big improvement to become a 3&D wing)
Ray McCallum (3rd string PG)
Nik Stauskas (lost rookie struggling to find his way)
Really only two guys contributing from that list in Cousins and McLemore compared to all the guys playing huge roles for the Warriors
(2) The Warriors got good when they traded junk ball for a bigger, more traditional lineup.
They went from an undersized starting lineup of Monta Ellis and Steph Curry in the backcourt, Thompson at the SF and Udoh/Biedrens at center to a big lineup of Curry at PG, Thompson at SG, Dorell Wright at SF, Lee at PF and Bogut at C.
The Warriors didn't win with small, run-and-gun Nellie ball. They won when gave themselves more size at practically every position, improved their defense, rebounding and toughness and gave their best offensive players a supporting cast and a system that suited their strengths. Then they built on that foundation. Barnes, Ezeli, Green, Speights, Iguodala, Livingston, Barbosa.
They took heat for dumping the coach that brought them so much success but they did it at the right time - right after the season. And they brought in a guy that did exactly what they hoped when Kerr took them to the next level by replacing ISO offense with ball movement while continuing to get the most defensively out of a very offensively potent lineup.
DeMarcus isn't Curry. McLemore and Stauskas aren't Thompson. Mullin is not the same as Kerr. 24 games into the season is not the same as the beginning of May. Sacramento is not Golden State.