The Golden Standard: 2015–16 Warriors’ Record-Breaking Season
When dominance meets discipline, magic happens. The 2015–16 Golden State Warriors didn’t just win games — they changed the blueprint of modern basketball.
With a record-breaking 73–9 season, they shattered a record many believed was untouchable: the 1995–96 Bulls’ 72–10 legacy.
Though they didn’t end with a ring, they etched their names into history, not just for how much they won, but how they won.

What Made This Season So Historic?
The Warriors were coming off a 67-win championship season. Expectations were high, but no one saw 73 coming.
Key milestones from the season:
- 🔥 Broke the Bulls’ 72–10 record
- 🏀 First team to reach 50 wins in just 55 games
- 📈 Highest offensive rating (114.5) in the league
- 🎯 Most 3-pointers made in a season (1,077)
This wasn’t just a strong team. It was a system perfected, a storm of pace, precision, and perimeter play.
🧠 Why 73 Wins Still Stands Out
Winning 73 games requires more than just a talented roster. It takes an almost supernatural level of consistency, and the Warriors delivered.
💡 No Load Management
They didn’t rest stars. There were no planned “DNPs” or scheduled manipulations. Every game mattered.
🧬 Team Chemistry
Curry, Klay, Draymond, and the bench weren’t just teammates — they functioned like a hive mind. Unselfish play, crisp rotations, and trust defined their identity.
💪 Physical & Mental Endurance
Across 82 games, they kept their edge through back-to-backs, hostile road arenas, and high-pressure media coverage.
👥 Player Traits That Powered the 73 Wins
🔥 Stephen Curry – Unanimous MVP
- Averaged 30.1 PPG on insane shooting splits (50/45/90)
- Shattered his own 3-point record with 402 threes made
- His gravity alone bent defenses like no one else ever had
🎯 Klay Thompson – Instant Offense, Elite Defense
- Dropped 37 points in a quarter earlier that year
- One of the best two-way guards in the league
- Took the pressure off Curry with constant motion
🛡️ Draymond Green – Defensive Engine
- Averaged 7.4 assists, 9.5 rebounds, and 1.5 blocks
- Could guard all five positions
- Vocal leader and emotional core of the roster
🧠 Andre Iguodala & Shaun Livingston – IQ and Depth
- Controlled the pace off the bench
- Made smart plays, locked down scorers, and preserved leads
- “Strength in Numbers” wasn’t marketing — it was truth
📉 The Flip Side: No Championship
Despite the historic regular season, the Warriors lost in the 2016 NBA Finals, blowing a 3–1 lead to the Cleveland Cavaliers.
- Game 7 came down to the wire
- LeBron James’ iconic block and Kyrie Irving’s clutch three sealed it
- Draymond’s Game 5 suspension and Curry’s leg injury played key roles
For some fans, it diminished the season. But in reality, the 73 wins remain untouched, and nothing can erase that feat.
🧱 Why No Team Has Reached 73 Again
📊 Load Management Era
Today’s teams prioritize rest and playoff readiness. No one pushes for 73 anymore — not even the 2019 Bucks, 2022 Suns, or 2017 Warriors.
🔄 More Balanced Talent
With talent spread across the league, even superteams face tougher schedules and less margin for error.
💣 Injury Risks
Injuries are too common, and teams now protect their stars to avoid postseason burnout.
🏛️ Legacy of the 73-Win Warriors
The 2015–16 Warriors redefined:
- 🏹 How offense is played — introducing the three-point revolution
- ⚙️ Team structure — proving depth > star-stacking
- 💡 Coaching culture — Steve Kerr balanced analytics with locker room trust
While they fell short of the title, they ignited a basketball revolution that still shapes the NBA today.
🧩 Trivia Corner
- 🧠 The Warriors lost only 2 games at home that season
- 💥 Opened the season with a 24–0 streak — an NBA record
- 🔄 Finished the season 11 games ahead of the next-best team
- 🎯 Curry led the league in steals and free throw %, not just scoring
- 🔥 Kerr missed half the season — Luke Walton coached them to a 39–4 start
🔗 Related Reads
👉 The Bulls’ 72-Win Season – Can It Still Compete?
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