Warriors value championship over wins record "The clock's late," Iguodala said, pointing at the game clock that tracks the team's post-practice media availability. Entering his 13th NBA season, Iguodala is a master of efficiency. Motivated by the urge to silence anyone who doubted their surprising run to the 2015 NBA title, the Warriors delivered playoff-level effort throughout an 82-game gauntlet. Soon enough, the question became whether Golden State could break the 1995-96 Bulls' regular-season wins record. By the time the Spurs eventually fell out of contention for that spot, Golden State was staring down a feat many had long considered impossible. In the regular season, it never lost back-to-back games. The Warriors needed to climb out of a 3-1 hole in the Western Conference Finals, something only nine teams had done in playoff series history, just to set up a rematch with the Cavaliers. An advocate for maintenance, head coach Steve Kerr was uncomfortable at times last season with the Warriors' chase for 73. Wednesday afternoon, after fielding his final question for the day, Iguodala navigated past a scrum of reporters to Warriors communications guru Raymond Ridder.