Warriors' Stephen Curry drops ominous return timeline after hamstring injury

Matthew Wadleigh

Warriors' Stephen Curry drops ominous return timeline after hamstring injury  image

The Golden State Warriors have a 1-0 series lead against the Minnesota Timberwolves. But, Stephen Curry is out for some time after sustaining a hamstring strain in Game 1. 

After exiting the game early, the MRI results revealed a Grade 1 hamstring strain, which will sideline him for at least a week, and possibly more. 

Now, the Warriors do have somewhat of a plan in place, but everything depends on how Curry recovers and how the injury heals. 

On Thursday, Curry was at shoot around ahead of Game 2 against Minnesota, but he gave a bit of an ominous update on his target return date, per Anthony Slater of The Athletic

"No, this is new," Curry said when asked if he had a target in mind. "And from all that I’m learning about how quickly you can get back, there has to be a healing process. It's just the way the body works. You can’t accelerate.”

"It'll be one of those, after a week, really re-evaluating every day to understand when it's safe just to even think about playing." 

Curry said this is his first hamstring injury in his life, so it's a tough break for the No. 7 seed Warriors, especially with how good he has been playing this postseason. 

For what it's worth, the Warriors had a 7-5 record this season without Curry in the lineup, although they lost two of the three games without Curry since the acquisition of Jimmy Butler. 

For now, everybody is in wait-and-see mode with Curry, and the earliest he could possibly be back would be a potential Game 6, although even that is a cloudy thought at this moment. 

MORE NBA NEWS: 

Matthew Wadleigh

Matthew Wadleigh is a freelance writer with The Sporting News. He was born and raised in Southern California and grew up a San Diego sports fan (yes, it’s tough, except for Aztecs hoops). Matthew went to Fresno State as a journalism major and got to see Davante Adams, Derek Carr, Paul George and Aaron Judge in person. Matthew has written for publications including ClutchPoints, Sportscasting, Fansided, Trojans Wire, UCLA Wire and Buffaloes Wire.