Golden State Warriors (2014–2026) 2014–15 season: Emergence of Stephen Curry and the beginning of a dynasty On May 14, 2014, Kerr who was given head coaching offers by the
Golden State Warriors and
New York Knicks in the 2014 offseason, reached an agreement to become the head coach for the Warriors on a five-year, $25 million deal, succeeding
Mark Jackson. Kerr coached in the 2014
Summer League for the Warriors. During the
2014–15 season, the team's offense employed elements of the
triangle offense from his playing days in Chicago under
Phil Jackson, the spacing and pace of
Gregg Popovich in San Antonio, and the uptempo principles
Mike D'Antoni and later
Alvin Gentry used in Phoenix when Kerr was the general manager. After the Warriors beat the Houston Rockets to win their 14th consecutive game, Kerr became the first coach to start his career with a 19–2 record. This beat out
Al Cervi and his 18–2 start with the Syracuse Nationals. On December 10, 2014, Kerr became the first NBA rookie head coach to win 21 of his first 23 games. He was named the head coach of the Western Conference team for the
2015 NBA All-Star Game after the Warriors had the best record in the conference. On April 4, the Warriors beat the Dallas Mavericks 123–110 to clinch
home-court advantage throughout the playoffs, and Kerr got his 63rd win of the season to become the highest winning rookie head coach in NBA history, passing
Tom Thibodeau and his 62 wins with the Chicago Bulls in the 2010–11 season. In the
NBA Coach of the Year voting, Kerr was the runner-up to
Mike Budenholzer. The Warriors ultimately finished with one of the best regular seasons in NBA history, and the greatest in the team's 69-year history. They ended with an overall record of 67–15, becoming the 10th team to win 67 or more games in a single season and point guard
Stephen Curry won his first of two consecutive
regular season MVP awards. It was the first time the Warriors had ever won as many as 60 games in a season; their previous high was 59 in the 1975–76 season. They also ended with a 39–2 home record, which is tied for the second-best home record in NBA history. The Warriors were first in defensive efficiency for the season and second in offensive efficiency, barely missing the mark that the
Julius Erving–led Sixers achieved by being first in both offensive and defensive efficiency. The Warriors became the first team in NBA history to have two win streaks over 15 at home (18 and 19). In the first round of the playoffs against the
New Orleans Pelicans, Kerr led the Warriors to their first four-game playoff sweep since the
1975 NBA Finals. Afterwards, the team beat the
Memphis Grizzlies in six games during the Western Conference Semifinals. Down 2–1 in the series, Kerr made an unconventional adjustment in Game 4 to leave the Grizzlies'
Tony Allen open and have his defender, center
Andrew Bogut, guard the interior. This strategy was lauded after Allen, Memphis' best wing defender but a poor jump-shooter, was benched and limited to 16 minutes after missing wide open shots. The Warriors then defeated the
Houston Rockets in five games during the
Western Conference finals, making the
NBA Finals for the first time in 40 years. The Warriors faced the
Cleveland Cavaliers in the
2015 NBA Finals. Kerr and coach
David Blatt were both in their first season as NBA head coaches, and this was the first time a pair of rookie head coaches faced each other in the
NBA Finals since the NBA's first year of existence, in 1947 with
Eddie Gottlieb of the
Philadelphia Warriors and
Harold Olsen of the
Chicago Stags competing. After the Warriors went down 2–1 to Cleveland, Kerr started
swingman Andre Iguodala in place of Bogut, jump-starting their stagnant offense for a 103–82 road victory that evened the series. It was Iguodala's first start of the season, and the small unit came to be known as the
Death Lineup. After the game, Kerr admitted to lying to the press in response to pregame questions about potential changes to his starting lineup. The Warriors went on to win the series in six games, defeating the Cavaliers, giving Kerr his sixth championship and his first as a head coach.
2015–16: Several-month absence amid historic season After the first two days of the defending champion Warriors' training camp, Kerr took an indefinite leave of absence to rehabilitate his back, which had caused problems since the
2015 NBA Finals. Around this time, assistant coach
Luke Walton assumed Kerr's coaching duties. Kerr missed all of 2015 and most of January 2016, although technically the NBA credited Walton's win–loss record to Kerr. Kerr said, "I think it's ridiculous", when asked about getting all of Walton's wins. On January 22, 2016, Kerr returned to coaching after missing 43 games, but warned he might need to miss games occasionally if there was a recurrence of the headaches and pain related to the
spinal fluid leak that sidelined him. The Warriors went 39–4 with interim coach
Luke Walton. The Warriors finished with a 34–5 record after Kerr returned to coaching, and the team broke the
1995–96 Chicago Bulls 72–10 record by winning 73 games. For his record-breaking season,
Stephen Curry was named the league's first ever unanimous
MVP in history, becoming the 11th player in history to win the award in consecutive seasons and the first guard to do so since
Steve Nash in 2004–05 and 2005–06. Curry's scoring average increase of 6.3 is the largest ever by a reigning MVP. Kerr led the Warriors to the
2016 NBA Finals, where they would again face the Cavaliers, but the Warriors lost in seven games despite a 3–1 lead.
2016–19: Arrival of Kevin Durant, back-to-back championships On July 4, 2016, the Warriors had made a landmark acquisition, signing free agent and seven-time NBA All-Star
Kevin Durant and the Warriors were immediately hailed as a
"superteam" by the media and fans, forming a new
All-Star "Fantastic Four" of Durant,
Stephen Curry,
Klay Thompson and
Draymond Green. On November 20, 2016, the NBA announced that Kerr had been fined $25,000 for public criticism of officiating during a radio interview with
KNBR 680 three days prior. The Warriors broke over
20 NBA records on their way to equaling their
2014–15 regular-season record of , their second most wins in franchise history. Kerr missed time during the 2017 playoffs due to recurring back issues. Associate head coach
Mike Brown acted as acting head coach during periods of Kerr's absence, and Brown continued head coaching into the playoffs leading the Warriors to a 13–0 record in the postseason. Kerr returned in Game 2 of the
2017 NBA Finals, where the Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers in five games. The Warriors finished the playoffs with a 16–1 record, the best postseason winning percentage in NBA history. Kerr is the fourth coach in NBA history to win two championships in his first three seasons of coaching. Kerr won his third championship as a head coach when the Warriors swept the
Cleveland Cavaliers in four games during the
2018 NBA Finals to give Kerr his eighth championship of his career. The Warriors reached their fifth straight Finals under Kerr in 2019, but were defeated by the
Toronto Raptors in six games. During Game 5, starting power forward
Kevin Durant tore his Achilles, and starting shooting guard
Klay Thompson tore his ACL in the next game.
2019–present: Injury-plagued season before a return to the promised land During the 2019–20 season, with Thompson out for the year and franchise point guard
Stephen Curry only playing five games due to a hand injury, the Warriors finished with the worst record (15–50) in the league. It marked the first time in Kerr's coaching career that he had missed the playoffs. In 2020–21, with Thompson still out due to an Achilles tear but Curry healthy, the Warriors qualified for the newly implemented
play-in tournament, but ultimately did not qualify for the playoffs for the second straight season. The Warriors returned to the playoffs in 2021–22 and reached the
2022 NBA Finals, where they defeated the
Boston Celtics in six games, giving Kerr his fourth championship as a head coach and his ninth championship overall. During the 2022–23 season, Kerr and the Warriors reached the Western Conference Semifinals, where they lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in six games. On April 20, 2025, he recorded his 100th playoff win as a head coach, tying
Larry Brown for sixth place in the list.
United States national team Kerr was an assistant coach on the gold medal-winning
United States men's Olympic basketball team at the
2020 Summer Olympics. In December 2021, he was named head coach of the
U.S. men's basketball team. In
2023, Kerr led the
United States team to a disappointing fourth place finish at the FIBA World Cup as the U.S. failed to win a medal for the second consecutive tournament after an overtime loss to
Canada in the bronze medal game, 127–118. ====
2024 Summer Olympics==== At the
2024 Summer Olympic Men's Basketball Tournament, Kerr coached the
United States team to its fifth consecutive gold medal at
Paris'
Bercy Arena in a win over host country
France, 98–87. This was a reprise of the win over the French Team at the Tokyo Olympics.
Legacy Kerr is the first head coach in NBA history to lead his team to 67 or more wins in three consecutive seasons. He was named one of the
Top 15 Coaches in NBA History in 2022, when the league commemorated its 75th anniversary. In March 2025, Kerr overtook
Al Attles as the Warriors coach with the most wins in franchise history. == Personal life ==