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  • How love, Warriors basketball and poetry brought Tom Meschery back

    How love, Warriors basketball and poetry brought Tom Meschery back

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The poet has been upstairs in his office, tapping at the keyboard on various projects. Most of his mornings begin this way … so much work to do. Some days he tends to his blog, and on other days he tidies up his memoir that is nearing publication. Or he may put the finishing touches on another of his mystery novels. And of course, his poetry. There is always his poetry.

    Much of his poetry chronicles his remarkable life. He was born in Manchuria to Russian parents, and from ages 3 to 6 lived in a World War II internment camp in Tokyo. Just before he turned 7, he crossed under the Golden Gate Bridge. After moving to America, he later became an accomplished professional basketball player who did more than just start alongside Wilt Chamberlain. He was a 1963 NBA All-Star and the first player to have his number retired by the Golden State Warriors. He also was a failed bookstore owner, coached basketball everywhere from Portland, Ore., to Africa, and spent 24 years teaching high school English.

    His eclectic path is made more fascinating in that at 85 he refuses to become idle and bask in the accomplishment of a life well lived. He says he is “obsessed” with being productive, which for him means writing. He has authored five books of poetry. Written two memoirs. Six novels. The majority of his literary work has come after he turned 70. He tries to explain the “why” behind his obsession but ultimately concedes that perhaps poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson put it best in Ulysses:

    How dull it is to pause, to make an end,
    To rust unburnish’d, not to shine in use!
    As tho’ to breathe were life!

    It’s that last line that particularly resonates with the poet, Tom Meschery. Just because you are breathing doesn’t mean you are living.

    In 2005, he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, a blood cancer that has no cure. Doctors estimated he had five years to live. Now 19 years later, he is as prolific as ever, even as he sacrifices an afternoon to break from his computer and regale a visitor with stories. He credits medical science, and in particular the drug Revlimid, for keeping his cancer in remission. But he also feels something deeper, something more powerful has been behind his late-life renaissance: a love story. His love story.

    He is not big on sentimentality, lest it come across as maudlin. However, he is a romantic and therefore acknowledges that his love story is more than just a poet falling for an artist. Like his poetry, which he says “seems to come out of nowhere,” she came from an online dating site and changed his life. Not only changed it but also played a role in saving it.

    “I think love acted as a barrier to the cancer,” Meschery says. “It was like the door was closed. Maybe it wasn’t locked, but the love was holding onto the door and not letting the cancer in. And that kind of love changed my attitude toward living. I started spending all my time thinking about living, rather than dying.”


    Melanie and Tom Meschery at their home in California. (Max Whittaker / For The Athletic)

    When Tom Meschery received his cancer diagnosis in 2005, he was already in a bit of a spiral. He was newly divorced and had just retired from a teaching job he loved. Living in Truckee, Calif., a ski town on the outskirts of Lake Tahoe, he had become engulfed with loneliness. He was 68 and wrestling with his purpose in life. Now, faced with a diagnosis that sounded like a death sentence, he slipped into what he called a suicidal depression.

    His spiral was palpable. After separate visits following their father’s diagnosis, his three children — Janai, Megan and Matthew — all left concerned.

    “We were all really worried about him,” Matthew says. “Not just because of the cancer, but also the circumstances of him being alone up on the mountain, just going through that mostly by himself.”

    The siblings remember comparing notes after visits. They all remarked how the house they grew up in — one filled with activity, laughter and lively discussion — had become so quiet.

    “It was a house that was always filled with people, a very social place, and dad was always the one holding court,” Janai says. “And the contrast … was hard on all of us.”

    By 2008, Meschery could no longer suppress his depression. With Matthew visiting, Meschery remembers halting the ironing of a shirt and blurting out to his son: I’m lonely.

    Matthew made a suggestion.

    Go online, Dad. Everybody does it.

    So he put himself out there. The poet went on his first date.

    “I wasn’t particularly impressed,” he sniffed.

    His second foray on the dating site seemed improbable from the get-go. Her name was Melanie Marchant, and her profile picture was stunning. There is no way, he reasoned, that she is in her 60s; she looks 30. And it seemed too perfect that like he, she was creative, an accomplished painter located two hours away in Sacramento. For a month, they chatted online and on the phone. They talked about literature, cooking, her two children and his three.

    On Valentine’s Day 2008, a first date was arranged at a Turkish restaurant in downtown Sacramento. As he hurried into the restaurant, late, she was waiting with the maitre d, toe-tapping in mock disgust. She playfully stuck her tongue out at him.

    They exchanged cards. His card to her featured the poem Wild Geese by Mary Oliver. The poem represented his vulnerability, his willingness to be open.

    You do not have to be good.
    You do not have to walk on your knees
    for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.
    You only have to let the soft animal of your body
    love what it loves.
    Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
    Meanwhile the world goes on.

    Her card for him? A Valentine left over from one of her grandchildren, featuring Batman. Almost two decades later, it still humors him.

    After dinner, they went to her place. She says she had a surprise for him. As they went up the stairs, he became enraptured. Lining the walls of the staircase were religious icons. He was taken back to his youth and his Russian Orthodox roots. Then, the surprise: she had rented “Ratatouille” — the animated movie about a rat who has a nose for cooking — which played off their frequent conversations about recipes and cuisine.

    “And that was it, babe. I was in love,” he says, throwing his hands in the air. “As I drove back to the mountains that night, I knew this was going to be a lifetime relationship. I just knew that she and I were going to be together for the rest of our lives.”

    One year after their first date, they were married.

    She had been divorced for 30 years and says “if you go 30 years, you know when you find something.” They connected over their creative curiosities and their love of literature — she estimates in their first year of dating they spent between $2,000-$3,000 on books. And soon, she became his trusted editor. He figures she has edited 53,000 pages of his writing.

    “I would go through his manuscripts and write “Booooooooring!” Melanie says chuckling. “But I think his writing is wonderful. I do worry when I ask him how he slept, and he says ‘Not well …’, because that means he has written another book in his head. He’s got three or four of them up there now.”

    He says she has become his muse, but more accurately she has become somewhat of a life coach. She calls him Thomas and he calls her Mel, and they are constantly engaged in playful banter, trying to get the other to chuckle. One of her favorite pastimes is charting who she considers the most handsome players in the NBA (De’Aaron Fox, Steph Curry and Harrison Barnes top the current list).

    However, she turns stern and blunt when it comes to his cancer. She is adamant that our bodies are not separate from our minds, and from the onset of their relationship, she has conditioned his mind to revel in the now rather than dread what could be ahead.

    “When he told me he had cancer, I said, ‘Yeah? I know a lot of people who have cancer. When you are 70, people get cancer,’” Melanie says. “I don’t do drama. I don’t do sobbing. What I’m good at is, if there is a problem, it’s not a challenge. You just take it and solve it. And the man I met was so healthy and happy … he has cancer? Not today. That’s just how I felt.”

    His mindset changed. He stopped thinking so much about the future and instead embraced what was in front of him. There was poetry to write, grandchildren to enjoy, dinners to be had and basketball games to watch.

    “When I met Mel, I knew that I had found the love of my life,” Meschery says. “And from that point on, I became more positive about myself, about my cancer and about how long I would live. I just couldn’t whine about it with her, she wouldn’t stand it. She inspired me to just let it go, and trust my instincts.”

    He is on a maintenance dose of Revlimid — 28 days on the drug, 10 days off — and every three months he has blood drawn to chart his cell count and presence of proteins. Every test since he has met Melanie has shown the cancer to be in remission.

    “And we laugh about it: Another three months of putting up with me,” Meschery says. “It has become a much more casual conversation, almost like it’s not life-threatening anymore. And I think that was all her doing, which became my doing. It was like she passed on this belief system to me, and gave it to me as a gift.”

    Tom Meschery at his computer


    Tom Meschery has published over 100 poems about sports and is working to finish his memoir. (Max Whittaker / For The Athletic)

    NBA players from the 1960s would chuckle at the idea of Meschery as a poet, trumpeting the powers of love. To them, he was the Mad Manchurian, a 6-foot-7 bear of a man who was known for his intensity and physicality, which sometimes morphed into rage. He played power forward, and after 778 career games — six seasons with the Warriors, who moved from Philly to San Francisco in 1962, and four with the Seattle SuperSonics — Meschery averaged 12.7 points and 8.6 rebounds. But as his nickname suggests, he was as known for his temperament as he was for his skill.

    He once grabbed a chair during a game and chased Lakers center Darrall Imhoff into the stands. And he remembers fighting Philadelphia’s Chet Walker, and after both were ejected, charging at him in the back hallway.

    He has yet to reconcile with the dichotomy between how he played and how he views himself. He addressed his unease in his last book of poetry, “Clear Path,” with the poem Rumors.

    He writes of his wife on an airplane, and a passenger remarking to her that Meschery “was the meanest son of a b—- I’d ever seen play basketball.”

    …there was my epitaph being written
    at ten thousand feet above the earth
    by a stranger who might have seen me play
    or maybe not at all, and just heard from someone
    else that I was mean. How rumors start. How unjust
    a life can be, viewed through someone else’s eyes.

    “It always shocked me that I often reacted so violently on the court,” Meschery says today. “I know in my heart I was not a violent man. But if you experience violence once in yourself, I think you are forever going to second guess the possibility that it is a part of your personality. And it can hang there for a lifetime. I can’t look in the mirror and see myself as a mean son of a b—-. But I know there was a part of me … and that poem was part of that reflection that I sensed, and regrettably so, that there is something in me that would allow anger to enter. And it’s not a good feeling.”

    He also never bridged the barrier between him and his father, whom he loved but with whom he struggled to connect. His father wanted him to go into the military and never watched him play basketball, deeming it unworthy as a profession. He opened Meschery’s eyes to poetry, as he would recite poems in Russian at the dinner table, unafraid to weep. Meschery says one of the great regrets in his life is not arriving in time to say goodbye to his father before he died. In his first collection of poetry, “Nothing We Lose Can Be Replaced,” his piece entitled Tom Meschery is essentially a letter to his father, who once asked, ‘What kind of work is this for a man?’

    Old immigrant, I admit all this
    too late. You died before I could explain
    newspapers call me a journeyman.
    They write I roll up my sleeves
    and go to work. They use words
    like hammer and muscle to describe me
    …father, you would have been proud of me:
    I labored in the company of large men.

    Meschery also recounted the night Chamberlain scored 100 points against the Knicks in 1962. Meschery started beside Chamberlain and played 40 minutes, amassing 16 points and seven rebounds. In the poem Wilt, he captured a viewpoint from the team bus: the contrast between a historic night of work on the hardwood and the ordinary, everyday life in the Pennsylvania countryside.

    As a rookie I watched
    Wilt score a century in one game
    in Hershey, Pa., with the smell
    of chocolate floating through the arena
    …but mostly, what I remember about that game
    is this: …on the bus driving through the dark Amish countryside,
    outside a farmer in a horse and buggy,
    hurrying home in the all
    too brief light of his lantern

    He has more than 100 poems published about sports and quips that he is subconsciously trying to match the 2,841 personal fouls for which he was whistled during his career. When asked if he ever reflects on the breadth and depth of his life’s work, he pauses, then equates measuring his life accomplishments to evaluating his poetry.

    “I think I’ve done the best I could,” Meschery says. “If I look at life like a whole series of poetry … I can only pick out 15 or 20 poems out of the entire collection that I think are truly inspired poetry. I am just a poet. But I recognize I’ve written some really, really good poems. But I also recognize that a lot of my poetry is … meh. Not bad. Not awful. And that’s okay. I’m not unhappy about it. That’s a little bit the way life is.

    “Can you look at your life and honestly say that most of your life has been inspired? Probably not. But you do pick out those moments when you did really good. And I think I’ve been able to do that. But at the same time, I’m not so egotistical to believe that every moment of my life has been a Kareem Abdul-Jabbar sky hook.”


    Another force helped pull Meschery out of his malaise following his cancer diagnosis. It was a friend from long ago, one with whom he hadn’t kept in touch: basketball.

    In 2006, Matthew, concerned about his father’s well-being, bought him NBA League Pass, a subscription that provides coverage for every NBA game. By then, basketball had become an afterthought for Meschery. He had not been involved in the NBA since 1976 when he finished a two-year stint as an assistant under Lenny Wilkens in Portland. And he hadn’t been involved in basketball period since 1985, when he went to West Africa to coach teams in Mali, Ivory Coast, Gabon and the Republic of the Congo.

    When he tuned in, his interest in the NBA was rekindled. He was drawn to his former team, the Warriors, and that 2006-07 team — an uptempo, free-wheeling and stylistic squad coached by Don Nelson and led by Baron Davis, Monta Ellis, Stephen Jackson and Jason Richardson — stirred him. He was once again inspired by the game he once played.

    “I hadn’t kept up with the NBA, but once I started watching this new version of basketball, I went crazy. I just loved it,” Meschery says. “The ball was moving … they were flying through the air … and I was just astounded these guys could do this stuff.”

    Then, in 2010, under the new ownership of Joe Lacob, the Warriors reached out to Meschery. The organization wanted to reconnect with its past. Meschery, the first NBA All-Star not born in America, and the first Warriors player to have his number retired, was brought back into the fold. He was invited to games. Introduced to players. He rode in all four championship parades, including 2022, when Warriors star Klay Thompson spotted from the team bus Meschery riding on the parade route on Market Street. Thompson got off the bus, and while holding the Larry O’Brien Trophy, beelined for Meschery, wrapping him in a bear hug.

    “There was a time when we were worried about my dad losing a sense of himself,” Matthew says. “Basketball was a big part of his life experience and who he is, and the Warriors helped bring that back.”

    Before this season, the Warriors asked Meschery to write a poem to commemorate Golden State’s new City Edition uniforms, which paid homage to the San Francisco cable cars. Meschery recited Mason Street Line at the unveiling.

    “When I think back on my cancer, love saved me and helped cure me,” Meschery says. “But I think the Warriors had a little something to do with it, too.”

    Tom Meschery riding in Warriors victory parade


    Tom Meschery has been in all four of the Warriors victory parades, including this appearance in 2022. (Courtesy of Matthew Meschery)

    There is nothing poetic about how the poet handles the moments when the inevitable thoughts come, the thoughts of dying, of the cancer eventually winning.

    “I’d be lying if I told you I don’t think about it from time to time,” Meschery says. “I think anybody who reaches the age of 85 knows they don’t have much time left. But I don’t dwell on it.”

    When those moments arrive, he finds he is usually in bed. “Then I have a little mantra I say to myself: Tom, you are not going to die tomorrow. And Tom, you are not going to die in the next week. And probably not for the next six months. More likely, not for another year. So f— it, get on with your life.”

    Then, he says, he goes back to sleep, intent on seeing his grandchildren, seeing his latest works published, including his memoir “The Mad Manchurian in August, and in October the publication of “The Case of the VW Hippie Bus,” the third installment in his Brovelli Brothers mystery novels.

    In the meantime, he spends most of his nights watching the Warriors, or the Kings. Melanie, who turned 80 on Sunday is often nearby, flipping pages of the latest book she is reading, pausing briefly to make a quip or note the handsomeness of an opposing player.

    “I call her my basketball buddy,” Meschery says. “And she says, ‘That’s exactly what every woman wants to hear.’”

    The point is no longer how long he will live, he says, but rather doing what is enjoyable and productive. That he has found love with Melanie, and in turn found his muse and purpose, gives him a bittersweet vantage on his sunset.

    “I think it makes you fear death more,” he says. “I’m really going to miss living. The idea of not seeing my grandchildren, the idea of not being able to write a poem, to enjoy a meal … that can be quite terrifying. But you can’t live your life worrying about death.”

    And so he continues to appreciate living. And laughing. And loving. And ever the poet, he continues writing.

    It was three years ago when Meschery wrote the poem 2,841 Personal Fouls. It has little to do with his basketball career, and more to do with his love story. In the poem, he laments that the “thought of dying still pisses me off” and he equates his anger to the unfairness he felt with many of the 2,841 fouls for which he was whistled. But he counters with the outlook Melanie has so ingrained in him.

    This morning, didn’t I wake up to sunlight
    and a warm breeze? Didn’t my wife
    poke her head into the office
    to tell me she loved me? I flavor
    my coffee with honey that is sweet as life.
    I should live a little longer.

    (Top photo: Max Whittaker for The Athletic)

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    The New York Times

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  • The fearless mindset of the Warriors’ Brandin Podziemski: ‘He’s got a delusion to him’

    The fearless mindset of the Warriors’ Brandin Podziemski: ‘He’s got a delusion to him’

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    SAN FRANCISCO — Nearly a year ago on the dot, Mike Dunleavy, the Golden State Warriors’ future general manager, and Kent Lacob, an ascending front office personnel voice, hopped in a car and made the quick 50 mile trip south to Santa Clara’s campus.

    They were primarily there to see Maxwell Lewis, the possible lottery pick out of Pepperdine. Lewis played fine. He’d eventually get selected 40th in the 2023 NBA Draft. But he wasn’t the best player on the floor. Brandin Podziemski, a 6-foot-4 guard who was only beginning to creep onto the draft radar, made every significant play to lead Santa Clara to victory. His 23 points mattered. But it was the 18 rebounds that had Dunleavy’s and Lacob’s antennas up.

    “Mike and I walked out of the game like, ‘Um, that guy might be a first-round pick,’” Lacob said.

    Podziemski competed in the NBA Rising Stars Challenge at All-Star Weekend last Friday. He leads all NBA rookies with 14 games of at least 10 points, five rebounds and five assists, making him a clear candidate to finish on the All-Rookie first team.

    He turns 21 this week, but has already pushed his way past Klay Thompson into the Warriors’ starting and closing lineups, a vital glue piece of head coach Steve Kerr’s favorite five-man group, which has outscored opponents by 57 points in 107 minutes.

    The relationship between Podziemski and the Warriors can be traced to that February night. That’s when they first began to take Podziemski seriously as a prospect. In the ensuing 12 months — with a bunch of important inflection points along the way — he has won over every level of the organization, most crucially his veteran teammates.

    Podziemski’s future surfaced recently in the visiting locker room in Salt Lake City. He’s a prototype role player right now, but has dreams of becoming an All-Star. There are roadblocks ahead and limitations to overcome. But anyone who has doubted Podziemski to this point has continually been proven wrong.

    “The ceiling is high,” Draymond Green said. “He’s still learning. Still figuring s— out. But when you start looking at people who are going to succeed him…”

    Green points three lockers down. Stephen Curry is getting dressed after torching the Jazz. Curry’s prime may extend until 40. But he turns 36 next month. When Curry is 40, Podziemski will be 25.

    “It won’t look the same,” Green said. “Totally different. But you’re very comfortable when he’s out there on the court. That says a lot for a rookie on this team — that you feel the amount of comfort you do when he’s out there running the show.”


    The Warriors’ front office reconnected with Podziemski at the draft combine in Chicago in May. Most top prospects don’t do much court work. He tested out better than expected athletically and was already rising on boards, getting first-round buzz. Some in his position may have skipped the scrimmages. Podziemski didn’t.

    “I got nothing to hide,” he told the Warriors brass, led by scouting director Larry Harris.

    Podziemski then went out and crushed the scrimmage portion. His stock spiked again. In-person workouts cranked up. Podziemski traveled the country, intent on impressing. He went to Houston. Chuck Hayes, currently in the Warriors front office, was working for the Rockets at the time. He remembers Podziemski killing the workout while letting the gym know about it.

    “BP,” Hayes called out before a recent game. “You remember talking trash to John Lucas in the Rockets workout?”

    “Oh, yeah,” Podziemski replied.

    Podziemski and Lucas, the former NBA point guard and legendary development coach, were arguing about who was the greatest lefty guard in the building. It was an early peek into the mindset that has earned Podziemski so much respect.

    “He talk s— all day,” Green said. “That’s all he do.”

    Podziemski thought he crushed his workout in Miami. He figured the Heat might draft him 18th. They went with Jaime Jaquez Jr., also a Warriors’ favorite. Golden State was up at No. 19. Podziemski thought he fit, but didn’t feel quite as optimistic about how he performed at his group workout in San Francisco. The Warriors were sure.

    “He was great on the court,” Lacob said. “Like, really good. Clearly the best player in the workout.”

    The Warriors then brought him into the film room and had him break down two games of tape. They don’t often learn much in these sessions. Podziemski was different. They slowed down some of his pick-and-roll decision-making against Gonzaga and defensive possessions.

    “He could reference personnel on the other team,” Lacob said. “Names, tendencies, opponent actions. His memory recall was super impressive.”

    Podziemski popped in the Warriors’ analytics model, put together by their vice president of analytics Pabail Sidhu. They value it with increased frequency. Podziemski’s 8.8 rebounds per game led his conference. That juiced the analytics model. When it was all wrapped together, Podziemski finished top-10 on the front office’s consensus final draft board.

    “There was a belief that he was clearly a Steve Kerr system fit, but also a consensus belief it was more than that,” Lacob said. “The talent combined with the IQ and the personality was something to bet on.”

    Cam Whitmore, considered a pre-draft top-five prospect, was still available at 19. So were plenty of other valued players. But the Warriors didn’t flinch. They took Podziemski. It was Dunleavy’s first draft selection as general manager. The room agreed on Podziemski.


    Green sprained his left ankle just before training camp. He missed about a month. In his ramp-up to return, the Warriors set up a scrimmage in Sacramento the morning of their second game. Podziemski was out of the rotation, so they had him play on Green’s team. They lost the first scrimmage after Green turned it over.

    “We can’t have a turnover for game!” Podziemski told Green. “You cannot turn the ball over for game.”

    Green was stunned. They’ve had rookies who barely say a word to him the entire season.

    “I was like, ‘OK, cool, you got it. No problem,’” Green said. “Here we are playing a pick-up game, a game to get me ready and he’s yelling at me. That to me said a whole lot. I was like, ‘You know what? No problem. But make sure you speak up like that all the time.’”


    Green and Podziemski high-five during a game against the Oklahoma City Thunder. (Alonzo Adams / USA Today)

    The Warriors had an extended stay in Los Angeles during the preseason. They had some workouts on UCLA’s campus. After one practice, the guards set up a King of the Court style one-on-one. Score and stay. Podziemski was up against a group that included Curry and Chris Paul.

    “We were at UCLA, right?” Paul asked Moses Moody. “When BP beat us in ones.”

    “Yes,” Moody responded, grinning at the memory. The rookie was giving it to two of the greatest to ever do it at the point guard position and alerting anyone within earshot of the damage.

    “He did the Tiger (Woods) fist-pump,” Paul said, shaking his head.

    “‘Let’s f—g go!’” Curry remembers him taunting. “That was hilarious.”


    Podziemski’s first NBA taste was bitter. He struggled in summer league, mostly with his jumper and floater. The more he stewed, the more it snowballed.

    “I had a little bit of doubt after summer league,” Podziemski admitted. “But the rest of that July period and August and September, I just attacked. I focused on what I needed to work on to be a role player on this team.”

    Podziemski attended every team workout that Curry, Paul and Green organized across the summer. He was in the team facility on Aug. 1 and a mainstay almost every day after. He entered camp confident he could make some noise, even if most figured he’d spend the majority of the season in Santa Cruz with the Warriors G League affiliate.

    Kevon Looney remembers the new rookie guard bashing into him and clawing over rebounds. He initially told Podziemski to quit stealing them away. Then he realized it was part of his game and attitude.

    “I remember in those mini-camps, he’d be grumbling after scrimmages like, ‘Oh, I’m tired of losing,’” Looney said. “I was like, ‘You should just be happy you’re on the court.’ He’s like, ‘Nah, we gotta figure out a way to win. They need to pass me the ball.’ I’m like, ‘Uhh, I don’t know about that.’”

    Looney saw a quote from Podziemski soon after the draft that said he wanted to be a triple-double guy.

    “That’s pretty bold,” Looney said and laughed. “But I know most Wisconsin guards have this crazy confidence to them. (Jordan) Poole. Tyler Herro. He’s got a delusion to him that makes him good.”

    Podziemski grew up in Milwaukee in what he describes as a “competitive” family where his father, John, and his mother, Barbara West, didn’t allow him to win at anything. He needed to earn it.

    “From that competitiveness comes confidence,” Podziemski said. “Knowing how much you put into the game, why would you come in here nervous or timid?”

    Podziemski stays extremely late after games. He strolls around the locker room and converses with anyone in his orbit. He tried to set up an NBA-related quiz after a game early in the season to get some spending money off Thompson and then compared their salaries when Thompson was hesitant. Thompson told him to stop “pocket-watching.”

    “It’s easier to tame a lion than get a sheep to show some oomph,” Curry said. “The most annoying parts about him are the greatest parts about him. He’s still coachable. That’s a big part of it. You can say all that stuff but if you can’t accept coaching, that’s where it turns into being counterproductive.”

    Podziemski trails Curry for postgame workouts and studies what makes him great. He might be the most active member of the team’s group chat, according to Green, and told Green he was coming for him via text messages.

    “I wouldn’t do this if I were you,” Green warned. “I don’t play fair.”

    Podziemski then sent a bunch of old photos of Green to the team, the funniest he could find.

    “He was like: ‘Wham. Wham. Wham,’” Green said of the flood of texts and then remembered he hadn’t retaliated. “I still gotta popcorn his car.”

    After a low-energy loss to the Heat in late December, a distraught Podziemski went to the podium and blamed himself as the biggest reason for the loss. Anyone who watched the game would’ve placed his decent performance far down the list. Curry went 3 of 15 shooting. Andrew Wiggins was in a slump. Defensive breakdowns were everywhere. But there he was pinning himself as the night’s wrongdoer.

    “Geez,” Thompson said when he heard about it. “Dramatic, rookie.”


    Kerr has been most impressed with Podziemski defensively. In camp, they track deflections during scrimmages. Podziemski led the team. That was an early sign.

    His rebounding numbers translated, which was particularly important for a team that leaned small. The Warriors are the third-best rebounding team in the NBA and Podziemski’s 5.8 rebounds per game in 26 minutes per game rank behind only Green and Looney. He gets on the glass more relentlessly than Wiggins and Jonathan Kuminga, their bigger wings.

    “What this team has lacked, what it lacked last year, he gave us,” Kerr said. “The connection. The connector. The ball-mover. The cutter. There’s a feel and a recognition of what’s happening on the floor that makes him playable in any lineup. He enhances every lineup.”

    The Warriors nearly blew a huge lead to the Spurs in late November. They won, but it was a bad overall performance and Podziemski’s first real stinker. He missed all five of his shots. Kerr entered the locker room postgame expecting the team to be down and Podziemski to be in hiding.

    “I would have been holed up in my apartment for three days wondering if I’d ever make a shot again,” Kerr said of his younger self. “But I went in there and he was the most upbeat guy. I loved it. Because when you play poorly and still can bring team energy and maintain confidence and swagger, that’s a great sign.”

    One of the more consequential plays of the Warriors’ season so far came in Portland in mid-December. They entered a wobbly 11-14, needing desperately to beat a bad Trail Blazers team. But Curry struggled and they were having a tough time putting the win away.

    Curry missed a free throw with four seconds left. The Blazers, down two, didn’t call timeout. Shaedon Sharpe pushed the ball upcourt in a scramble drill. He had what appeared to be a path to the rim to tie it. But Podziemski stepped in front and took a game-winning charge. Here’s the possession:

    That was Podziemski’s 11th charge drawn. It has become his signature defensive move. He has drawn 27 this season, which leads the NBA. He tracks the leaderboard, knew who led the NBA in that category last season (Oklahoma City’s Jaylin Williams) and even mentions some of the greatest charge-takers in recent history when discussing it.

    When discussing Podziemski’s defensive upside, Kerr compared him to Austin Reaves of the Lakers.

    “Like when I coached Austin this past summer, what stood out to me most is just that there’s zero fear defensively. And he’s strong as s—. That’s what they have in common. They’re very similar (in) size. Six-four and really physically strong. That’s what you need, I think, in today’s game. The guys who struggle defensively are the guys who aren’t physically strong. If you’re going to be on the small side, you’ve got to be strong,” Kerr said.

    Podziemski has, in a roundabout way, compared himself to Gary Payton II and Draymond Green this season, overly ambitious on its face but Payton and Green seem to understand the general point. He sees the floor and the patterns and has an appetite for disruption like both of them. But that comes with a downside. He roams.

    “He gambles way too much,” Kerr said. “That’s great except we really only need one guy (Draymond) doing that. If you have two guys doing that, the defense will be screwed up. But I’ll take that any day over the guy who isn’t aware. The guy who isn’t aware is standing on the weak side while the guy is laying it in. He’s the opposite. He sees every cutter. He’s trying to help on everything. We just have to help him streamline and help him understand his job isn’t to do everyone else’s job.”

    Adds Green: “He gets lost sometimes. But the reality is I used to get lost all the time. People may not remember, but they couldn’t play me on shooters for a long time. It’d be like we’re playing the Pelicans, I’d guard Anthony Davis. Then they’d switch Ryan Anderson or Nikola Mirotić and they’d be like: ‘We got to get Draymond out of the game.’”

    Podziemski strayed too far off Jordan Clarkson during a recent game against the Jazz and learned the lesson on the bench from Payton, another high-risk gambler.

    “He sees what Draymond does and tries to mimic it,” Payton said. “But I told him when you’re guarding a problem like Clarkson, you can’t roam as much as you’d like. Because it’s a swing, swing, high percentage catch-and-shoot. It’s all a feel.”

    On the other end of the floor, Podziemski is a low-risk playmaker. In February, he has 52 assists and nine turnovers. In January, he had 41 assists and 12 turnovers. He had a 27-assist, 0-turnover four-game stretch recently that broke rookie records.

    But his ultimate upside will be determined as a scorer. Podziemski’s shot diet is limited to 3s, floaters, sweeping hooks and sneaky layups. He stays out of the midrange and doesn’t live above the rim. He struggled with his 3 for some of the season but has made 12 of his last 19 to up his season percentage to 38.5 percent. He has scored in double-figures in 28 games this season, sixth-most among rookies, and hit 20 four times. If that can become a regular benchmark as he nears his prime, the ceiling will continue to rise.

    “I want to be an All-Star,” Podziemski said. “You know, Jonathan has taken that next step of really being in that conversation. To see his growth just this year has been pretty special. So going into the summer after this year elevating my game to another level, doing the things that I’m deficient in now and making them as efficient as possible, I think I can get there. I’m never gonna just settle for being a role player, especially after my first year. I got a long career ahead of me.

    (Photo illustration: Rachel Orr / The Athletic; photo: Brian Babineau / NBAE via Getty Images)

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    The New York Times

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  • Steph Curry defeats Sabrina Ionescu in first-ever NBA vs. WNBA three-point contest at All-Star Weekend

    Steph Curry defeats Sabrina Ionescu in first-ever NBA vs. WNBA three-point contest at All-Star Weekend

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    We know Steph Curry and Sabrina Ionescu are great three-point shooters. But this weekend, we got to find out who is the best.Curry narrowly defeated Ionescu Saturday when the two sharpshooters faced off during All-Star Weekend in the first NBA vs. WNBA three-point contest to settle a long-running debate.The Golden State Warriors star scored 29 points to the New York Liberty star, who scored 26.Ionescu said she was excited to “change the narrative” between NBA and WNBA players.Video above: Steph Curry inspires students “That was amazing,” Ionescu said. “Just to be able to have this be the first of this kind of event and come out here and put on a show but understanding what this means. Excited to change the narrative and be able to do it alongside the greatest to ever do it.”Curry, while wearing a three-point champion belt, was complimentary of the event and Ionescu.”This couldn’t have gone any better in the sense of us two taking the chance in front of this stage, running around with all the hype, and to deliver like that, she set the bar, it was unbelievable to watch,” Curry said. “So, this might be something – I don’t know if anybody can fill these shoes, but it might be something that we need to do more often.”A dream crossover match-upCurry is a two-time NBA three-point contest champion and holds the league’s record for most career three-pointers made (3,642).However, in 2023, Ionescu set the WNBA record for most three-pointers in a single-season (128). She also set a WNBA and NBA all-time record score in the three-point contest last season, recording 37 points out of a possible 40.According to the official release, Curry shot NBA balls from the NBA three-point line, while Ionescu used the WNBA equivalents – the line is a little closer and the ball is slightly smaller.But, confident of her abilities before the match, Ionescu said she wanted to level the playing field. “I’ll shoot from the NBA line… LETS GET IT,” she wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.As part of the contest, both Curry and Ionescu’s respective charities will receive a donation from the NBA and WNBA. The pair will also have a chance to raise money for the NBA Foundation, which aims to further economic empowerment in the Black community, with each regular shot worth $1,000, every money ball $2,000 and a special 29-foot-9-inch three-pointer called the “STARRY Range Ball” worth $3,000.”I think this is like the coolest thing ever,” Curry told TNT in late January.”I love the confidence, I love the competition. It’s a new format on that stage.”A weekend of actionThe traditional three-point contest saw Malik Beasley, Jalen Brunson, Tyrese Haliburton, Damian Lillard, Lauri Markkanen, Donovan Mitchell, Karl-Anthony Towns and Trae Young vie for the crown.In the end, Lillard, the Milwaukee Bucks All-Star guard, successfully defended his three-point contest title, becoming the first player to win back-to-back crowns since Jason Kapono did so in 2007 and 2008.All-Star Weekend will culminate in the All-Star Game on Sunday from the Indiana Pacers’ Gainbridge Fieldhouse, which sees the best-of-the-best compete against one another.The game has reverted back to the traditional Eastern Conference vs. Western Conference format for this year, with many of the league’s biggest stars lining up in Indianapolis.Giannis Antetokounmpo and LeBron James captain the East and West, respectively, while Joel Embiid is the biggest name to miss out, having undergone surgery for a knee injury earlier this month.Saturday’s action started with the NBA’s showcase of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) as Virginia Union played Winston-Salem State.Players’ all-around skillsets were on display on Saturday evening with the Skills Challenge, before the three-point contest showcased some of the best talent from deep. The Slam Dunk competition rounded out the evening.And on Sunday, the G League – the NBA’s minor league affiliate – will host its own series of events beginning at 1:30 p.m. ET at the G League Park at the Indian Convention Center before the crowning jewel of the weekend, the All-Star Game, takes place at 8 p.m. ET.

    We know Steph Curry and Sabrina Ionescu are great three-point shooters. But this weekend, we got to find out who is the best.

    Curry narrowly defeated Ionescu Saturday when the two sharpshooters faced off during All-Star Weekend in the first NBA vs. WNBA three-point contest to settle a long-running debate.

    The Golden State Warriors star scored 29 points to the New York Liberty star, who scored 26.

    Ionescu said she was excited to “change the narrative” between NBA and WNBA players.

    Video above: Steph Curry inspires students

    “That was amazing,” Ionescu said. “Just to be able to have this be the first of this kind of event and come out here and put on a show but understanding what this means. Excited to change the narrative and be able to do it alongside the greatest to ever do it.”

    Curry, while wearing a three-point champion belt, was complimentary of the event and Ionescu.

    “This couldn’t have gone any better in the sense of us two taking the chance in front of this stage, running around with all the hype, and to deliver like that, she set the bar, it was unbelievable to watch,” Curry said. “So, this might be something – I don’t know if anybody can fill these shoes, but it might be something that we need to do more often.”

    A dream crossover match-up

    Curry is a two-time NBA three-point contest champion and holds the league’s record for most career three-pointers made (3,642).

    However, in 2023, Ionescu set the WNBA record for most three-pointers in a single-season (128). She also set a WNBA and NBA all-time record score in the three-point contest last season, recording 37 points out of a possible 40.

    According to the official release, Curry shot NBA balls from the NBA three-point line, while Ionescu used the WNBA equivalents – the line is a little closer and the ball is slightly smaller.

    But, confident of her abilities before the match, Ionescu said she wanted to level the playing field. “I’ll shoot from the NBA line… LETS GET IT,” she wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    This content is imported from Twitter.
    You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    As part of the contest, both Curry and Ionescu’s respective charities will receive a donation from the NBA and WNBA. The pair will also have a chance to raise money for the NBA Foundation, which aims to further economic empowerment in the Black community, with each regular shot worth $1,000, every money ball $2,000 and a special 29-foot-9-inch three-pointer called the “STARRY Range Ball” worth $3,000.

    “I think this is like the coolest thing ever,” Curry told TNT in late January.

    “I love the confidence, I love the competition. It’s a new format on that stage.”

    A weekend of action

    The traditional three-point contest saw Malik Beasley, Jalen Brunson, Tyrese Haliburton, Damian Lillard, Lauri Markkanen, Donovan Mitchell, Karl-Anthony Towns and Trae Young vie for the crown.

    In the end, Lillard, the Milwaukee Bucks All-Star guard, successfully defended his three-point contest title, becoming the first player to win back-to-back crowns since Jason Kapono did so in 2007 and 2008.

    All-Star Weekend will culminate in the All-Star Game on Sunday from the Indiana Pacers’ Gainbridge Fieldhouse, which sees the best-of-the-best compete against one another.

    The game has reverted back to the traditional Eastern Conference vs. Western Conference format for this year, with many of the league’s biggest stars lining up in Indianapolis.

    Giannis Antetokounmpo and LeBron James captain the East and West, respectively, while Joel Embiid is the biggest name to miss out, having undergone surgery for a knee injury earlier this month.

    Saturday’s action started with the NBA’s showcase of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) as Virginia Union played Winston-Salem State.

    Players’ all-around skillsets were on display on Saturday evening with the Skills Challenge, before the three-point contest showcased some of the best talent from deep. The Slam Dunk competition rounded out the evening.

    And on Sunday, the G League – the NBA’s minor league affiliate – will host its own series of events beginning at 1:30 p.m. ET at the G League Park at the Indian Convention Center before the crowning jewel of the weekend, the All-Star Game, takes place at 8 p.m. ET.

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  • Klay Thompson comes off Warriors’ bench for first time since 2012

    Klay Thompson comes off Warriors’ bench for first time since 2012

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    The last time Klay Thompson came off the bench was March 2012. He was 22 then, an unproven rookie. Monta Ellis started ahead of him. Nate Robinson came off the bench beside him. The Golden State Warriors faced the LA Clippers. Chauncey Billups, now 47 and the head coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, was on that Clippers team.

    Thompson was initially elevated to the starting lineup because of Stephen Curry’s ankle trouble and the Monta Ellis trade. That Clippers game was the final of Curry’s third season. He left after nine minutes and would sit the final month. By the time Curry returned the following season, Thompson was the entrenched starter. The Splash Brothers formed.

    More than a decade later, Thompson’s streak of consecutive starts extended all the way to 727 games. It ended Thursday night in Utah, the prevailing story in the Warriors’ eventual 140-137 win.

    Steve Kerr replaced his four-time NBA champion with Brandin Podziemski, a rookie who had outperformed Thompson recently and better completed the five-man grouping next to Curry, Andrew Wiggins, Jonathan Kuminga and Draymond Green, according to the data. When explaining the decision postgame, Kerr pointed to that lineup’s gaudy stats. They’ve outscored opponents by 57 points in 107 minutes.

    Numbers indicated this move was rational and perhaps necessary. Thompson is shooting career lows from the field and from 3 this season. The Warriors are clawing for their postseason lives, entering Thursday with a 26-26 record, 10th in the Western Conference.

    But that didn’t make the conversation simpler. Kerr said he’s been thinking about it for awhile and decided to do it Thursday, a night after Kerr kept Thompson out of the Warriors’ closing lineup again before inserting him as a floor spacer in the final minute and watching Thompson commit an intentional and ill-advised foul against the Clippers. He told Thompson of the decision on Thursday morning in Utah.

    “He wasn’t thrilled about it,” Kerr told reporters. “I didn’t expect him to be thrilled about it.”

    But what a response Thompson delivered. He came out scorching, putting up his highest point total of the season before the third quarter was done. He had 17 points in 11 first-half minutes, earning closing duties, which included a nice transition find in the final minute of the second quarter to Green, who finished with 23 points, his most since 2018. The Warriors scored 84 in the first half.

    Thompson didn’t cool off after halftime. He scored 18 in a torrid third quarter, giving him 35 points. That’s where he finished, making 13 of his 22 shots and seven of his 13 3s, a vintage performance that helped the Warriors hold off the Jazz in a shootout despite nearly giving away another big lead late. Thompson also made a huge defensive play with 74 seconds left, stopping a Keyonte George drive and forcing a travel. It was Thompson’s best game of the season.

    “The fuel that fed his competitiveness was the decision that I made,” Kerr said. “He’s such a competitor. I’ve seen him hit a million big shots. I’ve seen him guard the toughest guys in the league. Klay’s a champion. He’s an incredible player, great person. I’ve been blessed to coach him. It’s been a tricky season for him and for us. There’s a lot of transition happening. Some of our younger guys are coming on. It’s not as easy to do what Klay did five, six years ago, for him. I think this could be a good balance to get the best out of Klay and get the best out of our team.”

    Kerr said he plans to keep Podziemski in the starting lineup and Thompson off the bench after the All-Star break, saying the move isn’t “permanent,” but he wants to give it a healthy look.

    “Klay coming off the bench gives us a lot of firepower,” Kerr said.

    (Photo of Klay Thompson: Alex Goodlett / Getty Images)

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  • Instant observations: Sixers blown out at home by Warriors

    Instant observations: Sixers blown out at home by Warriors

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    Looking to “pick off” a win despite being severely short-handed, Sixers head coach Nick Nurse’s team played host to the similarly-struggling Golden State Warriors Wednesday night, and once again the Sixers were dominated on their own home floor, 127-104. Here is what jumped out from another resounding loss:

    Jaden Springer gets the start

    With Joel Embiid, De’Anthony Melton, Nic Batum, Danuel House Jr., Marcus Morris Sr. and Robert Covington all unavailable in this one, Nurse was forced to give many more minutes than he typically would to a few fringe rotation pieces. One of them, Springer, actually drew a start — and was tasked with the Stephen Curry assignment on the defensive end of the floor. 

    Springer’s NBA existence is a peculiar one — he oftentimes is forced to sit, but when he does get in the game, he is given the most difficult of assignments. 

    Springer held Curry to a scoreless first quarter, in which the former MVP shot 0-4 from the field and 0-3 from beyond the arc. Curry hit what was originally scored a four-point play opportunity over Springer, but Nurse issued a rare first quarter challenge which was successful, overturning the Curry three and Springer foul into an offensive foul by Curry.

    Curry only scored two points in the entire first half — both on free throws. He did not register a single field goal attempt in the second quarter. 

    A defensive masterclass in the first quarter

    Springer was far from the only Sixer who stepped up on the defensive end of the floor early on in this one. The entire team was in lockstep, forming a cohesive unit which shut down just about everything Golden State’s once-potent offense tried to do. 

    The Warriors scored just 15 points in the entire first frame, shooting 5-22 from the field and 1-7 from beyond the arc. Golden State missed a few good looks, but their brutal output was largely the product of a stifling Sixers defense. Paul Reed, who blocked two shots in the period, did an excellent job protecting the rim to help lead the team’s defense alongside Springer and others.

    KJ Martin produces

    Martin was another fringe rotation player Nurse was forced to rely on, but the fourth-year athletic wing gave the Sixers solid minutes in the first half. Martin scored seven points on 3-3 shooting — two buckets inside and a corner triple. As trade talks linger and escalate over the next handful of hours, it will be interesting to see how much value Martin may hold league-wide — particularly among young, rebuilding teams.

    Tyrese Maxey, offense struggle mightily in first half

    Despite their terrific defensive effort in the first 24 minutes of the game, the Sixers entered halftime trailing — all because their offense was mostly inept. Tobias Harris led the team in scoring in the first half, posting nine points on as many shot attempts. The team was a combined 19-46 (41.3 percent) from the field, while making only two of their 14 attempts from beyond the arc.

    Tyrese Maxey, who is, of course, supposed to be the engine that keeps this vehicle moving while Embiid is out, continued to struggle against blitzes out of pick-and-roll offense. There is no doubt that the first-time All-Star is a brilliant offensive player, capable of doing tremendous things as a scorer. But with Embiid off the floor, he is quickly learning how difficult it is to be the primary focus of an opposing defense. Playing alongside perhaps the most dominant force in the NBA makes things a whole lot easier for a guard like Maxey. 

    Maxey should, in theory, see more shots with Embiid out, and that should translate to more points. But first, Maxey and the Sixers have to prove they are able to consistently defeat the kind of aggressive coverages they have been seeing frequently since Embiid went down.

    More difficulties for Kelly Oubre Jr.

    Oubre has not looked like his best self in quite a while now — his three-point shots have stopped falling, and his finishing around the rim has been extremely suspect. Oubre is locked into a starting spot because of how many players are injured. But if this team ever gets fully healthy again, it must hope Oubre looks a lot more like he did early on in the season, because he has been overexposed in this role.

    Sixers dominated and put away in third quarter

    The Sixers’ third quarter performance in this one was so rough that not only did it axe any chances they had of winning the game, but it was legitimately uncomfortable to watch at times. On one end of the floor, the Warriors got hot — Andrew Wiggins, in particular, lit up the Sixers in the period with his shooting and scoring. Warriors youngster Jonathan Kuminga also took advantage of a Sixers defense that looked far less cohesive and communicative than it did in the first half.

    On the other end of the floor, the only Sixer who could pull off anything of note was Martin, who knocked down another triple and used his athleticism to generate a few chances to score at the rim. Maxey’s struggles continued, Oubre’s finishing looked even worse, Furkan Korkmaz looked unplayable, Patrick Beverley’s tricks were not working, and the entire team cratered as a result.

    In all, the Sixers were outscored by 20 — 43-23 — in the third quarter. It was a period which tanked their chances and was emblematic of all of their issues that have emerged in the absence of Embiid and the others who were unavailable. 

    The elephant in the room

    With Thursday afternoon’s NBA Trade Deadline looming, one must ask: will Sixers President of Basketball Operations Daryl Morey look to be especially aggressive over the next handful of hours in giving Nurse more useful pieces to use while the team is so drastically undermanned, or — with his team plummeting in the standings and no certainty about Embiid’s return — will he play things conservatively? We will find out soon.


    Follow Adam on Twitter: @SixersAdam

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • LeBron James vs. Stephen Curry is still the NBA’s best theater

    LeBron James vs. Stephen Curry is still the NBA’s best theater

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    SAN FRANCISCO — The frustration seethed in Stephen Curry. Until it boiled to the surface. Until he let out a roar. Until he ripped his jersey from the collar to the 30.

    He’d scored 46 points on 35 shots, getting the benefit of just three free throws in his 43 minutes. He hit the game-tying layup at the end of regulation. Inside the final minute of the first overtime, he forced a turnover and then hit a massive corner 3, setting up the game-tying 3 from Klay Thompson that kept the Warriors alive. Then in the second overtime, Curry’s final points of the night came on a 26-footer from the top with 4.7 seconds remaining, putting the Warriors up a point.

    He left his follow-through in the air as he backpedaled. Too spent for a more elaborate celebration. The NBA’s leader in clutch points delivered 19 more in this double-overtime affair, including 10 in the second overtime. On most nights, it would’ve been enough.

    But on the other team was Curry’s partner in magnificence. His most validating and valiant foe. LeBron James. They’ve exchanged heartbreaks and hugs over the years. James, whose Lakers eliminated Curry’s Warriors from the playoffs last year, had more heartbreak to hand Curry.

    The 39-year-old James beat a rookie nearly half his age off the dribble, blew past another young, spry athlete and powered up for a strong attack on the rim. He drew the foul and, punctuating his spectacular night, swished a pair of free throws to give the Lakers the win, 145-144. James’ 36 points, 20 rebounds and 12 assists in nearly 48 minutes indicted his birth certificate for fraud.

    They aren’t winning like they’re used to, both needing all they have just to stay in the race, both hoping to find crucial help to get them back to the realm of the contenders. But Saturday showed Curry and LeBron are still captivating. It will be a decade this coming February since LeBron’s buzzer-beating 3 against the Warriors at Oracle in Oakland debuted “The Silencer” celebration and sparked this duo into must-watch theater. All these years later, when they share a court, it’s still the NBA’s best theater.

    “It’s something that you will truly take all in when you’re done playing,” LeBron James said during his on-court interview, “and be able to watch with your grandkids and say that I played against one of the best players ever to play this game. Steph, after the game, came to me and said, ‘How does it keep getting better? How do we keep getting better?’ I think it’s just a true testament to us putting the work in in the game, being true to the game, and the game just continues to give back to us.” 

    James, and D’Angelo Russell, made sure another close game slipped through the hands of the Warriors. But this time, it wasn’t so much about what the Warriors didn’t do. This loss wasn’t because of a head-scratching turnover, as was the gut-wrenching loss to Sacramento two nights earlier. Or a questionable coaching decision. Or because they fell apart against an onslaught. Or even because of missed shots.

    Still, one of their best efforts counts as but a near-win. A tease. The Warriors are now 15-13 in clutch games with Curry (0-4 without him). They’re five games below .500 and still on the outside of the postseason field. They can play as well as anyone but not win as frequently as the better teams.

    “Our whole season,” Curry said, “we’ve had some tough breaks, some self-inflicted wounds. Some games that obviously you should have won and there’s disappointment walking off the floor. … We fought the whole way. Stayed in it even when things weren’t going our way, gave ourselves an opportunity. It goes down to the last possession three or four times in regulation, both overtimes. It just shows that we really want it. We’re playing with a little bit of desperation trying to change the tide of our season and just don’t have nothing to show for it right now.”


    LeBron James and Stephen Curry combined for 82 points on 60 shots and plenty of highlights in Saturday’s double-overtime thriller in San Francisco. (Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)

    But their peak is still high enough to get intoxicated. Saturday was a gallery of their best.

    Curry, obviously. Draymond Green was every bit the difference maker he’s always been, on both ends, and the combustible will that often burns him on this night kept the Warriors firing. Thompson was vintage in the second half after a brutal first half. His defense on LeBron, his shot-making, his competitive spirit. Jonathan Kuminga was ready and impactful. His 22 points and nine rebounds in 43 minutes showed he can play at this level. He should even have a larger role in the offense.

    Head coach Steve Kerr is certain a run is coming. His Warriors are ready for a breakthrough. They’ve got one more game on this homestand, against Philadelphia, before a road trip that starts with three losing teams.

    It’s only possible if the Warriors’ resolve is stronger than their jersey fabric.

    “Our guys were amazing, they were amazing,” Kerr said. “The way they battled, competed, and stayed in the game. Made so many plays. Just felt like we deserved to win that game the way the guys fought. So many plays that could have gone either way. That just felt like a game that we deserved to win. As long as we keep playing the way we played tonight, then I think we’re going to turn this around and have a great season. I really believe that.”

    The Lakers are in the same situation, though a little closer to where they want to be than the Warriors thanks to a more stable foundation with James and an elite version of Anthony Davis. Their best, too, looks worthy. The Warriors seem to bring that out of them.

    But playing their best in moments, in games, isn’t their problem. It’s sustainability. It’s the consistency and versatility of their greatness that’s lacking. They can’t seem to do it every night. They can’t seem to summon it in multiple ways.

    The Lakers and the Warriors.

    Saturday conspired to conjure the greatness from both teams. A prime-time game. One of great importance to both middling squads. The Hall of Fame presence all over the floor. The appreciation for the stage, the moment, and to still be on it.

    They delivered a thriller. They lived up to their names. Multiple times, Curry took matters into his own hands and delivered like a superstar. But this night, LeBron James had the ball last.

    So Curry left the court overcome with frustration. With his jersey in his own hands.

    “Actually makes it worse,” Curry said. “Makes, misses or whatever, there’s an energy about what we’re trying to do. So the good news is if we can keep doing that, you would like to think that you could build momentum, and that’s that’s what our hope is. But it’s just a tough … back-to-back games at home that you play well enough to win and just don’t get it done.”

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Warriors are spiraling but may have finally found a lineup to drag them out of it

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    ‘I was lost’: Ricky Rubio reflects on his NBA career and the dark days that occurred

    (Top photo of LeBron James and Stephen Curry after Saturday’s game: Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)



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  • LeBron James Fast Facts | CNN

    LeBron James Fast Facts | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Here’s a look at the life of basketball player LeBron James.

    Birth date: December 30, 1984

    Birth place: Akron, Ohio

    Birth name: LeBron Raymone James

    Father: Anthony McClelland

    Mother: Gloria James

    Marriage: Savannah (Brinson) James (September 2013-present)

    Children: Zhuri Nova, Bryce Maximus and LeBron Jr.

    James also played football in high school.

    Runs a non-profit organization called The LeBron James Family Foundation, which helps children in his hometown area.

    Co-founder of production company SpringHill Entertainment.

    Has been named the NBA’s Most Valuable Player four times (2009, 2010, 2012, 2013).

    Has been to the NBA All-Star Game every year since 2005.

    Named the NBA Finals MVP four times (2012, 2013, 2016, 2020).

    Is nicknamed “King James.”

    Is the youngest player in NBA history to reach 30,000 career points.

    Has played for the US national team in the 2004, 2008, and 2012 Olympics. They won gold in 2008 and 2012.

    Owned a very small stake in Beats Electronics, which was sold to Apple, Inc. for $3 billion in June 2014, reportedly netting him around $30 million in cash and stocks.

    James and a host of other Black athletes and artists founded the political organization More Than A Vote in the run-up to the 2020 election, providing James and others with a vehicle to help register Black voters and turn them out in the November election.

    2000 – Helps lead high school team to the state championship. They won the championship three of the four seasons he played.

    February 18, 2002 – James is featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated with the words, “The Chosen One.”

    June 26, 2003 – Is chosen No. 1 overall by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the NBA draft.

    2004 – Earns the Eddie Gottlieb Trophy as NBA Rookie of the Year.

    August 2004 – Makes his first Olympics appearance for the US national team.

    November 27, 2004 – Becomes the youngest NBA player to score 2,000 points in their career.

    February 8, 2005 – Is named a starter for the NBA’s Eastern Conference All-Star Team.

    February 19, 2006 – Is named to the All-Star Team again and becomes the youngest MVP of the game.

    July 10, 2010 – Announces he is leaving the Cavaliers to become part of the Miami Heat.

    June 21, 2012 – The Miami Heat win the NBA Finals, marking James’ first championship.

    January 16, 2013 – Becomes the youngest NBA player to score 20,000 points.

    June 24, 2014 – Chooses to become a free agent.

    July 11, 2014 – James tells Sports Illustrated that he’ll leave the Miami Heat for the Cleveland Cavaliers.

    December 7, 2015 – Nike confirms that it has signed a lifetime deal with James.

    June 19, 2016 – The Cleveland Cavaliers defeat the Golden State Warriors 93-89 in a deciding Game 7 to win the NBA Championship. James is unanimously named the Finals MVP; his performance helps the Cavaliers capture the first major sports championship that a Cleveland team has won since 1964.

    May 25, 2017 – James passes Michael Jordan as the NBA’s all-time playoff scoring leader with 5,995 points. Jordan’s record of 5,987 held for 20 years.

    May 31, 2017 – Police tell CNN that a racist slur was spray-painted on the front gate of James’ Los Angeles home. At a press conference in Oakland, California, James comments on the state of race relations in the United States. “No matter how much money you have, no matter how famous you are, no matter how many people admire you, being black in America is tough.”

    January 23, 2018 – Becomes the seventh, and youngest, player in NBA history to score 30,000 points.

    June 29, 2018 – James decides not to pick up his option for next season with the Cleveland Cavaliers and will become an unrestricted free agent, according to multiple reports.

    July 1, 2018 – James, now a free agent, agrees to a four-year, $154M contract to join the Los Angeles Lakers, according to a press release from his agency.

    July 30, 2018 – James’ foundation teams with the Akron Public Schools system to open a school that supports at-risk children. Third and fourth graders will make up the inaugural class at the I Promise School, with plans to expand to first through eighth grade by 2022.

    November 4, 2019 – James announces that a historic apartment building in Akron, Ohio, is being renovated and turned into transitional housing for families in need at his I Promise School, so students have a stable place to live while they get their education.

    August 11, 2020 – “I Promise,” a children’s book written by James, is published.

    October 11, 2020 – After the Los Angeles Lakers defeat the Miami Heat, James becomes the first player in NBA history to be named NBA Finals MVP with three different teams.

    March 16, 2021 – It is announced that Fenway Sports Group, which owns the Boston Red Sox, has added James as a partner. It becomes official on March 31.

    July 16, 2021 – “Space Jam: A New Legacy” premieres, in which James plays intergalactic basketball with the Looney Tunes.

    November 21, 2021 – James is ejected during a game against the Detroit Pistons after making contact with Pistons’ Isaiah Stewart in the face. The ejection is only the second in James’ career – the first coming in 2017 for comments made to a referee. Both players are suspended the next day – James for one game and Stewart for two.

    March 19, 2022 – Passes Karl Malone (36,928 career points) on the NBA’s all-time scoring list, to become second only to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (38,387).

    August 17, 2022 – James signs a new two-year contract with the Lakers, worth $97.1 million, making him the highest-earning NBA player ever.

    February 7, 2023 – James breaks the NBA’s all-time scoring record, surpassing Abdul-Jabbar.

    January 25, 2024 – James is named to his 20th NBA All-Star Game, passing Abdul-Jabbar for most of all time.

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  • Why NBA home teams are no longer wearing white jerseys

    Why NBA home teams are no longer wearing white jerseys

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    Every August, after the NBA releases its schedule for the upcoming season, Michael McCullough, the Miami Heat’s chief marketing officer, thinks about the next 82 games. He not only considers ticket sales and promotions but also sets a meeting with the team’s equipment manager and focuses on an essential part of his job: uniforms.

    Laying out the right jerseys used to be an easy exercise across the NBA. There were just two choices. When Rob Pimental, the Heat’s equipment manager and travel coordinator, began his career with the Sacramento Kings in the 1980s, it was just white and blue: white jerseys at home, dark ones on the road. What to wear didn’t demand a conversation.

    Today, it needs lots of meetings. It has become one of the benchmark choices a franchise can make each season. Over the last six-plus years, jerseys have grown to become not just merchandise but also part of an entire marketing ensemble, a diadem of that year’s commercial enterprise.

    Jerseys were once hidebound by convention — not always constant but at least consistent in color and place — but they are now ever-changing. Aesthetically, the NBA looks different from year to year as it introduces new uniforms with each season. It is exhilarating or exhausting, depending on whom you ask. The league is either running into grand ideas behind the creativity of its teams, or it is running away from convention and diluting its storied brands.

    The story of the league’s changeover can be told by the erosion of one old mainstay: the home white jersey. For decades, this was an NBA staple. Now, it is increasingly a rarity.


    The process to pick jerseys for each of the 1,230 NBA games each season seems simple: The home team picks its uniform first, and the road team chooses next. But it is exhaustingly complicated. What used to be mostly a binary decision tree is now complex.

    In a way, it begins years ahead of time. Teams start designing their latest City Edition jerseys with Nike two seasons ahead of their debut.

    “It’s like a jigsaw puzzle in many ways,” McCullough said.

    The makeover began with the 2017-18 season, when Nike took over the NBA’s on-court uniform and apparel business. Teams occasionally had asked the league to step away from the usual uniform split to introduce or highlight new alternate jerseys. That trend began in the late 1990s and has increased incrementally since.

    Still, teams needed permission from the league to do so. Nike brought on a four-uniform system: the Association, a white jersey; the Icon, a dark jersey; the Statement, an alternate jersey; and the City Edition, which changes annually and has no set color scheme. Some teams have a Classic jersey, too.


    The Heat wore their white jerseys in Brooklyn against the Nets on Jan. 15. (Nathaniel S. Butler / NBAE via Getty Images)

    The NBA streamlined the process. Christopher Arena, head of on-court and brand partnerships for the NBA, used to keep an Excel spreadsheet of every team’s uniform decision for each game, occasionally hunting them down to get their picks in or calling another team to adjust its choice to avoid a color clash. Then the NBA modernized. It debuted NBA LockerVision, a digital database where teams log in their uniforms weeks after the schedule is released.

    There are rules on how often a franchise must wear each jersey: Association and Icon must be worn at least 10 times during a season, Statement six times, City Edition and Classic three times. There are guardrails against colors matching too closely, though not all incidents have been avoided. After the Oklahoma City Thunder and Atlanta Hawks played each other in nearly matching red/orange hues in 2021, the league further barred teams from picking jerseys that are too similar.

    That upended the regular order. Where white jerseys used to be regularly worn at home, they are now more often seen on the road. Those August marketing meetings are an opportunity to lay out the best times to show off the latest City Edition jersey.

    Few teams have leaned in as much as the Miami Heat. In some ways, they are still taken by tradition. Miami’s red-and-black jersey has remained almost unchanged for decades. Every spring, Miami brings back its annual “White Hot” campaign, which has been in place since 2006. The organization wears its white uniforms at home in the playoffs and asks fans to wear white too.

    “That’s part of the whole lore of sports, that tradition,” McCullough said. “There’s room, I think, in sports to create new traditions. I like to think that’s what we’re doing, creating other opportunities for people to have another relationship with their team around what the players are wearing. And of course, it’s broadened out for us entire merchandise lines to support these uniforms and to support this second identity. It just becomes kind of who you are.”

    As much as those white jerseys mean to the organization, the last few years have allowed the Heat to experiment and debut new designs and color schemes. When McCullough gets the new schedule every summer, he begins to envision the rollout campaign for that year’s latest jersey.

    The Heat have created some of the most vibrant City Edition jerseys of the last decade. Their “Vice City” jerseys were a smash hit. The originals were white; subsequent editions have come in blue gale, fuchsia and black. This season, they wear black jerseys with “HEAT Culture” across the chest.

    Most often, they wear them at home. The Heat has programmed those City Edition jerseys to be worn 19 times in Miami and just once on the road. Their Association uniforms — or what used to be known as the home whites — will be worn on the road 24 times.

    McCullough wants to make sure the City Edition uniforms get enough appearances in Miami to sink in with Heat fans. He wants the Heat to wear them around the holidays, when fans go shopping. He wants to create favorable environments to show them off and build affinity for them.

    “You’ve got this whole narrative you’ve woven around this special uniform that you can only do at home,” he said. “That you can’t do on the road.”

    The Heat can build a whole campaign around their latest jerseys by wearing them at home. They unveiled an alternate court in 2018-19 to match their Vice City jerseys and have had one each season since. The franchise can pick and choose when to wear the jerseys if the game is in Miami, so they can prioritize the right days.

    The Vice City design became its own kind of brand for the franchise. The Heat’s license plate in Vice City colors is the second-highest selling plate in the state, McCullough said, and is tops among all of Florida’s professional sports teams.

    “You look at any badass car in south Florida — and you know there’s a lot of badass cars — and they all have the Heat plate on them,” he said. “It is just a cool-looking plate. I’m sure a lot of those plates are not Heat fans. It’s just a badass-looking license plate to have on your car.”

    It is a symbol of the Heat’s successful effort. The planning goes across the organization. McCullough surveys Pimental and considers him an unofficial member of the marketing staff. Any uniform decisions are run by him.

    Pimental’s job is vast. Whenever the Heat choose their road jerseys, they must consider how it will affect travel. He had to learn how to re-pack for trips after Nike took over in 2017 because of the new possibilities.

    For each road trip, the Heat bring a game set of each uniform and a backup set, as well as a few blanks; that’s 40-45 uniforms in each color. If they intend to wear two different uniforms on a trip, they could bring almost 90 different sets.

    Then there is everything else: the warmups, the sneakers, the tights, the socks, the practice gear. In all, Pimental said his team and the training staff bring about 3,000 pounds of equipment on road trips.

    He calls it “a traveling circus.” It’s a far cry from his early days in Sacramento, but he does not miss the simplicity.

    “Sure, maybe (there are) times you get frustrated, but I think it’s cool to have a little more of an identity,” he said. “I don’t think there’s anything wrong with it. Fads change, things change. You never know if you’ll go back to white uniforms at home. It’s cool to see different things.

    “Before, you only saw the white uniforms at home. Now you get an opportunity to see all the uniforms that we have.”


    The NBA isn’t the only league that has abandoned the home white jerseys as its core tenet. NHL franchises have flip-flopped during the league’s history and started wearing their dark sweaters at home again during the 2003-04 season. The NFL lets the home team decide its uniforms, and those teams rarely choose white anymore. Even the Los Angeles Lakers didn’t wear white at home until the early 2000s.

    NBA teams began pushing alternate jerseys at home more frequently in the decade or so before Nike took over. Arena believes teams wore their white jerseys at home about 75 percent of the time by 2017.

    Now, it is far less. The old uniform rules and expectations no longer apply. Arena does not see this as a wholesale abdication from league norms.

    “It was already eroding,” he said. “We just put a paradigm around it. And again, eroding assumes that what it was was somewhat perfect, like some statue, and it was eroding to something imperfect. I would argue it was on the way to being flawed, and we’ve now made it perfect.”

    The Association jersey is worn at the same frequency this season as it was during the 2017-18 season, Nike’s first year as the apparel distributor, but the split between home and road is stark. Teams wore their Association jerseys roughly 29 times per season in that first season under Nike, and an average of 17 games at home. This season, the Association jersey averaged 29 appearances per team but just roughly nine times at home.

    About 22 percent of all games this season will feature a matchup of two teams each in a color jersey. Teams are scheduled to wear their City Edition jerseys about 14 times this season, with 11 of those at home.

    The rules the league has put in place makes some jerseys a skeleton key. The Lakers’ gold Icon jersey can pair with anything, Arena said. Other jerseys — like the Indiana Pacers’ yellow, the Thunder’s orange and the Memphis Grizzlies’ light blue — are also versatile and don’t need to only be worn against white as a counterpoint.

    The NBA, Arena said, obsesses “over this more than you can imagine.” Uniforms are a part of his life’s work, and he has been with the league for 26 years.

    In that time, the league has undergone drastic changes, switched uniform providers several times and watched a new suite of logos and color schemes pop up. For most of that period, some basics never changed, but wearing white jerseys at home is no longer part of that foundation.

    “I don’t know that we ever want to be so steadfast in rules and regulations and tradition and biases that we can’t step outside and listen to our teams and our fans,” Arena said. “I think what our teams are telling us was that our fans wanted to see these different uniforms at home, and they were maybe sick of seeing their team in white every single game for 41 games.

    “The benefit, I guess you could say, is they get to see the wonderful colors of the 29 other teams come in. They can see the purple of the Lakers and the green of the Celtics and so forth. But they never got to see their team wearing their colors at home on their home floor, which is an incredible dynamic to see.”

    (Top photo of Jimmy Butler: Issac Baldizon / NBAE via Getty Images)

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    The New York Times

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  • As Draymond Green returns, can he and Warriors wind down a dynasty the right way?

    As Draymond Green returns, can he and Warriors wind down a dynasty the right way?

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    In the backyard of Draymond Green’s $10 million home in the Los Angeles suburb of Brentwood, where white columns and a marble patio overlook the greenest of grass, Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr chatted with the heartbeat of his team.

    Hours earlier, the Warriors had landed in Los Angeles to a whirlwind of drama. The night before, Dec. 12 in Phoenix, Green had protested an uncalled foul by spinning and flailing his arms. He struck Suns center Jusuf Nurkić in the face, incurring a Flagrant 2 foul and automatic ejection. This was just shy of a month after his previous Flagrant 2, a five-second chokehold of Minnesota’s Rudy Gobert that landed Green a five-game suspension and a promise of harsher future league penalties.

    So while the basketball world waited for the league’s latest punishment — an indefinite suspension that ended up lasting 12 games — and before the Warriors took on the host Clippers, Kerr visited Green for their latest heart-to-heart talk. These two have argued and debated. They’ve cursed each other out. They’ve strategized together. Bared their souls to one another. On this day, they cried together.

    And Kerr came equipped with an appeal: “I want you to end this the right way. I want us to end this the right way.”

    Discussing the end strikes a chord with Green. Kerr knew it would. He’s spent the last five years in the trenches with Green, Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson, warding off the inevitable. Fighting against basketball mortality. The way last season ended, and how this one has gone, they can hardly deny the end is nearing. Stalking them. They can feel its breath.

    “We’re in a position where we’re getting older, trying to defend everything that we’ve done over the last decade,” Kerr said recently after practice, explaining his pitch to Green. “Let’s do it the right way. Let’s do it with dignity. Let’s do it with competitive desire. Let’s do it joyfully. What this team has been built on, and I think what attracts a lot of our fans, it’s not just the style but it’s the joy that the players feel, the competitive desire that sort of complements that. It’s been a wonderful combination.”

    Since the NBA went to a two-round draft in 1989, only three players have made the Hall of Fame who were not selected in the first round: Toni Kukoč, Ben Wallace and Manu Ginobili. Two-time MVP Nikola Jokić is sure to join them. But not before Green, the No. 35 pick in the 2012 NBA Draft. His next decade was worthy of a documentary.

    That’s why it’s imperative for the 33-year-old Green, who is expected to return to game action Monday and has three years and over $77 million remaining on his contract, to end his career right. Because finality with a shot of regret is too strong an elixir. Over the last 15 months, he has been choreographing a conclusion that sullies the quality of his journey. His prominence has become more about flagrants and flails, suspensions and stomps, petulance and punches.

    Green’s legacy should be a glorious one. An improbable legend, a four-time NBA champion born of the rare combination of skill, intellect and toughness. The chubby kid from rusty Saginaw, Mich., forged himself into an all-time great. A testament to the capacity of will, of what sports can blossom from unlikely soils.

    “He was 285 pounds when I first got him,” said Tom Izzo, who coached Green at Michigan State.

    Instead, his reputation is currently more about the problems he causes than the championship solutions he has delivered. But his teammates believe, his coach believes, NBA commissioner Adam Silver and his enforcer, executive vice president Joe Dumars, believe there is a Draymond in there worth fighting to save. A legacy that deserves better punctuation.

    “When I look back at these situations,” Green said last week, “it’s like, ‘Can I remove the antics?’ I am very confident I can remove the antics. And I am very confident if I do, no one is worried about how I play the game of basketball, how I carry myself in the game of basketball. It’s the antics. That’s the focus. It’s not changing who I am completely. You don’t change the spots on a leopard.”


    After an altercation with the Timberwolves’ Rudy Gobert in November, Green (center) was suspended five games. A month later, he was suspended indefinitely for striking the Suns’ Jusuf Nurkić. (Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)

    Kevon Looney’s AAU coach, Shelby Parrish, was in the Bay Area visiting, not long after Looney was drafted in 2015. Looney was showing his youth coach around and, next thing he knew, Green was hanging out with coach Parrish. They talked for at least an hour.

    Then Green invited Looney and his guests to hang out at Halftime Sports Bar in Oakland. In the middle of the day, they were playing dominoes with Green. Parrish had the memory of a lifetime.

    “The reason that he’s allowed to yell at people,” Looney said of Green, “and get animated is because he only wants to win and he puts the time in off the court. … When I first got here, any time there was a rookie, anytime somebody new came to the team, he’s the first person to take them in and take them out. Show ’em the town. Put them in touch with the people they need to know. That’s what he did for me. All my family and friends, he made them feel comfortable, like they were his family.”

    Back in October, Trayce Jackson-Davis worked out in the team’s practice facility on the ground floor of Chase Center. The rookie big man, who turns 24 in February, was still getting accustomed to life in the NBA when he learned he would start at center against Sacramento in the third preseason game. Green, sidelined with a sprained left ankle, interrupted the rookie’s workout. He gave Jackson-Davis 10 minutes of pointers on defending Kings big man Domantas Sabonis. The four-time champion schooling the No. 57 pick. Green walked through how to give Sabonis space, how to hold his ground when Sabonis lowers his shoulder or digs in his elbow, and how to get into Sabonis’ body on rebounds.

    “It was great, especially how nervous I was,” Jackson-Davis said, “being so early in the season. The vets, at that time, weren’t around. We hadn’t developed relationships yet. He didn’t have to do that. But it helped. Especially in the first quarter, I guarded him really well.”

    The dynamics of the Warriors, of locker rooms, of relationships within teams helps explain why, even after his laundry list of violations over the years, Green is still a Warrior. Still welcomed. Still redeemable.

    Loyalty.

    It sounds like an oxymoron for a player who keeps letting his team down. Green’s inability to control himself and make sure he’s available for a team that desperately needs him could be seen as disloyalty. Watching the Warriors’ defense decline significantly without him underscores how much his absence hurts the Warriors.

    “Part of that complexity,” Kerr explained, “is this intense loyalty to the team and to the organization, to his coaches. He’s loyal to me. We’ve definitely had our share of run-ins, but it’s all in the name of trying to win.”

    “I think the people that he trusts and he believes in, he’d die for ’em,” Izzo said. “I know that sounds like a drastic statement. I believe it. I really do.”

    Green is a dichotomy. Most aren’t privy to the countless impactful moments behind the scenes. That character is behind the patience he receives within the organization. It also fuels the hope he can rectify his name.

    As Looney said, “There is way more good than bad.”

    Draymond Green and Jordan Poole


    Draymond Green is known for embracing his young Warriors teammates, but his punch of Jordan Poole (right) in October 2022 ran counter to that and stood out from his other incidents. (Christian Petersen / Getty Images)

    The one incident Looney doesn’t get behind, the one the Warriors all agree was the most wrong Green has been, was punching Jordan Poole in October 2022. Fresh off of a summer of basking in championship glory, Green again changed the narrative about himself when he attacked Poole in practice in an altercation that escalated too far. The video leak made it a permanent mark on Green’s record.

    Striking Poole wasn’t motivated by winning, or loyalty, or getting the most out of his teammates. Of all the things Green has done, it’s the sin that’s been forgiven but not forgotten. And it continues to haunt the Warriors, as the spark of the more volatile version of Green that has been suspended four times for a total of 19 games in the last 10 months.

    Green wasn’t suspended for the Poole punch. At the time, the Warriors believed a suspension wasn’t enough. They wanted him to live in the discomfort he caused. They kept his locker next to Poole, perhaps hoping they would reconcile. In the end, it just kept the discomfort alive, and Green had to live with it. His punishment was having to earn back the trust.

    He did eventually. But accumulation is now a factor. Earlier in his career, Green could just go dominate and shut everyone up. That’s not so easy anymore. As the antics have increased, the winning has lessened. Now that the NBA is involved and increasingly punitive, the price of his antics is greater than it’s ever been. Green’s problems have become less a caveat of success and more a barricade in the way of it.

    “Part of what drives Draymond is the insecurity that we all have in us,” Kerr said. “Most people don’t really want to admit vulnerability. He’s not Steph Curry. He’s not LeBron James. He can’t just ride on, ‘Well, I’ll go get 25 tonight.’ For him to play well, he has to be all in, emotionally and physically and spiritually. And there are times where And there are times where because it’s an 82-game season with all the drama, all the BS that’s out there … it eats at him. And then he can’t just rely on that skill … so then he’ll lash out. And when he lashes out, there’s repercussions.”

    If anybody could be done with Green and his antics, it’s Kerr. But they’re so much alike, which Kerr made clear to Green in that backyard talk. Kerr, a five-time NBA champion as a player, knows what’s it like to become so maddened by his competitive drive. He’s been where Green is, so he knows where Green needs to go to deal with that consuming drive.

    “It’s kind of deep s—, you know, that we’re talking about,” Kerr said. “Being vulnerable. That’s one of the things I’m encouraging him to do. Be more vulnerable. Just admit you’re wrong. There’s a power in that, you know? If he does, then he doesn’t have to explain himself. And if he’s not explaining himself, I think people will have more sympathy.”


    Green was expecting to be a first-round pick in 2012. He played four seasons at Michigan State, played in two Final Fours and as a senior was a consensus All-American.

    But Green didn’t fit the NBA mold. He was seen as a “tweener” — a player whose combination of size and skill left him between the traditional positions. The 6-foot, 7 1/2-inch Green was considered too small to be a power forward and not athletic enough to be a small forward. None of his measurements added up to what he’s become.

    But his immeasurables were off the charts. And the No. 1 attribute working on his behalf is still the thing mentioned first about him today. Draymond is synonymous with winning.

    “You just don’t have that many people anymore for whom winning is the most important thing,” Izzo said. “You know, sometimes I get mad at him because his podcast takes up time. … But all these players have distractions. But with him, it’s about winning. If you need him to set a screen, get a rebound, make a pass, take a shot, never take a shot — whatever it is. I just don’t know enough people that put winning as the priority.”

    When the Warriors drafted him in the second round, it was the perfect match. A franchise needing to build a winning culture landed a player with the formula it lacked. High basketball IQ. Defensive genius and leadership. Natural talent. Heart. And it was on display immediately.

    Draymond Green


    “I just don’t know enough people that put winning as the priority,” Michigan State coach Tom Izzo says of Draymond Green. (Chuck Liddy / Raleigh News & Observer / Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

    At Summer League in 2012, the Warriors’ young players were in Las Vegas practicing and playing some high-intensity scrimmages. Harrison Barnes was the lottery pick that year. Festus Ezeli was the Warriors’ other first-round pick. Green wasn’t one of the prized young talents. Jeremy Tyler, a former high school sensation who was selected in the second round in 2011, was assigned to be Green’s mentor. That was until Tyler called a foul during the scrimmage in Las Vegas that Green thought was weak and a sign of his softness.

    “He dropped him as his vet,” Barnes recalled in an interview with the Mercury News in 2015. “He said Jeremy couldn’t be his vet anymore.”

    Months later, when the full team got together for pickup runs before training camp, Green was going at veteran David Lee, the Warriors’ lone All-Star at the time.

    Green was this way at Civitan Recreation Center in Saginaw, when he was the little guy earning his keep on the court with the older kids. He was this way at Saginaw High, when he led his school to two state championships and a top-five national ranking as a senior. He was this way as a freshman at Michigan State, when he played six minutes in his debut and by the end of the season was a rotation player in the national championship game.

    “A lot of my respect for Draymond comes from on the court,” Looney said. “I always took pride in being a tough guy, being tenacious, being relentless, always showing up and holding yourself accountable. And I always see him sacrifice the most. As a young player, I admired that. He’ll make every play.”

    Before the antics, winning was Green’s clear legacy. It’s how he garnered respect, awe even. It’s his worth in a league full of bigger, more athletic and more talented players. It’s how he made four All-Star Games and earned two All-NBA nods, eight All-NBA Defense selections and a Defensive Player of the Year award.

    “He’s the ultimate winner,” Kerr said. “A champion. This whole business is about winning. … Draymond, even though he can be hard to coach because of emotion, he is actually easy to coach because of his brain and his loyalty and his fight and his competitive drive. I’ll take those guys every day of the week.”

    None of the Warriors’ success happens without Green. That’s the declaration in Kerr’s appeal to end the right way.

    As the heartbeat, Green has shown he can will the Warriors to a higher level, but he’s also shown he can drag them into the muck. The same fire he used to help refine the Warriors into a dynasty has proven hot enough to burn what they’ve built.

    Now, the journey begins, again, to see if the Warriors can rely on Green. If the reflection takes. If the counseling and growth sticks. If so, the Warriors can go out with class, celebrated for their valiance. That would fit their story, and Green’s. But they can’t end this right without him.

    “My thing with him now is,” Izzo said, “can you take these last three years or whatever, and just focus in on this. Really leave the legacy that you deserve to have. And that’s as one of the greatest winners. That’s one of the tougher competitors. That’s a very good teammate.”

    Draymond Green


    Part of a dynasty with Klay Thompson (center) and Stephen Curry (right), Draymond Green’s legacy should be set. That’s behind Steve Kerr’s appeal to “end this the right way.” (Jesse D. Garrabrant / NBAE via Getty Images)

    (Top illustration: John Bradford / The Athletic; photo: Jane Tyska / Digital First Media / East Bay Times / Getty Images) 

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    The New York Times

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  • Draymond Green reinstated after 12-game suspension

    Draymond Green reinstated after 12-game suspension

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    The NBA has reinstated Golden State Warriors star Draymond Green after his 12-game suspension, the league announced Saturday. Green has been undergoing counseling for several weeks along with holding progress meetings with the league and Warriors.

    “During the period of his suspension, which began on Dec. 14 and resulted in him missing 12 games, Green completed steps that demonstrated his commitment to conforming his conduct to standards expected of NBA players,” Joe Dumars, executive vice president and head of basketball operations for the NBA, said in a statement.

    “He has engaged in meetings with a counselor and has met jointly on multiple occasions with representatives of the NBA, the Warriors and the National Basketball Players Association, both of which will continue throughout the season.”

    The four-time NBA champion was suspended indefinitely after striking Suns center Jusuf Nurkić in the face during the Warriors’ Dec. 12 matchup against Phoenix. Golden State has gone 7-5 in Green’s absence and holds a 17-18 record.

    GO DEEPER

    Trotter: Draymond Green is responsible for his misconduct, but he’s not alone

    What’s the significance of Green’s return?

    The Warriors get their best defender back. He’s a coordinator on the floor and he’s been missed.

    The Warriors had a 119.8 defensive rating in his 12-game absence, the eighth-worst in the NBA during that stretch. They’ve solved some of their early-season offensive troubles, curbing their turnovers while ticking up their pace, but this team can’t be taken seriously until it starts getting more stops. Nobody in the world — when he is eligible and physically right — helps you get stops better than Green. — Anthony Slater, Warriors senior writer

    When will he return?

    Green and Rick Celebrini, the team’s lead medical decision-maker, will determine that. There will be some sort of ramp-up process. He won’t play on Sunday against the Toronto Raptors at home, though Green is eligible. The Warriors then get two days off before a Wednesday home game against the Pelicans and then start a four-game road trip next Friday night in Chicago. — Slater

    Biggest Green-related question upon his return

    Whose minutes does he take and how long can he stay out of the league’s crosshairs? Jonathan Kuminga started all 12 games Green missed and has performed well enough to maintain his spot and heavy minute load. He just played a career-high 36 minutes in the previous game.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Jonathan Kuminga meets with Steve Kerr to quell festering Warriors issues: ‘I love it here’

    It’s possible the Warriors inch Green back into the fold off the bench and theoretically could make him their starting center. The night he committed the foul on Nurkić, Kuminga had replaced Kevon Looney in the starting lineup to open the second half and Green had shifted to the five spot. — Slater

    Required reading

    (Photo: Tony Ding / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

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  • Dunking hurts: Why players hate — and love — the NBA’s greatest feat

    Dunking hurts: Why players hate — and love — the NBA’s greatest feat

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    The dunk is basketball’s most lionized play. The most iconic ones are canonized, referenced fondly and often, debated for their merits and significance. The sport’s language has created so many names for it: jam, yam, slam, poster, stuff, hammer. It’s a unique club that only few on this world can join. It’s marvelous.

    And it hurts like hell.

    “Can you think of any other concept where your hand swings at something metal?” 11-year NBA veteran Austin Rivers asks. “It’ll probably hurt, yeah?”

    When asked, players catalog the pain dunking has caused: broken nails; bent fingers; recent bruises; lasting scars; midair collisions; twisted necks; dangerous landings. Injuries that cost them games or even seasons.

    Derrick Jones Jr., a former NBA All-Star Weekend dunk contest winner now with the Dallas Mavericks, points out two specific marks on his left wrist. Larry Nance Jr., another high flier in his ninth NBA season and third with the New Orleans Pelicans, recalls childhood memories of his father’s scarred arms from a 14-year NBA career that included winning the first-ever dunk contest in 1984. Dallas’ Josh Green remembers one pregame dunk that set his nerves afire.

    “I remember thinking, ‘Why would I do this before a game,’” the 23-year-old Green says.

    And yet still they dunk.

    In the modern NBA, the dunk’s frequency has been increasing, going from 8,254 in the 2002-03 regular season to 11,664 last year. The rise is mostly due to the 3-point revolution and the increased spacing and cleaner driving lanes that come with it. But the league also has taller, more explosive athletes entering every year. With them come even more spectacular aerial feats, ones that enrapture fans and wow even the players who witness them.

    What players think of the dunk, and the agony that can come with it, is ever changing. This isn’t some new trend. It’s just that the dunk, for all its allure and mystique, is the most visceral mark of a player’s maturation.

    Basketball’s most exclusive club, one only entered 10 feet in the air, isn’t one that players can — or always want to — live in forever.


    Dennis Smith Jr., now a member of the Brooklyn Nets, had a 48-inch vertical as a prospect, but says now his struggles with landing affected his shooting form. (Nathaniel S. Butler / NBAE via Getty Images)

    When young basketball players first start dunking, they never want to stop.

    “It makes you the guy,” Dennis Smith Jr. says.

    Smith’s first in-game dunk was an off-the-backboard slam in a state title game when he was 13. His team was up big and his teammates were showing off. “Now it’s my turn,” the 26-year-old Brooklyn Nets guard recalls thinking. “I got one.” An in-game dunk is a status symbol he has never forgotten.

    Willie Green, now the head coach of the New Orleans Pelicans after a 12-year NBA career, was told as a teenager that toe raises would help him reach above the rim. Every morning in the shower, he counted to 300 — rising onto the balls of his feet with each number until this club finally let him in.

    “If you could dunk, people looked up to you, they glorified you,” Green says. “You felt like you got over a big hurdle in basketball. It was a huge step in basketball when I was able to dunk.”

    Every player asked remembers how old they were when they first started. “You’re young, you’re bouncy,” Markieff Morris, 34, says. “You dunked so you could talk your s—.” It was the first thing youngsters like him did stepping into the gym, the last before they left.

    “When you’re first dunking, your fingers are full of blood because of the (contact),” Philadelphia 76ers forward Nicolas Batum recalls. “But you get used to it. You have so much joy of dunking. You’re one of the few people in the world that can.”

    Once players start dunking in games, it becomes even more addicting. “When you try to dunk on someone, you’re hyped up, you’re amped up,” the New York Knicks’ Donte DiVincenzo says. “You don’t feel any of that s—.” It’s the same as any adrenaline high. “It feels like energy,” 21-year-old Mavericks guard Jaden Hardy says. As the crowds grow bigger and the reactions reverberate louder, it’s even better.

    Marques Johnson, a five-time NBA All-Star who retired in 1990, remembers one slam he had at age 15 in a summer league over a player who had just been drafted to the NBA. To dunk on him, to knock him to the ground, proved something.

    “As a young player, if you can hang with guys on the next level,” he says, “it becomes that validation that you belong.”

    Johnson, currently the Milwaukee Bucks’ television analyst, played collegiately for UCLA, where he was named the Naismith College Player of the Year in 1977, the first season the dunk was re-legalized in college basketball. “I really believe it’s a big reason why I won,” he says. “People ain’t seen a dunk in college basketball in 10 years.” Johnson, a hyperathletic 6-foot-7 forward, took up residence above the rim.

    Once, he missed two weeks with a knee sprain after dunking on a teammate in practice and landing hard. As he lay on the ground in pain, he still remembers what his first question was.

    “Did the dunk go in?”

    “Yeah,” he was told. “You dunked on him.”


    Marques Johnson, shown here with the Bucks, believes dunking was a big reason he was the Naismith Player of the Year in 1977. (Heinz Kluetmeier / Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

    Last season, Christian Wood rebounded his own miss and found an empty path to the rim. He dribbled once, planted both feet, hurled the ball through the rim — and then clutched his left hand as he ran back down the court.

    Wood, who signed with the Los Angeles Lakers this summer after his one season with the Mavericks, finished the game but missed the next eight with a broken thumb. “I went for a tomahawk (dunk), trying to look flashy for some reason, and hit my thumb again,” he says. He had already injured it, he says, but that’s the moment when he knew he “had really hurt it.”

    As teenagers age into veterans, their relationships toward dunking often change. “To really dunk consistently in the NBA, you gotta be a freak athlete.” Rivers says. For those who aren’t, dunking becomes more akin to a tool than a feat.

    “S—, those things are really adding up,” the 26-year-old DiVincenzo says. “A lot of the younger guys want to dunk every single time. I am not like that anymore.”

    DiVincenzo still dunks — he had nine last year with the Golden State Warriors — but prefers layups when possible. It isn’t always possible, though. “Sometimes, (a dunk) is the only way to draw fouls,” he says.

    When Willie Green neared the end of his career, he recalls hating when defenders forced him into it.

    “They’re chasing you down hard on a fast break, and you want to lay it up, but you know if you lay it up, they’re going to block it,” he says. “I’m like, ‘Man. You made me dunk that.’”

    Green was a two-foot dunker, which meant accelerating into the air was hard on his knees, especially the left one, which was surgically repaired in 2005. “That force, that gravity, compounded with coming down,” he says. “It takes a toll on you.”

    Smith, the ninth pick in the 2017 draft, entered the league with a record-tying 48-inch vertical — and with a dangerous habit of coming down on one leg. While recovering from knee surgery, he learned to land on both of them. “I don’t even think about it now,” he says. But he still does thoracic therapy to treat scar tissues in his wrist from his childhood dunks, which he believes has had an effect on his shooting form.

    The league’s freak athletes, the ones Rivers referenced, do have different experiences. Nance Jr., who remembers his father’s forearm scars, has none of his own. His hands are large enough to engulf the ball rather than pinning it against his wrist. “I never really learned how to cup it like everybody else,” Nance says. “I genuinely don’t believe I could do it if I tried.” He drops the ball through the rim rather than relying on inertia.

    “Not really,” he says when asked whether it hurts. “Unless I miss.”

    Players like him still experience pain from the midair collisions and the misses: when the basketball hits the cylinder’s rear and sends shock waves through their arms; when an opponent’s desperate swipes hit flesh and nerve; when the crash of bodies sends theirs sprawling to the floor.

    Anthony Edwards, another alien athlete, doesn’t even refer to what he does as dunking. “I don’t really dunk the ball,” he says. “I just put it in there the majority of the time.” Earlier this month, though, Edwards elevated over the Oklahoma City Thunder’s Jaylin Williams, nicked him on the shoulder and came crashing back down.

    Though Edwards only missed two games with a hip injury, the Timberwolves’ rising star admitted he was “scared” and “nervous” in his first game upon returning. And even if missed dunks don’t injure him, there’s still pride.

    As Edwards said of them last season: “Those hurt my soul.”


    Anthony Edwards, shown here after a dunk in last season’s Play-In Tournament, was recently injured on a dunk attempt against Oklahoma City. (Adam Pantozzi / NBAE via Getty Images)

    Kyrie Irving had stolen the ball and was alone at the basket in a December game when he rose up to dunk in front of his own bench. His Dallas teammates had already risen up to celebrate — until they couldn’t.

    “I mistimed it,” he says. “My momentum wasn’t there.” The ball grazed the front of the rim and fell out.

    The 31-year-old Irving is known for every sort of highlight except dunking, of which he has only 25 in his 11-year career. But a flubbed dunk is embarrassing even for a player like him.

    “You just feel bad!” he says. “We’re the best athletes in the world. I should be able to get up there once in a while.”

    Later that quarter, the 6-foot-2 Irving had another chance at a wide-open fast break, at redemption. This time, he made sure to prove he could still do it.

    “I had to double pump,” he says, laughing now. “I had to get up there, bro. I couldn’t come in the locker room to my teammates, coaching staff, upper management. They would’ve been on my head.”

    Still, as players grow closer to retirement, they often hang up their dunking careers first.

    Rivers, who remains a free agent after spending his 11th season with the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2022-23, recently retired from dunking. “I just prefer laying the ball up,” he said last year. “A dunk takes a lot out of me.” It was the hard landings that ultimately got him to stop, but he believes he became a better finisher once he made the decision.

    It’s easier for veterans who never needed to play above the rim. Like, say, Stephen Curry, who seems amused he was asked about something he hasn’t done in a game since 2018.

    “I had no problem letting that part of myself go,” the 6-foot-3 Curry says. “I very easily moved on to the next chapter of my career.”

    Batum, a 35-year-old with 367 career dunks, also swore off contested dunks before last season. “My body told me,” he said. “It said, ‘No more, bro.’” Now he only dunks, gently with two hands, when he knows he’s alone at the rim.

    “When you hit 32, the game isn’t about dunking anymore,” says Morris, now in his 13th NBA season. “It’s about longevity and still being able to play at a high level.”

    Caron Butler wishes he had realized that sooner. When he was younger, Butler, who had two All-Star appearances before retiring to become a Miami Heat assistant coach, practiced as hard as he played.

    “I overemphasized the two points I was getting to prove a point or show off my God-given ability,” he says. “It would have given me more longevity.”

    Butler doesn’t have any regrets. But he thinks about the dunk differently now.

    “It’s just two points.”


    Caron Butler, shown here leaping between two Cavaliers during the 2008 NBA playoffs, said his attitude toward dunking changed as he got older. “It’s just two points,” he says. (Ned Dishman / NBAE via Getty Images)

    It’s just two points.

    “I’m listening to an old man talk,” Butler says. “That’s what 13-year-old Caron Butler would say. He would say, ‘I’m listening to a very old man talk about dunking.’”

    He’s not the only retired player who sees the irony. Green thinks his younger self, the one who counted his toe raises in the shower, would feel similarly

    “Thirteen-year-old me would really be disgusted right now,” he says.

    But Green did dunk again earlier in 2023, a windmill slam in a January practice that had his players hollering in amazement. “They always tell me I can’t dunk,” he says. “I wanted to show them I had a little juice.” Green, the league’s fifth-youngest head coach, says that one of his coaching qualities is his relatability.

    “When you’re asking high level professional athletes to do something, it helps for them to know that you’ve done it,” he says. “And it helps to know when they look at you that it looks like you still can do it.”

    For others, it’s something that hearkens back to the past: to the adrenaline rush they first felt, to the validation it gave when their NBA careers were still dreams. Klay Thompson, perhaps this sport’s second-best shooter ever behind Curry, his Warriors teammate, says one of the best moments of his career was a dunk. After missing two consecutive seasons with major surgeries, in his first game back, he drove to the rim and slammed one. Thompson knew in that moment, he says, that the Warriors could still win another championship — and later that season, they did.


    The end result of Klay Thompson’s dunk through multiple Cavaliers in his first game back from ACL and Achilles injuries. (Jed Jacobsohn / Getty Images)

    Thompson used to stroll onto the court and dunk as soon as his shoes were on. “Now, I need a good hour to get the gears greased and the motor working,” he says. As his body has changed, so too has his appreciation for what dunking means.

    “It’s always an amazing feeling hanging on the rim that you can (forget) most people can’t do it,” he says. “I no longer take it for granted.”

    It’s just two points for these club members, yes, but it’s more than that. For Johnson, the former Naismith College Player of the Year, dunking still means something special. Johnson turns 68 in February, and he plans to continue his personal tradition that began when he was 55: dunking on his birthday.

    It’s motivation, Johnson explains, to stay in shape, which was inspired by his son, Josiah, who films it every year. It started becoming harder when Marques turned 60. “The first two attempts, I’m barely getting above the rim,” he says. It’s harder to palm the ball as his hands lose strength, and it usually takes until the fifth or sixth try before he succeeds.

    Johnson, who had hip surgery this summer, doesn’t know if he will succeed next year. After all, he only attempts to dunk on his birthday, never in-between. “I know, eventually, I’m not going to be able to do it,” he says. But his recovery has gone well, and he feels good he’ll dunk once more next February.

    He still remembers it, misses it.

    “I remember them vividly: the excitement, the adrenaline rushing through your body,” he says. “So the dunk, as you can tell, has meant a whole lot to me.”

    When asked what his younger self would think about hearing him talk about dunking now — this exclusive club he first joined as a 14-year-old wearing slacks and dress shoes, one that has represented pain and joy, aging and authenticity — Johnson instead chooses to turn the question around.

    “I’d tell 16-year old me,” he says, “do it until the wheels come off.”

    (Illustration by Rachel Orr / The Athletic. Photos of Derrick Jones Jr. (left) and Anthony Edwards (right): Amanda Loman and David Berding / Getty Images)

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  • Their lights stay green: Comparing the shooting prowess of Caitlin, Steph, Dame and Sabrina

    Their lights stay green: Comparing the shooting prowess of Caitlin, Steph, Dame and Sabrina

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    In a nearly empty arena in late November 2020, Caitlin Clark shot her first college 3-pointer. Time was ticking down in the first quarter of the Hawkeyes’ matchup against Northern Iowa. Clark forced a steal at midcourt and weaved her way to the right wing. With two defenders around her, she rose up. Her attempt was blocked.

    That didn’t discourage her.

    Now a senior, Clark is perhaps the biggest star across both men’s and women’s college basketball. She’s made more than 400 3-pointers throughout her college career and re-written the record book — at Iowa and nationally. “We see it every single day in practice, she hits one (shot) that amazes you or makes one pass that makes your jaw kind of drop,” Iowa assistant Abby Stamp says.

    Clark passes with pin-point accuracy. Teammates and coaches alike laud her work ethic and improved leadership skills. But it’s Clark’s 3-point shooting which often immediately jumps out to viewers. She has been compared to some other recent greats in the basketball world — Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry, Milwaukee Bucks guard Damian Lillard and New York Liberty guard Sabrina Ionescu, to name a few. But how does Clark actually stack up when compared to such sharp-shooters?

    Though the NBA and college 3-point line are different distances (the NBA is 23 feet, 9 inches at the top of the arc, and the college line and WNBA line are both 22 feet, 1 ¾ inches at the top), The Athletic dove into six categories to show just how prolific Clark really is and to explain how she’s become so lethal from behind the arc. The comparison — use the button at the top of most graphs to toggle through Clark’s numbers from last season and this year (with games through Dec. 14) — reveals how this college star already shoots like some all-time professional greats.

    Clark’s comfort at shooting from long range stems from years of practice. While visiting home in Des Moines, Clark often shoots 100 logo 3-pointers during workouts, her trainer Kevin O’Hare says. Her goal is to make at least 50. “It’s just something that she’s always worked on,” O’Hare says. He adds that before Clark attempts any heaves she “does all the early fundamental things to get out to that point.” Considering she attempts that many from beyond 30 feet, a 25-to-30-foot 3 is very much in range.

    Through Dec. 14, just more than 31 percent of Clark’s shot attempts came from between 25 and 30 feet of the rim, which is 22.1 percent above this year’s national average in college, according to CBB Analytics. She is shooting 40.5 percent on such looks, more than 11 percent greater than her peers.

    It’s not a coincidence she shoots from such a distance, nor is it chance when such attempts go in. In addition to offseason training sessions, Stamp says Clark works on such attempts before, during and after practice. Iowa bigs also often set higher screens in practices when Clark is on the ball, knowing that she’s more likely to pull up from such distances in games. In that regard, she’s like Curry, Lillard and Ionescu in how their own teams adjust spacing when they are on the floor.

    Iowa coach Lisa Bluder always has been offensive-minded, imploring her teams to play with pace. The setup has been ideal for Clark, who is fond of pushing the basketball and making a play before her opponents can get set. Clark has taken more than 50 3s in the first 10 seconds of a possession this season. She took 137 above-the-break 3s last season, shooting 39 percent on such attempts. “Sometimes she’s gonna get that best look right away as we come across half court,” Stamp says.

    In these early-shot situations, Clark navigates a balancing act, avoiding forcing up shots and instead figuring out when to get teammates involved and allow possessions to develop. “It’s not an easy science, the shot selection question with her, because we’ve seen her make so many challenging shots over the course of practices and her career,” Stamp says. Iowa views a good attempt for all of its players as one that is in rhythm and in range. Clark’s range is, of course, different from her peers, as is her willingness to pull up right away. She’s like Curry in that regard, with the Warriors star having averaged 5.2 3-point attempts last season with between 15-24 seconds remaining on the shot clock.

    Clark, not surprisingly, is Iowa’s lead creator. This season, according to CBB Analytics, her usage rate is in the 100th percentile nationally, trailing only USC freshman star JuJu Watkins. In addition to being an elite shooter, Clark passes with precision. As her college career has progressed, she has found new ways to finish around the rim as well. “We’ve been just so thrilled with the way she’s developed her entire game,” Stamp says.

    From the perimeter, though, Clark has shown she can create her own shot and benefit from kick-outs from her teammates. Last season, she led the nation in unassisted 3-pointers, with 1.8 per game. She is leading the country again this season, ranking in the 98th percentile of assisted 3-pointers as well by making 0.7 more per game. “I would compare her to Steph; obviously, you take it with a grain of salt,” O’Hare says. “In how far out she shoots, her release, how good she is with the ball in her hands to create stuff.” As the data shows, Clark, Lillard and Curry all can convert on assisted and unassisted chances. Ionescu has proven she can shoot from long range in the WNBA, but over the last three seasons, she made 0.56 unassisted 3s per game.

    Clark seldom shies away from attempting a 3-pointer off the catch. As an Iowa freshman, she took 116 catch-and-shoot 3s, making 46.6 percent, according to Synergy Sports. Both her total number of catch-and-shoot attempts and percentage slipped as a sophomore. But throughout her tenure, the Hawkeyes’ coaching staff has continued to develop that part of Clark’s 3-point arsenal. “We really worked on trying to come off screens, change speed, change directions, sprint to the ball, get your feet ready, get yourself square to be able to catch-and-shoot off screens more,” Stamp says.

    In private workouts, that has meant putting down cones to mark Iowa bigs setting screens, and mimicking the many defensive machinations an opposing player could take when trying to slow Clark. She is on pace to shoot more catch-and-shoot 3s this season than previously in her college career. Not surprisingly, it’s an area in which she’s thrived — shooting a better percentage than Lillard in his final season with the Portland Trail Blazers and nearly matching Curry’s output in 2022-23. Clark’s current shooting percentage on catch-and-shoot 3s is also superior to Ionescu during her final season at Oregon, when she shot a still-impressive 34 percent on such chances, according to Synergy Sports.

    Few players, if any, have had greener lights than Clark. With every milestone, she cements the fact that she has accomplished plenty that no other player in college has done. Still, Stamp does think of another comparison for Clark. She cites Megan Gustafson, a former Naismith Player of the Year, who had been Iowa’s all-time leading scorer until Clark passed her earlier this season. Gustafson is a 6-foot-3 post player who attempted only two 3s in four years at Iowa, but she and Clark are both “masters of their craft” in the eyes of Stamp.

    This past weekend, Clark moved to No. 9 all-time in career scoring in women’s college basketball. If she stays healthy and maintains her current scoring average, she is on pace to pass former Washington star Kelsey Plum for No. 1 before the end of the season. Whether Clark then decides to enter the WNBA or return for a fifth year at Iowa remains uncertain, but her success has already put her in conversations with basketball’s elite.

    The Athletic’s Seth Partnow contributed to this report.

    (Illustration and data visuals: John Bradford / The Athletic; Photo of Stephen Curry: Thearon W. Henderson / Getty Images, photos of Caitlin Clark: G Fiume / Getty Images and Steph Chambers / Getty Images, photo of Sabrina Ionescu / Mitchell Leff)

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  • Draymond starts counseling, out at least 3 weeks

    Draymond starts counseling, out at least 3 weeks

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    Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green has started counseling and is expected to remain sidelined via suspension for at least the next three weeks, league sources said.

    The NBA announced an indefinite suspension for Green on Wednesday for striking Phoenix Suns center Jusuf Nurkić in the face during a game one night earlier. Joe Dumars, NBA executive vice president and head of basketball operations, said in a statement that Green’s “repeated history of unsportsmanlike acts” was a factor in the decision.

    League sources said Green, 33, was expected to receive counseling and work with the Warriors and NBA while suspended. People around Green and the organization said the four-time NBA champion has been understanding and prepared to undergo the process required to return to the team in a full capacity. Those sources would not reveal the specifics of Green’s counseling out of respect for his privacy.

    A three-week timeframe would mean his suspension stretches approximately 12 games.

    Green’s latest incident — his 20th career ejection — came in the third quarter of Tuesday’s game between the Warriors and Suns. Green appeared to be grappling for post positioning against Nurkić near the corner, swung around and nailed Nurkić in the face with a wild right arm. Nurkić fell and stayed down for about a minute.

    Officials stopped the game for a review, which did not take long. Green was ejected and didn’t even dispute it. He ran straight to the locker room.

    Following the game, Green apologized to Nurkić. He said it was unintentional and he was trying to sell a foul by flailing his arms.

    “As you know, I’m not one to apologize for things I meant to do, but I do apologize to Jusuf. Because I didn’t intend to hit him,” Green said. “I sell calls with my arms.”

    Green’s suspension is the sixth of his NBA career and his second this season. The league also suspended Green for five games in November for his involvement in an altercation against the Minnesota Timberwolves, when Green put Rudy Gobert in a headlock. He served two separate one-game suspensions last season — once for accumulating 16 technical fouls, and a second in the playoffs for stepping on Sacramento Kings power forward Domantas Sabonis.

    GO DEEPER

    A look at Draymond Green’s suspensions

    Warriors coach Steve Kerr said he thought an indefinite suspension for Green made sense to help the 12th-year veteran make a change.

    “To me, this is about more than basketball. It’s about helping Draymond,” Kerr said. “I think it’s an opportunity for Draymond to step away and to make a change in his approach and his life and that’s not an easy thing to do. That’s not something you say, ‘OK, five games and then he’s going to be fine.’”

    The Warriors (12-14) are 2-1 since Green’s ejection. They went 2-3 during his earlier five-game suspension.

    Required reading

    (Photo: Meg Oliphant / Getty Images)

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    The New York Times

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  • Amick: Have Draymond Green and these Warriors reached the tipping point?

    Amick: Have Draymond Green and these Warriors reached the tipping point?

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    He wouldn’t stop talking about the carry.

    This was Draymond Green’s first game back from his five-game suspension, with the Golden State Warriors forward having completed his league-mandated discipline for dragging Rudy Gobert all over the court as if he were playing hoops on a WWE stage. He was 13 months removed from the infamous Jordan Poole punch, six months removed from the Domantas Sabonis foot-stomp and two weeks away from the Jusuf Nurkić swinging punch against the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday night that led to the NBA suspending him indefinitely a day later. And Green, whose struggling Warriors had led the Sacramento Kings for nearly all of this Nov. 28 rematch of playoff opponents, was being consumed by his own intensity — again.

    No matter what was transpiring around him, Green just went on and on about how Malik Monk had palmed the ball while coming down the floor and — like so many thousands of NBA players who came before him — wasn’t penalized. He re-enacted Monk’s carry in dramatic form for the officials — the same ones he’d spent nearly a minute before jawing at when a Trey Lyles elbow went uncalled and compelled Green to flop — and drew a technical foul from Mitchell Ervin that flipped the energy in the building. But that didn’t stop Green from, well, carrying on.

    After Green was pulled from the game seconds later, he told Warriors coach Steve Kerr all about what Monk had done. He continued his anti-carrying crusade on the bench, where Green engaged in a spirited shouting match with player development coach Anthony Vereen that involved actual finger pointing in Green’s direction and was tense enough that Jonathan Kuminga and several others decided to play the part of peacemakers. Meanwhile, a Kings comeback from a 24-point deficit unfolded on the floor. The frustration on several nearby Warriors’ faces, among them Klay Thompson, was quite visible. And with good reason.

    Yet again, as has been the case so many times of late, Green was seemingly obsessed with the micro instead of the macro. With the game, the season and the back end of their storied dynasty on the line, here was Green getting so emotionally twisted in the moment that he forgot to consider the long-term ramifications of his actions. The more surprising part, and the thing that seemed to leave the door wide open for incidents yet to come, was that Green was so comfortable being this level of extra, as the kids say, even after the two ejections and five-game suspension that had already made life so unnecessarily hard on his team this season.

    “The Warriors … need to keep their poise and play basketball,” TNT announcer Stan Van Gundy had said on the telecast during that stretch, which led to the Kings’ 124-123 win.

    By “Warriors,” of course, he meant Green. And what they really need, with the Feb. 8 trade deadline looming, is to finally start answering the hard questions that everyone inside the Chase Center seems to want to ignore.

    Where is this all going? And with that league-record $400 million payroll (including luxury taxes) hanging over their heads, when might Warriors owner Joe Lacob decide that it’s time for a significant change? As one front-office executive put it in the wake of Green’s leveling of Nurkić, “I’d imagine some reassessments (are happening now).”

    But if winning titles is the end goal for them all — and it is — then the uncomfortable truth is that this revered group of future Hall of Famers doesn’t look capable of coming anywhere close. They’re getting beaten on most nights, having lost 12 of their last 17 after a 5-1 start. They look broken in ways that go well beyond the box score, with a litany of late-game situations having gone south during this brutal start. They look … cooked.

    Everyone except for Chef Curry, of course. And that’s just not enough.

    Steph is still Steph, 35 years of age and all. But the 33-year-old Thompson, whose looming free agency has added another stress point after he and the Warriors failed to come to terms on an extension, is having his worst year in more than a decade on both ends of the floor. The 33-year-old Green, who was given a four-year, $100 million deal in the summer, can still play at a high level but is still an issue because (see above).

    The production of Andrew Wiggins, whose renaissance was such a key factor in their 2022 title run, is down drastically across the board. And how’s this for added uncertainty: You have a coach in Kerr whose contract is up after this season and a general manager in Mike Dunleavy Jr. who is in his first season of filling those massive shoes left by the departed Bob Myers.

    Everywhere I go these days, there are human reminders of how much the Warriors’ world has changed. You see Myers on the media side now as an ESPN analyst, the retired Andre Iguodala heading up the players union as executive director and former Warriors player/front-office executive Shaun Livingston joining his old teammate on the NBPA. These are all people who used to get through to Green, men whose credibility came in handy during those many times when a Green-inspired crisis would inevitably arrive.

    That matters, of course, because it’s the absence of a calming effect that might force these Warriors to make hard decisions sooner than they might have hoped. It’s tough to keep trudging forward when the coals beneath your feet are this hot. You could see that dynamic play out in real time in the game in Sacramento, where it was so clear there was no one on this team — including Steph — who could persuade Green to shift his energy in a more positive direction for the sake of the greater good.

    We’ll never know what might have happened if the Warriors took a harder line with Green in these recent years, most notably after the Poole punch two Octobers ago. He was never suspended for that ugly act, as the Warriors decided instead to fine him while greenlighting a short sabbatical that ended just in time for the start of the regular season. The league, which showed deference to the Warriors’ celebrated culture in that instance and chose to let the organization handle the situation, stayed on the sideline.

    In hindsight, that was clearly a mistake. A soft precedent was set, and the Warriors would later reconfirm their loyalty to Green by re-upping him last summer not long before trading Poole to the Washington Wizards (in the three-team deal that brought them Chris Paul).

    But it doesn’t matter how they got here anymore. The frequency of the incidents involving Green, and the near-constant strain for all involved that comes with it, makes it hard to imagine this group riding off into the retirement sunset together anymore.

    Not at this price. Not with these goals. And not, most of all, with Green single-handedly sabotaging their twilight years like this.

    GO DEEPER

    The Warriors should consider exiting the Draymond-vs.-NBA drama


    Get The Bounce, a daily NBA Newsletter from Zach Harper and Shams Charania, in your inbox every morning. Sign up here.

    (Photo: Christian Petersen / Getty Images)

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    The New York Times

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  • Do Better: Warriors Draymond Green Suspended Indefinitely By The NBA 24 Hours After Latest Flagrant Foul

    Do Better: Warriors Draymond Green Suspended Indefinitely By The NBA 24 Hours After Latest Flagrant Foul

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    Draymond Green – Source: Christian Petersen / Getty

    The NBA has suspended Draymond Green indefinitely after his latest on-court fiasco with Phoenix Suns center Jusuf Nurkic.

    Draymond Green is one of the staples of the Golden State Warriors franchise. Also, he brings the most drama and shame to the franchise as well. Green plays a very old-school type of basketball that involves throwing elbows like it’s a Lil Jon music video. On Tuesday, December 12, Draymond once again was ejected for the 18th time in his career the AP reports.

    This stemmed from him busting Suns center Jusuf Turkic upside the head and receiving a Flagrant 2 foul. After a string of concerning behavior on the court, the NBA has announced it is suspending green indefinitely.

    NEW YORK, Dec. 13, 2023 – Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green has been suspended indefinitely for striking Phoenix Suns center Jusuf Nurkic in the face, it was announced today by Joe Dumars, Executive Vice President, Head of Basketball Operations. This outcome takes into account Green’s repeated history of unsportsmanlike acts. The incident occurred with 8:23 remaining in the third quarter of the Warriors’ 119-116 loss

    to the Suns on Dec. 12 at Footprint Center. Green received a Flagrant Foul 2 and was ejected. Green’s suspension will begin immediately. He will be required to meet certain league and team conditions before he returns to play.

    While it may seem harsh to suspend him with no time frame for a return this wasn’t nearly the first time Green went full UFC on the court. We all remember his infamous falcon punch on Jordan Poole that went viral. Just a few weeks ago we witnessed him put Rudy Gobert in a MMA headlock for no reason. Perhaps the most egregious Draymond MMA highlight is when he stomped on the chest of Domantis Sabonis’.

    Furthermore, we all saw this coming sooner or later regardless if his latest incident was intentional or not. Hopefully whatever punishment he receives will help him find the root cause of his frustrations and violent tendencies.

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    Noah Williams

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  • Draymond Green Swears He Didn’t Mean To Hit Jusuf Nurkic. You Be The Judge.

    Draymond Green Swears He Didn’t Mean To Hit Jusuf Nurkic. You Be The Judge.

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    The controversial Warriors forward, who faces another possible suspension, took a wild swing at the Suns player and knocked him to the ground.

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  • Long live the OG, the NBA’s unheralded tone-setters

    Long live the OG, the NBA’s unheralded tone-setters

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    Why are teams paying veterans millions of dollars to rarely play?

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    The New York Times

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  • Warriors, Timberwolves fight involves 3 ejections

    Warriors, Timberwolves fight involves 3 ejections

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    By Jon Krawczynski, Anthony Slater and Marcus Thompson II

    Golden State Warriors guard Klay Thompson, forward Draymond Green and Minnesota Timberwolves forward Jaden McDaniels were ejected after an altercation broke out in the first quarter of Tuesday’s game.

    Just 1:43 into the matchup, Thompson and McDaniels got into a scuffle at midcourt that saw both players grabbing each other’s jersey. Moments later Minnesota’s Rudy Gobert — who appeared to attempt to break up the altercation — was grabbed around the neck by Green before players and coaches stepped in to break it up.

    Thompson, Green and McDaniels were sent off.

    The Timberwolves won 104-101 over the Warriors. Minnesota improved to 8-2 while Golden State fell to 6-6.

    GO DEEPER

    Rudy Gobert calls out Draymond Green’s ‘clown behavior’ as he gets the better of latest spat

    What exactly happened between Thompson and McDaniels?

    Thompson was boxing out McDaniels in the right corner on one of the night’s first possessions. As part of it, Thompson appeared to grab McDaniels’ jersey. McDaniels took exception. He grabbed Thompson’s jersey and began to yank it, which sparked a strange and extended tug of war between the two that devolved into a much larger dust up. Thompson’s jersey was ripped. After the review, both were ejected. — Anthony Slater, Warriors beat writer

    What exactly happened between Green and Gobert?

    As the confrontation between McDaniels and Thompson spilled onto the Warriors side of the court, Gobert came in and grabbed Thompson from behind. That brought Green into the fracas, and he put Gobert in a chokehold to pull him off of Thompson. Karl-Anthony Towns and Anthony Edwards grabbed Green and Gobert, and tempers continued to flare. McDaniels was particularly heated, needing to be restrained by teammates as he hollered at Thompson. — Jon Krawczynski, Timberwolves beat writer

    Is there a longer-term concern for Warriors?

    Potentially. I’d doubt Thompson and McDaniels get any extra discipline, but everyone knows the history between Green and the NBA. They even admitted after the first round stomp of Domantas Sabonis that they suspended Green a game partially because of his past. That’ll presumably play into the equation again as they review this incident in the coming days. If they deem Green’s headlock of Gobert excessive, he could be facing another suspension on the heels of two separate ejections this week. — Slater

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Warriors’ observations: What went down in loss to the Timberwolves

    What losing McDaniels means for Timberwolves

    McDaniels is the Wolves’ best perimeter defender. His importance for this game was reduced slightly with Steph Curry sitting out, but the Wolves still will miss the pressure he can put on Chris Paul and Andrew Wiggins. From a team perspective, the fight definitely seemed to rattle the Wolves early in the game. They struggled at first to calm the game down, missing shots, turning the ball over and looking disorganized on defense, which played into the short-handed Warriors’ hands in the early going. — Krawczynski

    How the Warriors replace Green

    Green’s famous last altercation was with his own teammate. It cost him some credibility in the locker room. How will this impact his place in the locker room since he came to the defense of Thompson? Will it be seen as a good thing? The Warriors’ early season start has been characterized by the good vibes, which were contrary to last year. Green said the chemistry last year was awful.

    Will this be a galvanizing force for the Warriors? Or the latest incident where Green going overboard costs the Warriors?

    This figures to create a big opportunity for Jonathan Kuminga. With Green out, that’s 30 minutes of action available on the Warriors’ front court. The Warriors desperately need one of their young players to take a leap, especially as length and athleticism have been known to cause the Warriors problems.

    Another potential opportunity arises for Trayce Jackson-Davis, the rookie big the Warriors love. Green is essentially the Warriors’ back-up center. — Marcus Thompson II, senior columnist

    Required reading

    (Photo: Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

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    The New York Times

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  • Nike NBA City Edition 2023-24: Every alternate jersey ranked from No. 30 to No. 1

    Nike NBA City Edition 2023-24: Every alternate jersey ranked from No. 30 to No. 1

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    The 2023-24 Nike NBA City Edition uniforms were unveiled last Thursday. NBA fans will be treated to another season where alternate uniforms, according to Nike, continue to “represent the stories, history and heritage that make each franchise unique.”

    The uniforms are now in their seventh season with the NBA, and they have been a big hit in the past. Home teams will wear the uniforms throughout the NBA In-Season Tournament, which tipped off last Friday and will run until Dec. 9.

    The big question: How does this year’s collection of uniforms look?


    The 30 Nike NBA City Edition jerseys for the 2023-24 season.

    The unveiling gave The Athletic’s team of Jason Jones, James Edwards III and Kelly Iko an opportunity to discuss the jerseys in depth. The trio conferred about all 30 City Edition jerseys and came up with its own power rankings. The writers ranked each team using a scoring system where 30 points were given to their favorite jersey, all the way to one point given to their least favorite. This explains the numbers in parentheses next to each writer’s name below.

    Which jersey was the collective favorite? Here are the rankings and the writers’ thoughts of each, starting from worst to first.

    (All images are courtesy of Nike and the NBA)



    The Wizards jersey pays homage to the 40 boundary stones of the original outline of the District of Columbia.

    Edwards (5 points): This makes me want a Mountain Dew Baja Blast from Taco Bell.

    Iko (2): Have you ever chewed, like, five Skittles at once and looked at it? This is that. Come on, y’all.

    Jones (1): There’s a lot going on here. Doesn’t really work for me.


    This jersey was made in collaboration with Brooklyn artist and designer Brian Donnelly, known professionally as KAWS.

    Jones (7): The artwork for “Nets” is supposed to give a graffiti vibe. I wish it would have leaned more into that, especially with this season occurring as hip-hop celebrates its 50th anniversary.

    Edwards (6): I’m all for trying to be creative and different; you take a risk when you do that. But the Nets took a risk, and they failed. Miserably.

    Iko (1): It’s actually fitting that this was inspired by KAWS’ “Tension,” because that’s exactly the type of headache I get from looking at this for too long. This is a bad jersey. It’s actually baffling because KAWS makes some really dope art.


    The triangle-shaped word mark is a reminder of the throwback design after the team moved from Minneapolis in the 1960s.

    Jones (10): A mash between the early and modern Lakers. Not a big fan of the triangular shape of “Los Angeles,” but I understand its ties to the early days of the Lakers in the city. What would have been wild would have been something lake-related. That would have stood out more than another black jersey.

    Iko (5): What’s going on in Los Angeles? I get it, Laker Nation rides hard for its team, but when I go to the store, I’m not thinking about the triangle offense. It could be worse though … like Brooklyn’s.

    Edwards (4): I don’t really care about the reasoning for the placement of “Los Angeles.” It looks bad. Horrific. It’s like someone went to JOANN Fabrics and tried to make a custom Lakers jersey but ended up not measuring the width of the jersey correctly. For such a historic franchise, I expected better.


    Memphis’ jersey prominently features the “MEM” logo that has been seen on the waistbands and collars of past uniforms.

    Iko (15): I once got lost on Beale Street trying to get to FedExForum in Memphis. These give me the same confused vibe. The font is a cool idea, but it wasn’t executed well enough. Back to the drawing board.

    Jones (3): The Grizzlies had my favorite City Edition jersey last season. Not so much this year. It’s basic. Doesn’t have the same personality as last season when the jersey screamed Memphis swagger.

    Edwards (2): Someone on social media said the Memphis jersey is a QR code to see the actual jersey, and I can’t stop laughing. Horrible.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    NBA City Edition 2022-23: Every alternate jersey ranked from 29(?) to 1


    Indiana’s jersey has a street-art look resembling the murals and signs throughout Indianapolis neighborhoods.

    Edwards (13): I don’t mind this, because it’s different without being too extra. The color combination is obscure, and while it doesn’t make any sense to me in terms of a connection to Indianapolis, it’s not an ugly jersey. Middle of the pack for me.

    Iko (6): There is way too much going on. These are a mess.

    Jones (2): When I think of Indiana, I don’t think vibrant, which is what this jersey is. I’ve been to Indianapolis plenty of times, but this just doesn’t connect with the city for me.


    Heat fans are all in on “Heat Culture,” which this jersey proudly acknowledges.

    Iko (10): “Heat Culture” is one of those things that should be said and understood, not displayed on the front of a jersey. Miami has so many more things to offer as a city that could have been used with these jerseys. Missed opportunity.

    Jones (9): Nothing “Miami Vice”-related? No vibrant colors? A red-and-black jersey seems pretty simple. Adding “Heat Culture” is a nice touch, but when it comes to Miami, I prefer the “Vice” theme.

    Edwards (3): I don’t think saying “Heat Culture” is as corny as most people do, but a jersey that says “Heat Culture” … yeah, that’s corny.


    Denver’s jersey shows “5280” across the chest. A mile is 5,280 feet. Denver’s the “Mile-High City.” This one is pretty easy.

    Iko (14): This might have ranked higher if pickaxes were on the front and the mountains were on the back. They also could have done without the “5280” slapped across the middle. Three and four numbers on the front of a jersey is for AAU. Distracting.

    Jones (8): I’m still not sure how I feel about “5280” across the chest. I understand the significance, but how many numbers do you need on the front of a jersey? It takes away from the Denver skyline in the background.

    Edwards (1): Whoever came up with this jersey should be suspended (with pay, of course). I’m sorry. I like Denver as a city, and I love the Nuggets, but these are comically bad. Some players will have six numbers on the front of their jerseys when Denver wears them. Six.


    A black jersey with purple and highlighter-green accents gives a vibrant look for a New Orleans team representing a vibrant city.

    Edwards (12): Do these glow in the dark? If not, that’s disappointing.

    Iko (12): Somehow, some way, I blame (Pelicans writer) Will Guillory for these.

    Jones (4): The perfect jersey to wear around Halloween.


    Oklahoma City’s jersey aims to celebrate the city’s community art and appreciate the landscape of the Sooner State.

    Edwards (20): I like the color combinations, as well as the font of “OKC.” I’m a fan of these.

    Jones (5): This scheme matches the “Love’s” patch. Maybe that was intentional. The orange jumps out, but it’s pretty simple overall.

    Iko (4): This makes me think of McDonald’s. These are pretty blah, but they might look better framed.


    This jersey was designed in collaboration with Los Angeles-based artist Jonas Wood. “Clips” recreates the team’s word mark from the 1980s.

    Edwards (17): I wanted to knock it down some points for being so basic, but the ugliness of some other jerseys made it hard to penalize the Clippers for not trying.

    Iko (7): Did Marcus Morris make this as a parting gift? Morris averaged 12 points as a Clipper. This is that, but in jersey form: I came to work and I did the job that was asked of me.

    Jones (6): Nothing too fancy with this. No cool backstory or details in the description. Just a plain “Clips” jersey.


    “Chicago” printed vertically on the jersey, coupled with “Madhouse on Madison” on the jock tag is set to remind Bulls fans of the old Chicago Stadium days.

    Edwards (15): I ended up with them in the middle of the pack because I don’t like the placement of “Chicago.” It should be a little bit lower. That messed it all up for me.

    Jones (12): The intent is to be a nod to the old Chicago Stadium of the early 1990s. “Chicago” down the front of the jersey reminds me of the shooting shirts worn by a young Michael Jordan. It’s not the most imaginative, but it works.

    Iko (3): I understand the reference to Chicago Stadium from the ’90s, and I’m sure the locals really draw to the style, but I’ve never been a fan of the vertical lettering. It just makes for an awkward space in the middle.


    A collaboration with lifestyle brand Kith helps the Knicks celebrate the teams from the late 1990s and early 2000s.

    Jones (11): There’s a lot going on here. Pinstripes. Doubling up on “New York.” The black down the side. Just a lot.

    Iko (11): I feel like the Knicks have had a version of this every year for the last 10,000 years. It’s like the printer lagged out.

    Edwards (9): A drunk version of a Knicks jersey. That’s all I got.


    The Hawks use lowercase font and a “Lift as we fly” mantra to set the tone for this year’s City Edition jersey.

    Jones (15): Nothing will top the MLK jersey for me. I like the blue on this, but it’s pretty basic compared to some of the previous versions.

    Edwards (14): They’re fine. They’re middle of the pack to me, which might not say a lot because there are some absolutely horrendous City Edition jerseys.

    Iko (13): Maybe it’s the combination of the lowercase font on these and the peachy color that throws me off, but it just seems OK. There’s no story or anything that really speaks to me. It’s fine — nothing more, nothing less.


    The Spurs jersey pays homage to Hemisfair, the 1968 World’s Fair. It’s a retro look that values the heart of downtown San Antonio.

    Iko (19): I didn’t expect the Spurs to go with the white base, but this will look really dope under the arena lights. Also, Ricky’s Tacos in San Antonio is the best place many have never heard of.

    Jones (14): Would I wear this one? Probably not … but I like it. It’s very San Antonio. It definitely fits the city.

    Edwards (10): The lettering is cool. That’s about it. This is too basic.


    The Warriors jersey embodies San Francisco and its history of cable cars. The “San Francisco” word mark goes uphill as cable cars would around the city.

    Iko (18): San Francisco is a unique city, from its transportation system to landscape. That matches the lettering of these jerseys. I’ve ridden through the streets for years, and each time, the hills surprise me. The black on the jersey also is really emboldened, if that makes sense.

    Jones (17): The more I look at it, the more I like it. The cable car design of the “San Francisco” lettering works. The simplicity of the design with hints of the cable car history makes this a nice alternate jersey.

    Edwards (11): The idea was cool, but the execution is meh to me. It’s an OK jersey with awkward lettering. Not the best, but not the worst.


    Toronto’s jersey features a gold background and bolts of electricity as pinstripes. “We the North” is above the jock tag.

    Iko (20): Sweet threads. I love the cultural melting pot Toronto is, and that is reflected in the making of this jersey. These will be a hit in the city.

    Jones (20): The gold and lightning accents make this one of the Raptors’ best jerseys. “We the North” also reminds everyone that Toronto truly is an international city.

    Edwards (7): I don’t like gold uniforms at all. Just a personal preference. I love Toronto, though. It’s my favorite North American city. However, hard pass on the jersey.


    Grammy Award-winning singer/songwriter Leon Bridges inspired the Mavericks jersey. Bridges, a Fort Worth, Texas, native, has his signature on the jock tag.

    Edwards (21): I want to first shout out Erykah Badu while we’re on the topic of Dallas and R&B. Legend. This jersey is one of the better ones simply because of the font, colors and simplicity. It’s clean, and it pops. Hard to not like this.

    Jones (13): Tapping into the R&B history of the region makes for a cool backstory. The jersey itself is pretty simple, but the details via the input of Leon Bridges are a nice discussion point.

    Iko (16): I was actually curious about how and where Dallas would draw inspiration prior to these coming out. Leon Bridges is awesome, especially tied with the city’s history of R&B (shout-out to Tevin Campbell). For some reason, I keep thinking about Michael Finley when I see these.


    The state known as the “Land of 10,000 Lakes” features blue water tones through most of the jersey with “Minnesota” across the chest in white.

    Iko (26): Loooove these. The way the white dissolves into the blue gives a chilling effect. My mind immediately jumps to rapper Lil Yachty: “Cold Like Minnesota.”

    Jones (19): This gives off calm and soothing vibes, perfect for the Land of 10,000 Lakes. If the Timberwolves ran back the Prince alternate versions every year, I’d be happy, but this is a nice bounceback after last season’s version.

    Edwards (8): I guess I’ll be Debbie Downer here. These are mid, at best. Everything is smooshed at the top — the change in color, the number, “Minnesota” and the sponsors. I don’t love how small “Minnesota” reads. These would be lower for me if it weren’t for some of the nastiness that we’ve already talked about.


    In addition to having “Buzz City” across the chest, this Hornets jersey celebrates Spectrum Arena, as well as the Charlotte Mint, the first U.S. branch mint.

    Iko (21): You can never go wrong with teal and blue, and I really like how they incorporated the hornet influence. I can almost see Baron Davis crossing someone over in these. Nice work.

    Jones (18): Charlotte’s colors are some of the best in the league. I’m digging the gold touch, too. Much better than last season’s edition.

    Edwards (16): I agree with Jason. The Hornets have some of the best colors in the league. Hard to mess that up. These are clean, not too much.


    The Celtics mesh their traditional green with a wood grain pattern, paying respect to the city’s long history of furniture making.

    Edwards (22): If you’re not going to be creative, then keep it clean. Boston did. For my Michigan people, this jersey looks like an ad for Vernors.

    Iko (17): Maybe I’m in the minority, but I actually like the blending of the white on the front with the wood grain texture on the sides.

    Jones (16): Who knew Boston had a history of furniture making? I sure didn’t. The wood coloring on the side is also a nod to peach baskets, the part of history I would expect.


    The Kings jersey gives flashbacks of the 1968 Cincinnati Royals. The various crowns above the jock tag add a nice touch.

    Edwards (26): I’m going to sound like a hypocrite here, because the lettering doesn’t bug me nearly as much as the “Chicago” on the Bulls uniform, even though it’s just as high up the jersey. I think it’s because of the different colors. It breaks it up a little bit. These colors go together well. It’s sleek and clean.

    Jones (22): I’d be in favor of the Kings rocking this full-time. We need something that connects the Kings to their history with Oscar Robertson, and this jersey works.

    Iko (8): This is another one that James and Jason probably like, but I just can’t bring myself to it. Maybe it’s the width of the “Kings” stripes, but there’s a lot going on for me. I do like the colors, though.


    Celebrating Milwaukee’s Deer District is the theme with this year’s Bucks City Edition jersey. Milwaukee went with a blue and cream colorway.

    Jones (25): Another winner for the Bucks in the City Editions. The blue pops, and the cream “wave” is a nice touch. I’m just glad they didn’t go for a black jersey.

    Edwards (23): I like the colors, especially the cream design across the middle and down the side.

    Iko (9): I’m definitely in the minority with these. I love the historical connection to water used here, but really … using the arch as an ode to Fiserv Forum? Didn’t the arena open, like, five years ago? Not a fan.


    The Trail Blazers pay homage to the late Dr. Jack Ramsay, who coached the team to its only NBA title in 1977. Ramsay was known for wearing plaid in Portland.

    Jones (24): The plaid in honor of Dr. Jack Ramsay makes this a winner. It’s subtle, but it’s a great look. The Blazers kept it simple, but the history is in the details.

    Iko (23): Black is always a good default, and the Blazers did well with these. You don’t have to go for a home run all the time: A simple base hit will suffice.

    Edwards (18): Hard to hate it, easy not to love it. The plaid inside the lettering is a nice touch, visually and in terms of the backstory.


    With “City of Brotherly Love” across the chest, the Sixers jersey is inspired by the Reading Terminal Market, Philadelphia’s famous farmer’s market.

    Edwards (25): I’m a sucker for navy blue, red and white. Those three colors go together so well for me. I also really like the font on the front. Two thumbs up.

    Iko (22): It’s always hilarious hearing Philly associated with love, having spent quite a bit of time at 76ers games. But, really smooth color transition here, and the lettering is neat.

    Jones (21): Navy blue was a good play for the red and white. The Reading Terminal Market lettering also is a great addition. I’m always going to like seeing “City of Brotherly Love” on a jersey.


    The Rockets chose to honor the University of Houston’s Phi Slama Jama and Hakeem Olajuwon and Clyde Drexler, two hometown heroes, with their jerseys.

    Edwards (27): I like the connection to Phi Slama Jama. It looks classy. It’s not over the top.

    Iko (24): If you’re not from the city, you probably won’t get the cross reference between the University of Houston and the old Rockets teams, but this is a classic blend. This will sell like hotcakes at the Galleria.

    Jones (23): Phi Slama Jama gets some love with this design. Had to look up the shooting shirts worn by the University of Houston during Clyde Drexler and Hakeem Olajuwon’s college days to truly appreciate the design. Going with “H-Town” across the chest is a nice touch.


    Designed to resemble a suit of armor, the Magic jersey is Navy with silver outlining and incorporates the franchise’s star in place of the A in “Orlando” across the chest.

    Iko (30): My favorite. T-Mac. Penny. Shaq. Türkoğlu. All Magic legends, just like this jersey. It’s nostalgic. It’s smooth. It’s fire. This is how you do it. Take notes, Brooklyn.

    Jones (28): Going navy blue with the chain-link stripes feels like a modern version of the early Magic jerseys — which I like. The star for the “A” in Orlando is placed perfectly and will look good on the court.

    Edwards (19): I agree with the fellas. A modern twist on a ’90s basketball kid’s favorite jersey. Good job, Orlando.


    Cleveland’s jersey, from the font to word mark to patterns, shows love to its thriving performing arts center, considered the largest outside of New York.

    Iko (27): These are really dope. There’s intricate detail around the edges, and using the gold to highlight Cleveland’s theater scene is exactly the type of historical tidbit we never hear about. Awesome stuff.

    Jones (26): These jerseys work best when I learn something new. I had no idea of Cleveland’s connection to theater until learning about this jersey design. Cleveland has the largest performing arts center outside of New York? Wow. It’s simple, but the details make this one nice.

    Edwards (24): I didn’t know that either, Jason. Shout-out to the Cavs. It’s basic, but it’s done well. Good story. Definitely a top City Edition jersey.


    Utah’s jersey gives flashbacks of the jerseys from the late 1990s and early 2000s. It features the familiar mountain range across the chest.

    Edwards (29): The Karl Malone/John Stockton-era jerseys are some of my favorites of all time, and this is a great tweak of those. Give me any purple on a jersey. These aren’t as good as the Jazz uniforms from the ’90s — those are some of the best ever — but they are nice.

    Iko (28): Can the Jazz keep these forever? These are perfect. It’s not too much mountain for Utah fans, I don’t think, and the purple rocks.

    Jones (27): I’d take these over what the Jazz normally wear. The purple is perfect. The skyline works in paying homage to the best teams that played in Utah. I move that the Jazz stick with these jerseys.


    The jersey draws from the energy of the “Bad Boys” era. The jersey also honors Hall of Fame coach Chuck Daly with a “CD2” logo above the jock tag, his signature below it.

    Jones (30): One of the worst things from the late 1980s/early ’90s was that the Bad Boy Pistons didn’t play in black uniforms. Alternate jerseys weren’t the thing back then, but if they were, these would have been perfect. And how would anyone not like the crossbones here? The uniform captures the essence of the era perfectly.

    Edwards (30): These are clean. The connection to the “Bad Boys” era makes sense. It’s different from what the Pistons have done in the past. Well done. Very well done.

    Iko (25): I’d think Bill Laimbeer would rock these passionately. Everything about these screams Detroit Pistons basketball from back in the day — tough as nails, sleek and dark.


    Phoenix’s jersey reflects the city’s Hispanic culture, and the “El Valle” logo across the chest celebrates lowrider culture.

    Iko (29): It takes real talent to make purple and pink go together. These are the jerseys that make people smile. Well done.

    Jones (29): I love foreign languages on jerseys; the Suns hit a home run with this design. I also love the acknowledgement of lowrider culture. The design puts me in a custom ’64 Impala on a sunny day that’s bouncing down the street on switches.

    Edwards (28): Purple is my favorite color. I also like pink and teal. So, yeah, I’d be first in line to grab this if I were a Suns fan. Also, like Jason, I’m a fan of foreign languages on a jersey.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    NBA lineup changes: Who’s the same? Who’s different? Are rotations here to stay?

    (Illustration: Sam Richardson / The Athletic; photos courtesy of Nike and the NBA)

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    The New York Times

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  • Draymond Green Gets Kicked In The Groin And Fans Go Nuts Over The ‘Karma’

    Draymond Green Gets Kicked In The Groin And Fans Go Nuts Over The ‘Karma’

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    So when he took a foot to the groin from the Cleveland Cavaliers’ Jarrett Allen as they both went for a rebound, Green’s crumpling to the hardwood in pain didn’t necessarily elicit sympathy from every viewer.

    “Historically deserved,” one critic wrote.

    Check out some of the reactions here:

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