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SAN FRANCISCO – The Warriors were playing mere hours after one of their players asked for a trade. The Knicks were coming off a loss to hapless Sacramento the night before. Should there have been any surprise that both sides played with a hint of angst on Thursday night at Chase Center?
OK, maybe a little more than a little angst. Within a single 16-second stretch early in the fourth quarter of Golden State’s 126-113 victory, the officials initiated three separate reviews for possible flagrant fouls.
Draymond Green earned his second flagrant of the season when review showed he grabbed Karl-Anthony Towns’ ankle on a drive, while Brandin Podziemski and Towns avoided the harsh infraction.
So of course, it was a man who has a self-professed affection for confrontation who starred for the Warriors.
Jimmy Butler put up a hard-earned 32 points, eight rebounds and four assists against his old teammate-turned-enemy Towns, while Steph Curry poured in 27 points and seven assists. Moses Moody made seven 3-pointers to score 21, and Podziemski threw in 19 points of the bench.
“You attack and attack, and then you guard on the other end,” Butler said after putting up 22 shots and making 14 of them.
Towns scored 17 and grabbed 20 rebounds for New York, while Mikal Bridges scored 21 and OG Anunoby scored 25.
Golden State, with an engaged and active Kuminga on the bench after he asked for a trade earlier in the day, was playing the fifth of an eight-game homestand but came out flat.
The Knicks were playing the final leg of a four-game road trip, and were without their best player Jalen Brunson (28.2 points per game) and backup center Mitchell Robinson. Miles McBride scored 25 starting in Brunson’s place.
New York jumped out to a 33-19 lead midway through the first quarter, using their speed advantage to create a plethora of open shots.
Golden State did not stay dormant. Butler scored nine points in the quarter and led a second unit that cut the deficit to just 35-30 by the end of the quarter. The teams then traded leads for the majority of the second quarter and the Warriors went to halftime up 62-59.
“Jimmy was incredible tonight,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “He’s so good, he’s so dominant in a very subtle way. he just controlst heg ame, he never turns it over, creates shots for other people.”
A great stretch from the starting five to begin the third quarter (more on that later) was a large reason Golden State led 99-87 after three quarters.
The Warriors (23-19), after many replay reviews, finished off their fourth win in five games. They will greet Curry’s hometown team, the Charlotte Hornets, on Saturday.
“We’re doing what we’re supposed to dot develop an identity,” Curry said. “We’re trying to create a little bit of a run, especially in this homestand … I like where we’re at, I like the vibes, I like the idea of how we’re playing.
Same starting lineup, interesting results

When Quinten Post checked out with 6:55 left in the first quarter, the Warriors were down 21-11 as the Knicks drove into the paint and sprayed passes to open shooters at will.
This was nothing new for the starting five, which over the last month has put up an abysmal minus-1.3 net rating (113.5 offensive rating and 114.8 defensive rating). The Warriors’ rally began once Post and Moody were phased out for Melton and Gary Payton II.
The second half was a different story. The Warriors were up 81-72 when Post exited for Al Horford, the team outscoring the Knicks 19-13 during the stretch.
Melton-mania

De’Anthony Melton, minutes restriction be darned as he returns to 100% after ACL rehab, has quietly become the Warriors’ top scorer off the bench. He entered the night having scored in double figures in four consecutive games, including efforts of 22 and 23 points despite only playing around 25 minutes a night.
The combo guard has also become a fixture in Steve Kerr’s crunch time lineup as the team’s designated point of attack defender next to Steph Curry.
He was quieter against New York on the scoresheet (five points) but contributed in other ways, putting up two blocks. He was a stellar plus-17 in 23 minutes played.
Santos injured

Third-year wing Gui Santos has been a source of energy for the Warriors, often sparking the team with offensive boards and other effort plays that do not show up on the stat sheet.
But with 2:21 left in the first quarter, the Brazilian fan favorite crumpled to the floor after a collision with Josh Hart near midcourt. Santos appeared to roll his ankle.
He had to be helped off the court by team doctor Rick Celebrini, and Santos went straight back to the Warriors locker room. He was later diagnosed with a left ankle sprain. Kerr later told media that Santos didn’t expect it to be serious, but that the coach hadn’t talked to Celebrini yet.
















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Joseph Dycus
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Sausalito police arrested a man on assault allegations after a dispute over a $1.6 million boat at a brokerage.
The incident happened at about 1 p.m. Monday at the Sausalito Yacht Harbor, where the suspect expressed interest in buying the boat, according to police Capt. Brian Mather. An argument broke out between the suspect and a broker “over the legitimacy of the sale,” Mather said.
The suspect then tried to board a boat without permission, and staff told him to leave. The suspect refused and tried to assault an employee, then left as a broker called police.
Officers found the suspect walking nearby. He allegedly refused to stop and was arrested after a brief struggle. Scott Michael Swan, 39, of San Francisco was booked into the Marin County Jail.
Swan was scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday on misdemeanor charges of assault and resisting police. He remained in custody in lieu of $2,000 bail.
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Cameron Macdonald
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One yardstick of California’s popularity as a place to live made a slight improvement last year.
My trusty spreadsheet has collected annual migration data dating back to 2004 from three major moving van providers — Allied, Atlas and United. While having someone else move your stuff by van is usually an option for upper-crust Americans changing home states, this metric is worth following because it tends to parallel California’s competition for residents with other states.
For 2025, the three van companies found that, on average, 44% of their California interstate relocations were arrivals of new residents. And while that’s the fourth-lowest inbound share in the past 22 years, it also marked a rare improvement.
Last year’s outflow was a bump up from 2024, when 41% of California van moves were inbound — the second-lowest rate over these 22 years. California’s inbound share of van moves had decreased in five of the previous six years.
Despite the cooling of the outflow, 2025 was still below the average 47% inbound rate since 2004 and the 52% high of 2014. The all-time low was 41% in 2023.
Last year, California van outflow declined across all three companies compared to 2024, marking only the third time in 14 years that these movers experienced such synchronized slips.
Yet each company’s inflows are near record lows.
Atlas had 46% inbound moves to California last year — its fifth-lowest since 2004. United saw 42% inbound — its third-lowest. Allied was at 43% — its eighth-lowest.
Looking back over two decades, the pandemic appears to have been a turning point for van movements in California.
From 2004 through 2019, California van moves averaged 49% inbound relocations. This includes the 2008-2014 period, when the Great Recession’s economic turmoil saw van moves into California exceed van moves out of the state.
Since coronavirus upended the economy, though, arrivals averaged just 42% of California relocations by vans.
Van moves represent a small slice of migration, typically affordable only to wealthier households or workers with an expenses-paid relocation from major corporations.
Still, California van moves often parallel domestic migration patterns.
Swings in inbound van moves have gone in the same direction as changes in the state’s net population loss to other states in 14 of the last 21 years. It’s worth noting that these two benchmarks of interstate relocations have moved in opposite directions over the past three years.
State demographics reports show California lost a net 215,500 residents to other states in the year ended in July 2025 — the first widening of the outmigration gap in four years.
That was 54% above 2024’s 140,100 net outflow and 24% below the average 183,800 outmigration since 2004.
California has long been a net loser of residents to other states. Outmigration since 2004 has ranged from only 34,200 in 2014 to 369,200 in 2023.
Jonathan Lansner is the business columnist for the Southern California News Group. He can be reached at jlansner@scng.com
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SAN FRANCISCO – Steph Curry flew around the court and buried improbable, high arcing 3-pointers. Jimmy Butler used his smarts and muscle to carve out space for tricky shots and deft passes. And every other Warrior did …. not much else on Sunday evening at Chase Center.
Curry scored 31 and Butler poured in 30, but De’Anthony Melton (10) was the only other Warrior in double-figures as the Hawks beat the home team 124-11.
The Warriors entered Sunday as one of the league’s hottest teams, having won 8 of their last 11, two of those losses being in overtime and by one point respectively.
The Warriors winning run was defined by low turnover numbers, forcing giveaways of the and an offense that averaged over 120 points over its last five games. But against the Hawks, the Warriors relapsed into old habits.
The Warriors had 15 turnovers but forced only 8, thus wasting big nights from their two offensive stars. Nickeil Alexander-Walker scored 24 and Jalen Johnson put up a 22-point double-double as the Hawks debuted new additions CJ McCollum and Corey Kispert. The Hawks traded for both in the trade deal that sent longtime star guard Trae Young to the Wizards.
That momentum was not felt early on, as neither the crowd – many wearing 49ers jerseys and celebrating the team’s playoff victory – nor the players had much verve to begin.
The Warriors cut the Hawks 70-58 third quarter lead to just two points during a 10-0 run that spanned just 1:12 and was capped by a Curry triple from the wing. The Hawks, boosted by two Luke Kennard triples, responded with a 22-5 run of their own.
Seeking a boost down 87-73, Steve Kerr inserted the seldom-used Buddy Hield into the game with two minutes remaining in the third. Nothing could spark a comeback though as the Hawks went up by as many as 25 in the fourth quarter and salted away the victory.
Golden State (21-19) will play host to Portland — with a rare 8 p.m. tipoff time — on Tuesday.
DPoY Duel
Matchups between top scorers are often lauded as the game’s premier matchups, but for those who appreciate the other side of the ball, Sunday’s game provided just as much entertainment.
Last season Dyson Daniels finished second in Defensive Player of the Year voting, while Draymond Green placed third. Daniels is a perimeter defender and Green guards frontcourt players, and both are arguably the best in their respective roles.
Green and Daniels each had a block, but surprisingly, the Hawks wing did not have a single steal. Daniels led the league in takeaways with 3.0 per game last season, and is still averaging a healthy 2.0 this year.
Al Horford faces first team
One benefit of the Warriors’ extended homestand and their lack of back-to-backs is that it allows Al Horford to play each game and establish a rhythm. Coming off the bench for his fourth consecutive game, Horford responded with five points, eight rebounds and two assists in just 16 minutes.
To a newer generation of NBA fans, Horford is associated with the Celtics, the team he won the 2024 NBA title with. But he established himself as a bonafide playmaker with Atlanta, making the all star team four times in nine seasons.
Horford was selected No. 3 overall in the 2007 Draft, and scored 8,288 points in Atlanta, the 14th-most in franchise history.











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SAN FRANCISCO – Warriors coach Steve Kerr ripped the federal government for its response to the death of Minnesota woman Renee Nicole Good.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel shot and killed Good while she was in her vehicle on Wednesday.
On Thursday night, the Minnesota Timberwolves held a moment of silence in honor of Good before tipoff against the Cavaliers.
“I’m glad that the Timberwolves recognized her life and the tragic nature of her death,” Kerr said during his pregame press conference on Friday. “It’s shameful, really, that in our country, we can have law enforcement officers who commit murder and seemingly get away with it.”
Good was shot in her SUV in a neighborhood south of downtown Minneapolis.
Video from multiple bystanders showed officers surrounding the vehicle and attempting to open the driver’s side door, and then an officer shooting Good as she began to drive forward.
Whether any officers were hit by the vehicle is open to interpretation.
The federal government, led by President Donald Trump, has taken the side of ICE and characterized Good’s shooting as self-defense.
“It’s shameful that the government can come out and lie about what happened when there’s video and witnesses who have all come out and disputed what the government is saying,” Kerr said. “So very demoralizing, devastating to lose anybody’s life, especially in that manner. Terribly sad for her family, and for her and that city, and I’m glad the Timberwolves came out and expressed that sadness.”
This is far from the first time the Warriors coach has commented on current events and social justice matters.
Kerr has consistently voiced political opinions during his 11-year career in charge of the Warriors, including an appearance as a speaker at the 2024 Democratic National Convention, and has already made headlines multiple times over the past year for sharing thoughts about hot-button issues.
In May, he wore a shirt in support of Harvard when the university was under pressure by the Trump administration.
During the preseason this past fall, Kerr attended a “No Kings” protest to voice his opposition to actions taken by the federal government.
In October, Kerr praised San Francisco mayor Daniel Lurie for helping the Bay Area avoid a “surge” of federal law enforcement into the region’s biggest city.
In November, Kerr spoke about the need for gun reform after legendary Oakland coach John Beam was murdered at Laney College and a high school student was shot at Skyline High in Oakland.
In December, Kerr again called for change after a mass shooting at Brown left several dead and more wounded.
“It’s human nature to just not want to deal with this stuff, and it’s human nature to just think this is so horrible, let’s not think about it,” Kerr told reporters in Portland. “We have to think about it.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report
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SAN FRANCISCO – Draymond Green did not have to look very far – in both a space or time sense – to recall the last time his mother was disappointed in the way he had acted during a game.
Holding his phone in his right hand during Wednesday’s press conference after a 120-113 Warriors win over the Milwaukee Bucks, Green read off, rapid-fire, a number of recent texts from his mother, Mary Babers.
“Remember what you love, and stop abusing it,” one text read, while another, written after a recent ejection, was simply: “What happened?”
Basketball is an emotional game, with its players and coaches sometimes prone to losing their cool. And if there was one thing to be learned from the press conference before and after Golden State’s victory, it was this:
Age and basketball accomplishments cannot diminish a man’s fear or respect for his mother.
A few days earlier, Steve Kerr, 60, had drawn the ire of official Brian Forte when the Warriors coach had to be restrained while directing a stream of profanities in his direction after the Warriors were on the wrong end of several controversial calls.
Kerr, who was ejected in the loss to the Clippers, was not worried about how the league or his players would react to his outburst. Instead, his biggest critic after the ejection was his mother, Ann Kerr, who lives in Southern California and made the short trip to Inglewood.
Ms. Kerr was not pleased with her son’s behavior.
“She looked horrified afterwards, and she asked me if I was going to hit the referee,” Kerr said. “I said, ‘Mom, I’ve never hit anybody in my life …. She said, ‘Why were all of those men holding you back?’ Well, that’s all part of the theatrics.”
Theatrics got superstar Steph Curry in trouble with his mother, Sonya, during a 2018 playoff series with Houston.
“I did the ‘This is my (expletive) house,’ and right into the camera, too,” Curry said, sheepishly adding. “No plausible deniability.”
Even the opposing team got in on the action. Bucks coach Doc Rivers, an accomplished point guard back in the 1980s and 1990s, once disappointed his mother by using foul language in the heat of the action.
“Oh yeah, my mom, she is a churchgoing lady, and I wasn’t using the right language one game, she called and let me have it,” Rivers said. “It’s interesting ’cause you say ‘I’m sorry,’ but you do know the next day you’re gonna do it again. It’s a tough one.”
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INGLEWOOD – Steve Kerr had finally had enough. After watching Steph Curry’s shot not count as an and-1, and then Gary Payton II’s blocked layup by John Collins not ruled as a goaltend early in the fourth quarter, the longtime Warriors coach lost it once there was a stoppage on a Curry foul.
He berated the referees to such a degree that the usually mild-mannered coach had to be restrained by members of his staff at Intuit Dome on Monday. The officials gave him technical fouls in rapid succession, and Kerr had to make the long walk back to the locker room with 7:57 left in the game after being ejected for the fifth time in his career, and first time since Mar. 28, 2022.
Terry Stotts, who coached Portland for nine seasons between 2012-21, took over as the Warriors’ acting coach. He oversaw a spirited effort that ultimately fell short as the Warriors lost 103-102 to a Clippers team missing James Harden.
Golden State shot just 3 of 24 in the third quarter, but somehow remained in the game, thanks to 10-2 run to start the fourth, a run fueled by the energy of Payton and Gui Santos. And after Kerr’s ejection, the Warriors remained competitive and trailed 94-90 with 3:06 left after Jimmy Butler made two free throws.
Curry cut the lead to just 101-100 with 1:05 left after his 3-pointer bounced off the rim and in, but he fouled out when he swiped down on Kris Dunn’s arm on the very next possession. Dunn’s two free throws extended the lead back to three points with 43 seconds remaining. Green’s layup made it 103-102 with 33 seconds left on the clock.
Kawhi Leonard missed a long 3-pointer, and the Warriors had the ball with seven seconds remaining. However, Butler’s fadeaway from the baseline went long and the Clippers held on.
Curry put up 27 points for the Warriors, while Butler scored 24 and Draymond Green dished out 12 assists. Leonard put up 24 points, and Kobe Sanders had 20 points. The Warriors actually had fewer turnovers than the point guard-less Clippers, winning the margin 20-7.
The hosts led 31-19 after one quarter, but the Warriors cut the deficit to just 55-51 at halftime. This came despite Golden State being a ghastly 5 of 22 from behind the arc. The team finished 10 of 41 from behind the line.
The Warriors (19-18) begin an eight-game homestand against Milwaukee on Wednesday.
Draymond Green’s rough night
Having been ejected from Monday’s game and having not finished three of the past eight games, Draymond Green was under a microscope Wednesday night.
After diving into the Warriors bench late in the second quarter, a crash that left his ribs bruised, he left the game but returned after halftime. That lasted all of two minutes, with Green leaving the game again after rolling his left ankle after defending a Leonard drive. He returned after the timeout.
Green drew a few groans from the mostly pro-Warriors crowd in SoCal when he took and missed a 3-pointer on three of the first four Golden State possessions, but he was an overwhelming positive overall.
Green finished the first half with a plus-11 in the box score, after being in the negative in 9 of his last 11 games. Despite giving up at least five inches and around 50 pounds to Ivica Zubac, Green used his low center of gravity to make it difficult for the Croatian center to get good position.
Stopping Kawhi
Leonard, who entered the game with arguably the hottest hand in the NBA. He won the conference player of the week honor after averaging 41.3 points per game last week, which he supplemented by maintaining his NBA-best 2.17 steals per game.
The Warriors initially began the game in single coverage against the two-time Finals MVP, which led to him scoring 10 first-quarter points. But when they began to send doubles his way, usually asking a guard to dig down, that left Nic Batum open for back-to-back corner 3-pointers.
The only consistently positive outcomes for Warrior defenders came when they forced the midrange assassin to take a few steps back. Leonard was 0 of 6 from behind the arc in the first half. Leonard took only one 3-point shot in the second half.
Snoop Dogg stars
Legendary rapper Snoop Dogg made his broadcasting debut when he joined the NBA on NBC television production as a commentator. The Long Beach native has plenty of fans among the Warriors, including Kerr and Moses Moody.
Kerr joked about Snoop’s presence around the Olympic team in 2024 and said he looked forward to his pre-production meeting with the man. Moody, who counted “Gin and Juice” as his favorite Snoop track, saw the rapper’s presence at the regular-season NBA game as a positive.
“I really like the niche that he’s carved out for himself now in the business space,” Moody said. “I like what he adds, and it’s cool to see it on the NBA stage.”
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Get ready for the next chapter in the history of one of the Bay Area music scene’s most storied addresses.
Best known for hosting Boz Scagg’s legendary Slim’s hotspot for decades, and then a more recent (and much shorter) stint as YOLO Nightclub, the venue located at 333 11th St. in San Francisco will now transform into the home of The Budda.
The venue’s name references East Bay rapper Budda Mack, who is backing the new club.
“San Francisco, Bay Area get ready for the opening of my night club in SF,”
Mack posted on Instagram. “January is about to be different. A new chapter is opening with THE BUDDA night club 333 11th street San Francisco CA — a new club bringing energy, culture, and unforgettable nights to the city.
“This isn’t just another venue, it’s a movement. Lock in, stay tuned, and prepare yourself… THE BUDDA is coming.”
Mack is a successful independent hip-hop artist with more than 160,000 followers on YouTube and over 5,000 monthly listeners on Spotify. His best-known songs include “Twerk,” which has been viewed some 3.5 million times on YouTube alone, and “Get Ya Mind Right,” which also boosts more than a million views on YouTube.
It’s unclear at this point whether The Budda will be primarily a hip-hop venue or one that hosts different kinds of music.
The Budda takes over the spot that YOLO filled for some four years. The EDM/hip-hop club got its start right in 2021, right as COVID pandemic restrictions on live music venues began to ease up, and shuttered its doors in spring 2025.
YOLO, of course, followed the lengthy run of Slim’s, the Boz Scaggs-owned nightclub that opened in 1988 and went on to host such fantastic acts as the Throwing Muses, Jayhawks, Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir, Foo Fighters, Hole and the Lemonheads over the years.
The club closed in March 18, 2020. That was right as the pandemic hit and led to pretty much all live music venues in the U.S. shutting down, although the decision to close Slim’s was reportedly made before the pandemic.
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The Bottom of the Hill — once dubbed as “the best place to hear live music in San Francisco” by Rolling Stone magazine — is set to close its doors at the end of 2026.
The popular music venue, which booked early-career gigs by Green Day, Oasis, Alanis Morissette, The Strokes and other acts that would go on to headline major arenas and festivals, will host its last gig on New Year’s Eve, according to a post made on the Bottom of the Hill’s Facebook page.
“We make this announcement with great difficulty,” the post reads. “This legendary business will have lived to the ripe old age of 35, a long stretch in San Francisco for an independent rock ‘n’ roll venue of our size. It has been a wonderful trip, and we are full of stories and memories. We have hosted tens of thousands of musical artists and have been a community partner as well, holding numerous benefits, school recitals, weddings, birthdays, and memorials. Let’s have one more solid year of memories together and bid a fond farewell to a legendary venue.”
The closing will mark the end of one of the Bay Area’s marquee independent music venues — one of the very few that aren’t booked by a major concert promoter. Yet, thankfully, the club owners are giving people plenty of advance notice so that music fans from all around the Bay Area will have12 months to visit and bid farewell to the club, which has also hosted such great bands as the Throwing Muses, the Donnas, Queens of the Stone Age, Neutral Milk Hotel, the White Stripes and the Dandy Warhols since originally opening its doors at the corner of 17th and Missouri streets in the Potrero Hill district in 1991.
“We will curate one more year of great shows, enticing bands that make up our history to come back for one final play on our stage,” the Facebook post reads. “Let’s celebrate, for one more spin, how far we came, how many bands we hosted, how many amazing people we worked with.
“We want to thank the bands, their agents, managers, and roadies, for always bringing the most exciting shows to our intimate room, with the analog board at the helm. And most especially, we wish to thank our loyal customers who kept us in business for this long and told us, in so many ways, that we were doing things right.”
Increasing operating costs, shifts in the city’s demographics and the lingering impact of the pandemic — leading to more people staying at home — are reportedly among the reasons for the closing of the club, according to an interview with the Bottom of the Hill owners on coyotemedia.org. Overall, however, it also seems like the time was right for the owners to move on from the club.
“As the owners of Bottom of the Hill, we (Ramona Downey, Kathleen Owen, and Lynn Schwarz), are three women in different phases of our lives (and a sad RIP to Tim Benetti, our beloved fourth, whom we recently lost),” the Facebook post reads. “Part of what has made our partnership so functional and wonderful are the perspectives of three strong women from different generations and backgrounds. We come together on so many issues but also bring our own unique life experiences to this business.
“Together we have nurtured Bottom of the Hill over the decades — it’s our child. We include in our family the incredible staff who are the ones who keep our business on the map. Several of our team have been with us for well over a decade and some the whole time, making this decision to shutter extra difficult.
“We will miss you all so much after this one last star-studded year. 2026 is our big victory lap! Please come celebrate with us. Not with a whimper, but a bang!”
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SAN FRANCISCO – Warriors coach Steve Kerr tried just about everything. Pat Spencer-centric high screen and rolls. Post ups with Quinten Post. A pressing defensive scheme that looked to feature Will Richard.
But in front of a national television audience that expected to see the Warriors’ aging cast of legends face the defending champion Thunder at Chase Center on Friday, the viewing public saw a skeleton crew Golden State squad — for all of their creativity — fall 131-94.
Brandin Podziemski scored 12 points and had four assists, while Richard and Al Horford each scored 13. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander paced the Thunder with 30 points in just 28 minutes, while Chet Holmgren put up 15 points, 15 rebounds and four blocks as the Thunder improved to 3-0 against the Warriors and 30-5 on the season.
“Yeah I mean it was a tough night,” Kerr said. “Obviously we’re short-handed but I don’t think that is an excuse for the way we played.”
Coming off two consecutive road wins, the Warriors’ thee Hall of Famers – Steph Curry (ankle), Jimmy Butler (illness), Draymond Green (rest) – were ruled out before tipoff.
On top of that, combo guard De’Anthony Melton had the night off as the team remained cautious with his workload as the guard worked his way back from a torn ACL.
And Jonathan Kuminga, who has been benched for weeks as his trade date of Jan. 15 approaches but was in line to receive big minutes, was scratched with a lower back injury.
Thus, the Warriors resorted to a ragtag starting five of Podziemski, Will Richard, Moody, Gui Santos and Quinten Post.
Spurred by some inspired defense, the Warriors were able to hang around and even cut the Thunder lead to just 38-36 when Richard canned a 3-pointer with 7:19 left in the second quarter.
“There’s definitely look at some stuff you can learn from, but you got to have a short memory when it comes to games like this,” Richard said.
The Thunder responded with a 19-0 run to take command of the game, and the visitors cruised from there, leading by as many as 41 in the fourth quarter that was played exclusively between deep reserves. The Thunder, though no longer on pace to win a record-breaking 74 games in the regular season, have now won four in a row.
The Warriors (18-17) will take on the Jazz on Saturday.
Horford rare bright spot
There was not much to be excited about on Friday, but Al Horford’s strong run of play continued. Since returning from an seven-game absence caused by sciatica, the 39-year-old has averaged nine points per game (14, 7, 8, 10) in four contests.
In 13 minutes off the bench, Horford scored 10 points, grabbed five rebounds and blocked couple shots. Horford will not play against the Jazz, as he does not play back-to-backs.
Animated at officials
Oklahoma City’s proclivity to play physical defense without being called for fouls, and its star’s habit of finding a way of creatively drawing fouls, has become a source of frustration for many teams this season.
Add the Warriors to the list of franchises who had an issue with officiating during Thunder games. Al Horford, often mild-mannered, became highly-animated after being called for a foul on Gilgeous-Alexander midway through the first quarter.
A few minutes later, with 10 seconds remaining in the first period, Pat Spencer was called for a technical foul when he was running downcourt on defense.








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Winds exceeding 110 mph that tore across the top of Mount Hamilton early Christmas morning blasted a massive steel protective door off the iconic white dome at Lick Observatory.
Now, with back-to-back rainstorms bearing down on the Bay Area, officials this week are racing to seal the gaping hole and protect the historic Great Lick Refractor telescope beneath it.
“I’ve never seen or even heard of damage like this to a dome,” said Lick Observatory site superintendent Jamey Eriksen.
The damage threatens one of the Bay Area’s most significant scientific landmarks — a telescope that helped shape modern astronomy and still draws thousands of visitors each year to the mountaintop east of San Jose.
From the Bay Area below, the dome sheltering the Great Refractor still appears intact. Up close, the damage is stark: a multi-ton, 60-foot crescent of steel that once covered half the dome’s vertical opening is gone. It was one of two giant doors that slid open to reveal the night sky, then closed again to protect the telescope from the elements. Now it lies on the pavement beside the dome.
Inside, an all-hands scramble by a skeleton holiday-season crew helped avert worse damage. Beneath the dome, the 57-foot-long Great Refractor telescope is wrapped in black plastic tarps from eyepiece to lens assembly. Above it, the fallen door has left a gap in the steel dome roughly 4 feet wide and 10 feet tall, with a larger opening below it covered only by a fabric windscreen.

This week’s first storm is expected to dump about an inch of rain atop Mount Hamilton on Wednesday evening into Thursday morning. A second storm could add another inch Friday and Saturday, National Weather Service meteorologist Dial Hoang said Tuesday.
“Lenses, of course, don’t like water,” Lick astronomer Elinor Gates said. “Electrical equipment doesn’t like water.”
What a permanent fix will look like remains unclear. Even a temporary solution has proven difficult. Contractors suggested drilling into the surface of the dome — built in the 1880s — to fasten sheets of plywood or other materials over the opening. Eriksen rejected that approach, saying the solution will likely involve attaching large sheets of wood or siding to the dome’s interior steel framework instead. Tarps may also be suspended beneath the opening to catch any rain that gets through.
“It is not an easy solution,” Eriksen said. “We’re just trying to get through, protect this amazing telescope and building.”
Why the steel door fell off remains unclear. It initially crashed down onto an adjoining building, breaking windows and splintering attic beams, before a crane hoisted it and lowered it to the ground.
“Every winter we get very strong winds of 90 to 100 miles per hour,” Gates said. “This just seemed to have been a little more sustained than usual.”
The dome’s aging hardware may have made it vulnerable, she added. Newer research telescopes at Lick appeared undamaged and will continue operating, according to the University of California, which owns and operates the observatory.
When the damage was discovered Christmas morning, the roughly 10 staff members who had not left for the holidays rushed to the dome as rain fell and winds continued to buffet the peak.
“The set of skills up here is very good,” Eriksen said. “We worked full blast Christmas and the next day.”
Sensitive equipment and historical artifacts — including the Mills spectrograph used in the observatory’s early days to measure the colors of light emitted by stars and galaxies — were wheeled out as rain blew inside and winds swirled through the opening.
Gates and others mopped the circular wood-laminate floor surrounding the telescope, which sits atop elevators that raise it about 16 feet for observation. Others climbed a spiral staircase along the pedestal that supports the instrument. A 60-foot black tarp was cut in half, wrapped around each side of the telescope and secured with ratchet straps and minimal duct tape.

“We had nothing falling inside the dome but water,” Gates said — an outcome staff described as a relief under the circumstances. “We’re reasonably certain the telescope is fine, and that is a huge relief because of course the telescope is the heart and soul of this place.”
Built between 1880 and 1888, the Great Refractor — with lenses 3 feet across — was once the largest lens-based telescope in the world. For the 100 years after it was hauled up Mount Hamilton by horses and mules, it ranked among astronomy’s premier research instruments. It gained worldwide fame in 1892 after astronomers used it to discover Jupiter’s fifth moon, Amalthea, almost 300 years after Galileo identified the planet’s first four.
Later advances in mirror-based telescopes eventually eclipsed its scientific dominance.
But, said Andrew Fraknoi, former head of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific and an astronomy professor at the University of San Francisco, the telescope “remains both a great teaching tool, and a historical place where generations of students were trained.”
Still the second-largest refracting telescope in the world, it anchors Lick’s popular visitor programs, which draw adults and children eager to peer through its eyepiece into distant galaxies.
“At many observatories, you just showcase the science and you go to museums for the history,” Fraknoi said. “But here, you have a combination of both the history and science.”

Those public programs — including nighttime stargazing events, tours and educational programs — are now on hold indefinitely. The observatory’s Main Building, which houses the Great Refractor dome, the smaller Nickel reflector dome and an exhibit and lecture space between them, has been red-tagged by the county as temporarily unusable.
“It’s going to take many months,” Gates said. “This is going to be a real blow to our public programs.”
Fraknoi noted that terrestrial telescopes like those at Lick remain vulnerable to extreme weather. The site narrowly escaped destruction during a major wildfire in 2020.
“Fire, water, wind — all those things are issues,” he said. “In part, that’s why we have telescopes in space. But they can get hit by a chunk of rock, so no observatory is totally safe.”
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Ethan Baron
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CHARLOTTE – It is a scene witnessed in almost every NBA city the Warriors visit: fans arriving hours before tipoff and congregating in the lower bowl to gawk at Steph Curry’s legendary shooting routine before begging him for a signature or picture.
Curry almost always obliges, but it may be difficult for him to accommodate all requests at the final stop of the Warriors’ last road trip of 2025, an early game that will tip off at 10 A.M PST.
The Warriors will visit Curry’s hometown of Charlotte, also located a half-hour away from Davidson College.
On the day before New Year, Curry’s admirers will likely outnumber supporters of the lowly Hornets by a considerable margin. Including, for at least one game, in the Hornets broadcast booth, where father Dell Curry will provide television commentary.
It is one of the few road games the superstar considers a special occasion.
“I know when I go to Charlotte and see my family, and I know when I go to Toronto … so I circle those dates at the end of December,” Curry said this summer at his yearly golf tournament.
Adding to the New Year’s Eve festivities is that his younger brother, Seth – though inactive while dealing with sciatica – will now make the trip with the Warriors.
But while this homecoming usually results in a Warriors victory (8-4 record in Charlotte), signature Curry flurries are usually replaced with excellent but unspectacular outings.
Curry averages 27.3 points per game in 12 games in North Carolina’s largest city, a number that would be the envy of the vast majority of his NBA peers. But he has also not had a 40-point game in Spectrum Center since dropping exactly that amount during his MVP season in 2015-16.
But after almost a decade since that night, when he hit eight 3-pointers in a 116-99 victory, Curry is primed to have a huge game against the Hornets.
Charlotte is 11-20 and 12th in the Eastern Conference, and defense is the major reason why. The Hornets are bottom-third in the league in points allowed per game (118.5), rank near the bottom in defensive rating (118.7), and, most notably for the 3-point-happy Warriors, allow the worst accuracy mark from behind the arc (38.4) in the NBA.
One look at the Hornets’ perimeter personnel explains the poor numbers on that side of the ball.
The creative LaMelo Ball, along with Kon Knueppel, Collin Sexton and Tre Mann are all gifted scorers and offensive forces, but nobody is mistaking them for members of the 2004 Pistons.
Facing them is a version of Steph Curry who is playing at an All-NBA level despite being a few months from turning 38.
Curry is pacing the NBA in 3-point shots made per game at 4.8 and is still dropping in a healthy 39% on 12.2 attempts a night from behind the arc.
He has scored at least 35 points in eight games, and is tied with former Hornets owner Michael Jordan for the most 40-point games (44) by a player after turning 30.
After celebrating the new year on the East Coast, the Warriors will travel back to the Bay Area and take on the defending champion Thunder on Jan. 2.
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Joseph Dycus
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Despite possessing multiple double-digit leads in the second half, the Warriors found themselves in a familiar spot: stuck in a close game, with turnovers to blame in Toronto on Sunday afternoon.
Immanuel Quickley’s 3-pointer for the Raptors with under a minute tied the game at 120. Brandin Podziemski gave the Warriors another lead by grabbing an offensive rebound off a rare Steph Curry miss and putting it in with 32.8 remaining. Scottie Barnes answered by putting back a Brandon Ingram miss to tie it at 122.
Overtime ensued after Curry turned the ball over and the Raptors missed a buzzer-beater.
The Raptors scored the first 10 points over overtime to doom Golden State to an 141-127 loss, snapping the Warriors’ three-game winning streak.
“They turned up the pressure, and we didn’t handle it well and they scored 35 points off our turnovers,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr told reporters in Toronto. “That was the game. It sucks. We’re on a little bit of a run, have a chance at some momentum and control the whole game, and we let it slip.”
Curry led the team with 39 points and made 13 of 30 shots, making the Raptors pay for top-locking him on defense and allowing Curry to cut to the basket for layups and foul shots until late, when he went cold. The Warriors fell to 2-6 when Curry scores at least 35.
Meanwhile, Jimmy Butler scored 19 and Draymond Green put in 21 while making a season-high four 3-pointers. Quickley led the Raptors with 27 points and Ingram put in 26 as seven different Raptors scored in double-figures. Barnes scored 23, grabbed 25 rebounds and had 10 assists.
“The times we did get stops, we just didn’t come up with the rebound,” Podziemski said.
After mixing and matching and shuffling for the first two-and-a-half months of the season, Kerr settled upon a first five of Curry, Moses Moody, Butler, Green and Quinten Post for the fifth consecutive game, and that continuity paid off early.
The Warriors embarked on an 11-0 run in the second quarter to take a 54-50 lead midway through the period. The Raptors, led by Ingram, fought back to lead 65-64 at halftime. The Warriors led by as many as 13 in the third thanks to, oddly enough, a flurry of 3-pointers by Green and strong inside work by Curry.
But the Raptors forced four consecutive turnovers to cut the deficit to just 100-96 going into the fourth quarter. The Warriors bounced back to start the fourth, being aided by Buddy Hield and Moody’s 3-pointers that helped push the lead back to a dozen before a flurry of turnovers helped the Raptors stick around.
From there, the Warriors felt the impact of 21 their turnovers — 15 in the second half and overtime while they had trouble with the Raptors’ double-teams all game — and an additional three Raptors offensive rebounds in the first two minutes of overtime to send the Warriors (16-16) back to .500.
Golden State will play in Brooklyn on Monday (4:30 p.m., NBC Sports Bay Area).
“We’ve got to learn from this, and see what we did wrong in this game,” Will Richard said.
Defensive effort for naught
Payton cannot soar with the same abandon he once did, but the 32-year-old still has some life in his legs when playing limited minutes. Now strictly relegated to being an energetic defensive specialist, Payton made the most of his spot minutes.
He blocked two different Raptors dunks in the first half, on the heels of a spectacular two-handed smother of Cooper Flagg on Christmas. With De’Anthony Melton out of the lineup, his activity against an athletic Toronto squad was much-needed.
The Raptors, similar to the super-sized Blazers, are replete with rangy wings who love to attack the paint. RJ Barrett returned to action after missing a month with a knee injury as Toronto scored 70 points in the paint.
In the third quarter, the Warriors broke out a 2-3 zone, clogging the paint and attempting to close off driving lanes. The Warriors entered the game ranked third in defensive rating (112.2), and they were bolstered by Al Horford’s presence. For the second consecutive game after returning from sciatica, the center played well. He scored seven points and grabbed seven rebounds while playing active defense in 17 minutes.
But because of an avalanche of turnovers, the Raptors were able to score 35 off their takeaways, nullifying any halfcourt effort the Warriors showed.
Melton out, Hield in … sort of
Though Melton is beginning to ramp up his minutes – he was coming off a season-high 24 minutes against Dallas – the team is still being cautious with a player who is returning from a torn ACL.
With the game against Brooklyn scheduled for the next day, Kerr sat Melton and inserted Hield back into the lineup. Hield saw his streak of 198 consecutive games played snapped last week, and had played only three minutes in the past two games combined.
Though Hield played 13 minutes and scored three, it was actually Will Richard who absorbed most of Melton’s playing time. While playing high-level defense (five steals), the second-round pick put in 10 points and grabbed seven rebounds while playing with the stars late in the fourth and overtime.
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Joseph Dycus
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The end to a wild week of whipsawing weather across Northern California is at hand.
Sunny skies, calmer winds and cooler temperatures are forecast to return to the Bay Area on Saturday and linger into early next week, offering a respite from a weeklong parade of storms that felled trees, flooded roadways and caused power outages affecting thousands of people.
In the Sierra, clouds were expected to part beginning Saturday, potentially allowing skiers easier access over Interstate 80 and Highway 50 to take advantage of several feet of fresh powder around Lake Tahoe.A few final rounds of rain and gusty conditions were expected throughout the day Friday, particularly around midday and into the early afternoon as a final band of storms sweep through the region.
But in a word, the weather should be “beautiful” for the last several days of 2025, said Dylan Flynn, a National Weather Service meteorologist.
“The sun will be shining, the wind will be light — it’s going to be really nice,” Flynn said. “The only potential drawback will be cooler temperatures that could dip overnight into the 30s for parts of the Bay Area, making it “noticeable, especially compared to how warm it’s been,” he added.
The calmer forecast comes after a drumbeat of storms pummeled the Bay Area, bringing with them hurricane-force gusts that toppled trees and left many residents celebrating Christmas in the dark.
RELATED: Horse found roaming North Bay roadway during winter storm
Several thousand people were without power Friday morning, the vast majority in the Santa Cruz Mountains, along with other parts of the Peninsula and in the South Bay, according to Pacific Gas & Electric’s outage map. In all, the storms knocked out power to more than 777,000 people across PG&E’s California network, and about 41,000 of those people remained in the dark late Friday morning, said Paul Moreno, a spokesman for the utility provider.
Overnight Thursday into Friday, the weather service received reports of downed trees affecting Highway 152 and several boats damaged in the Santa Cruz Harbor from more bands of storms that rolled through the area.
Radar indicated a potential water spout in Monterey Bay right outside of Santa Cruz on Christmas Day, Flynn said, though it was not immediately clear whether it came ashore and caused any damage. The weather service also issued a tornado warning over the Santa Cruz Mountains later in the day, though it later appeared unlikely that anything touched down. Formal survey teams have not yet been dispatched.
Perhaps the greatest damage to emerge late this week came at the Lick Observatory atop Mt. Hamilton, where gusts of up to 114 mph on Christmas Day ripped open the shutter to its 36-inch Great Refractor dome, the observatory announced Friday. The dislodged shutter, which weighs more than two tons, “fell outward onto the roof of the Great Hall, crushing several structural beams,” according to a press release.
Though the telescope itself was not damaged, repairs to the facility are expected to take months. Complicating matters are the fact that the telescope’s precision lenses and electrical systems could now be “vulnerable” to precipitation, the observatory said.
“This was a frightening moment for our staff,” said Matthew Shetrone, deputy director of the University of California Observatories, in a statement that lauded his staff’s work to protect the telescope. “When the storm broke, everyone was safe, but the spiritual core of our observatory had been damaged.”
In all, since the first storms came ashore last weekend, Oakland and San Francisco have received more than 4 inches of rain, while the Oakland and Berkeley hills — along with the Santa Cruz Mountains to the southwest — received between 5 and 8 inches of precipitation, the weather service reported. San Jose received about 1.75 inches of rain, while similar totals were measured in Mountain View and Palo Alto and slightly more than 2 inches fell over Fremont.
The highest totals came in the North Bay, where Mt. Tamalpais received 15.11 inches of snow over the last week, according to the weather service. More than 6 inches fell in Tiburon, and Fairfax.
To the east, snow continued to fall over the Sierra — providing a direly-needed lift to Lake Tahoe-area ski resorts that had delayed their openings amid an unseasonably dry start to the season.
Several ski resorts reported another two feet of powder from early Christmas morning to just before dawn on Friday, according to Scott Rowe, another National Weather Service meteorologist. That latest dumping left Soda Springs with 72 inches of snow so far this week, while Kirkwood reported 59 inches of powder, and Bear Valley said it had received 58 inches of snow.
Borreal reported 47 inches of snow this week, as of early Friday morning, while 58 inches of snow had fallen at the summit of Palisades Tahoe.
Accessing those ski resorts remained difficult Friday. Caltrans continued to enforce chain controls over Interstate 80 over Donner Pass and Highway 50 over Echo Summit. Still, the new solid base layer of snow was a welcome sight.
Just a week ago, on Dec. 19, California’s statewide snowpack was at 12% of its seasonal average, with the state’s northern-most peaks registering just 4% of its normal snowpack total for that date, according to the California Department of Water Resources. Central California — including much of the Lake Tahoe region — also was at just 12% of average.
But as Friday, the state stood at 69% of its snowpack average for the day after Christmas, with northern California coming in at 44% of average and the Central Sierra reaching 73%. More snow was expected to continue falling Friday before easing off this weekend.
“We’ll take any snow at this point in time,” Scott said.
Jakob Rodgers is a senior breaking news reporter. Call, text or send him an encrypted message via Signal at 510-390-2351, or email him at jrodgers@bayareanewsgroup.com.
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Jakob Rodgers
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George Kittle’s injured ankle forced him to miss practice again on Thursday, leaving the 49ers’ Pro Bowl tight end’s status for Sunday night’s game against the Chicago Bears in question.
Coach Kyle Shanahan said on Wednesday that Kittle still has “a chance” to face the Bears as long as he was able to heal quick enough from his injury during Monday night’s win over Indianapolis.
San Francisco (11-4) has clinched a playoff spot and can earn the top seed in the NFC by beating the Bears (11-4) and Seattle (12-3) in the final two games of the season.
But losing Kittle would be a big blow to a San Francisco offense that has been operating at a high level during a five-game winning streak. The Niners have gone back-to-back games without having to punt for the first time in franchise history.
Kittle is a key part of both the run and pass game for the 49ers. The Niners’ running game has improved since Kittle returned after missing five games early this season with a hamstring injury.
Meanwhile, 49ers receiver Ricky Pearsall practiced on a limited basis for the second straight day on Thursday, meaning he has a shot to take the field Sunday. Pearsall, who missed Monday’s game with a knee injury, has 31 catches for 443 yards on the season.
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Nathan Canilao
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