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  • Warriors’ Kerr explains why he reluctantly supports Prop 50: ‘I didn’t love voting for it’

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    SAN FRANCISCO – The Warriors’ longtime head coach was one of almost five million Californians who cast a ballot in support of Prop 50

    After leading the team to a 118-107 victory over the Phoenix Suns at Chase Center on Tuesday night, Steve Kerr explained why he supported the gerrymandering measure that will allow the voting districts to be redrawn ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. 

    “I voted for it today. I didn’t love voting for it, but I felt it was necessary,” Kerr said. 

    Kerr, now in his 11th season coaching the team, added that he hoped Prop 50 is not a permanent measure. 

    “Hopefully, we can get back to a point where our democracy feels strong and healthy,” Kerr said. “It’s not right now. But I like the way the law was phrased that, if the other states decide to go back to what’s fair, then we will too. That’s why I voted for it.” 

    Prop 50 was crafted in response to efforts made by conservative-led states to redraw their own districts ahead of the midterms as a way to gain more Republican seats in the legislature. 

    California’s ballot measure is expected to add as many as five democratic seats to the national House of Representatives. 

    Tuesday’s remarks were just the latest in a long list of politically-charged statements made by the coach who once spoke at the 2024 Democratic National Convention

    During April, Kerr wore a shirt in support of Harvard while the university was under fire by President Donald Trump’s administration. 

    In October, Kerr attended and later voiced his support for the “No Kings” protests that opposed actions taken by the Trump presidency, and praised San Francisco mayor Daniel Lurie for helping avert a surge of federal immigration officers into the city. 

    “Beautiful people out there, and it was a love fest,” Kerr said of the “No Kings” protest. “Music playing, everybody marching peacefully. Everyone I saw 100% loves our country. And as is our country’s custom, if you don’t agree with what your government is doing, then you peacefully protest, and that’s how it should be. We are the democracy, we the people.”

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • As rest of NBA plays at breakneck speed, Warriors look to pace stars

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    SAN FRANCISCO — Just playing fast is no longer enough in today’s NBA. Now, playing at a frenetic pace is now the default.

    With players skewing more and more athletic, and as long-distance shooting stretches defenses to their limit, offenses are pushing the limit on how fast they can play. 

    Twenty-two teams are playing with a pace rating of at least 100, up from 14 teams a year ago. It is a trend Warriors coach Steve Kerr, whose team ranks 18th through seven games, knows well. 

    “What I’m seeing is that teams are spreading you out, playing as fast as possible and making it difficult to get to your coverages defensively,” Kerr said. “The faster the actions, the more difficult it is for the defense to respond.”

    Golden State entered its home matchup with the Phoenix Suns as losers of two consecutive games in the Midwest. Both the Milwaukee Bucks and Indiana Pacers were missing stars against the Warriors, but they made up for it by pushing the ball up and down the court. 

    “I thought the pace of the Milwaukee and Indiana games exposed what we were doing defensively, and we’ve got to improve those things,” Kerr said. 

    With his roster headlined by four players aged 35 and older, Kerr and the organization have made it a public priority to keep his stars fresh for the postseason. That involves playing at a slower pace, something the team has somewhat succeeded in, and something the Warriors’ intricate halfcourt offense lends itself to. 

    “We found the balance once we got Jimmy (Butler) … playing with a little more deliberatness and spacing once Jimmy got the ball,” Kerr said. “He’s one of the best iso players in the league.”

    The other method involves resting players – much to Michael Jordan’s chagrin – to keep minutes down. 

    The Warriors have already sat Al Horford in three games, counting Tuesday’s predetermined load management to avoid having him play in any back-to-backs. But the other three vets – Steph Curry, Draymond Green, Butler – have played in all seven of the team’s games. Both Curry and Butler are averaging north of 30 minutes a night, and Green comes in at a shade under at 29 a game. 

    Golden State listed Butler as questionable with low back soreness but he started against the Suns. 

    Kerr had hinted at starting to rest his stars during Monday’s practice.

    “I sat down with Mike (Dunleavy) and Rick Celebrini, Dray, Steph and Jimmy, the three main guys who are going to play heavy minutes,” Kerr said, later adding, “The rules the NBA gives us in terms of which games guys can rest, which games they can’t. That’s something we are really having to dive into now that the seasons going and rolling. It’s not easy, but we’ll do it collaboratively.”

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • Kurtenbach: The Warriors’ impressive win over the Nuggets is a foreshadowing

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    Thursday morning, the NBA’s worst came to light. There’s no spinning that a player of note and an acting NBA head coach landing federal indictments in a betting probe is bad news.

    It is, in fact, the kind of crisis that can send an entire league into a tailspin.

    So maybe it was fitting —a karmic counterbalance — that mere hours later, the absolute best of the NBA was right there for the world to see, front and center at Chase Center.

    That Warriors-Nuggets game is why we still tune in. That contest is why we still love this game.

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    Dieter Kurtenbach

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  • Warriors coach Kerr explains why he actually “liked” Kuminga ejection

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    Steve Kerr and Jonathan Kuminga have – rather publicly – not seen eye to eye on many things the fifth-year forward does on a basketball court. 

    But when the Warriors forward was ejected from the team’s fourth preseason game, tossed after arguing a no-call on a drive with 0.9 showing on the clock, the coach did not blast his player. 

    He actually appreciated the intensity Kuminga showed when he got right in the official’s face to argue his case in Portland on Tuesday.  

    “He got fouled, and it was frustration play, and I have no problem with it, because he deserved the foul and he was getting fouled quite a bit,” Kerr told media after the game, later adding, “I love the way he played, I love the fire, the passion. I don’t mind the ejection at all. I kind of liked it, actually. I thought JK was terrific.”

    The Warriors defeated the Blazers 118-111. 

    Kerr raved about Kuminga’s continued effort to showcase an all-around game. Aside from seven points, he also had four assists while playing the Draymond Green role out of the post and on the wing. 

    His activity on the glass was also much improved from Sunday’s game against the Lakers, when Kuminga grabbed zero rebounds. 

    “The way he ran on that play, the activity he played with, and he had six boards in one half in 17 minutes, that’s the JK who can really help our team,” Kerr said.  

    Kuminga recently signed a two-year, $46.5 million contract after a dramatic summer-long negotiation with the front office. During his introductory press conference, he pledged to focus on more than just scoring, something he has done thus far. 

    He has dished out 16 assists in four games, and has, aside from the goose egg in Los Angeles, grabbed at least five rebounds in each of the other three games. 

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • Instant Warriors analysis: Podziemski, Kuminga lead Golden State skeleton crew in Los Angeles

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    LOS ANGELES – A half dozen future members of the Basketball Hall of Fame were in Crypto Arena on Sunday night. Unfortunately for the paying public, most of them were inactive in the Warriors’ 126-116 loss to the host Lakers. 

    On the Warriors bench, Steph Curry and Al Horford were in street clothes, and Jimmy Butler was not even in the building, as he missed the game for personal reasons. 

    The Lakers were down LeBron James, afflicted by nerve pain. Luka Doncic was still not game-ready, and former Defensive Player of the Year Marcus Smart was ruled out a few hours before tipoff. 

    The results were … predictably ugly for the Warriors. 

    Starting Brandin Podziemski at point guard, Jonathan Kuminga next to Draymond Green at forward, and flanked by Quinten Post and Buddy Hield as shooters, the ragtag Warriors sputtered early, falling behind 63-46 by halftime. 

     If there was any area the team missed their stars, it was in the ballhandling department. Golden State committed 20 turnovers, a ghastly 14 of them in the first half. 

    “The spacing wasn’t good,” coach Steve Kerr said. “then in the second half, that was much more how like we wanted to play.”

    Podziemski was the star for shorthanded Golden State, with a stellar 23-point, eight assist night on 10 of 16 shooting. Kuminga poured in 13 points, and Gary Payton II had 11 points. Austin Reaves led the Lakers with 21 points. Undrafted guard LJ Cryer scored 11 points, all in the fourth quarter. 

    Green played 22 minutes, the most the 35-year-old has played thus far in any game this preseason. He will not suit up when the Warriors take on Portland on Tuesday.

    “He will have the night off in Portland, and then play against the Clippers on Friday,” Kerr said.

    The Warriors won the first matchup between West Coast teams 129-123 at Chase Center last week. 

    Brandin Podziemski, point guard

    Brandin Podziemski does all of the little things as a guard. He makes quick passes that maintain advantages. He fights for rebounds and earns Golden State extra possessions. He’ll make a few shots. 

    But driving the offense as a point guard? That is far from one of his strengths, but something he was asked to do against the Lakers with Curry and Butler sitting. The results were decent, with the Santa Clara alum dishing out eight assists. 

    “I think I’ve played pretty well (in preseason and training camp),” Podziemski said. “I’m just trying to find my lane and do the right things on and off the flor. And what I’ve been doing has been working.”

    He flashed as a playmaker in the open court, driving in transition on a number of occasions before dishing off to a cutting Hield or another teammate.

     And on a night when his teammates couldn’t help themselves when it came to giving away possessions, Podziemski only had two turnovers. On an otherwise forgettable night in Los Angeles, Podziemski was a bright spot in the city of stars. 

    Golden State Warriors’ Draymond Green passes the ball during the first half of a preseason NBA basketball game against the Los Angeles Lakers Sunday, Oct. 12, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong) 

    Jonathan Kuminga keeps on passing

    With the team’s top offensive engines sidelined, the stage was set for a Kuminga chuckfest. Instead, the fifth-year forward adhered to the same pass-first philosophy – an ill-advised pullup 3-pointer aside – he had shown in the first two games. 

    Kuminga dished out six assists in 22 minutes, the most impressive being a pair of first quarter dimes thrown in the open court. He was also the only Warrior to reach the free throw line in the first half, knocking down both of his foul shots. 

    GP2 still has it

    Steve Kerr seems to love few things more than raving about Gary Payton II’s impact during the team’s run to the 2022 championship. Back then, Payton was a destructive and uber-athletic 6-foot-3 bundle of energy, capable of blowing up plays with hustle and a limitless vertical leap. 

    These days, Payton, 32, is a step slower and cannot quite soar the way he could three years ago. But that does not stop him from making an impact in smaller bursts. 

    In 16 minutes off the bench, Payton made all five of his shots and harassed any ballhandler he was assigned to. 

    He had a vintage moment in the late third, when he finished a layup between four defenders, and then threw a pass to Will Richrd for a fastbreak layup on the next possession. 

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • Instant Warriors analysis: What happened when Golden State went big against Blazers

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    SAN FRANCISCO – With one deft change to the starting lineup, Warriors coach Steve Kerr demonstrated the biggest difference between this season’s roster and this year’s iteration.

    Out went the returning 6-foot-4, 205-pound Brandin Podziemski, and in went the 6-9, 260lb newcomer Al Horford.

    The new lineup saw Moses Moody and Jimmy Butler moved to guard and wing respectively, and Draymond Green shifted to his more natural power forward position and away from guarding 7-0 giant Donovan Clingan.

    There was plenty to analyze in Golden State’s 129-123 victory over the Blazers at Chase Center on Wednesday night.

    Butler scored 12, while Curry put in 10 and Buddy Hield scored 13. Moses Moody scored 10.

    Quinten Post put up 20 points and LJ Cryer had 14 while leading a thrilling fourth quarter comeback alongside Pat Spencer. The Warriors outscored the Blazers 51-26 in the fourth, putting up the most points in a quarter in preseason franchise history.

    Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) dribbles against the Portland Trail Blazers in the first quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

    On the first possession, Green showed his chemistry with his new frontcourt partner, lasering a pass to Horford for a layup, albeit one not converted.

    However, over the first 6:47, the lineup produced mixed results, as it fell behind 18-12 and forced Kerr to call a timeout.

    The interior defense was sensational in allowing just four points in the paint. But with a slower frontcourt, the Blazers peppered Golden State from behind the arc, starting 4 of 6 on wide-open looks.

    Green was surprisingly effective as a shooter, nailing a couple of open triples, and though Horford began 0 of 3, he did make a nifty pass to Butler while leading the fastbreak.

    That was all the spectators at Chase Center got to see of the starting unit, with that combination not playing together again in the first half. To start the second, Curry, Butler, Green and Horford were not on the bench.

    The Warriors were down 73-57 at halftime, and Kerr did not mince words.

    “We weren’t ready, we were not,” Kerr said. “We were careless with the ball, and they were flying by us every play.”

    Same amount of minutes for starters

    After playing around 15 minutes each in Sunday’s preseason opener, the Golden State vets – Horford, Curry, Butler and Green – were expected to play more minutes.

    “We usually ramp them up a little bit each game,” Kerr said after a recent practice. “I imagine it will be  a little bit more than the other night.”

    In reality, the ramp-up was minimal. Butler played 17 minutes while Green and Curry each played 16 apiece. Horford actually saw a decrease in playing time, seeing the floor for just 11 minutes while going 0 of 4.

    Moody and Post were the only Warriors players to crack 20 minutes.

    Podziemski … point guard?

    Golden State Warriors' Brandin Podziemski (2) drives past Portland Trail Blazers' Blake Wesley (1) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Brandin Podziemski (2) drives past Portland Trail Blazers’ Blake Wesley (1) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

    Kerr put starting shooting guard Podziemski in the role of floor general in the first quarter.

    The results were … not pretty. Portland ended the first quarter on a 13-0 run, with Golden State struggling to generate open looks with only one natural ballhandler on the floor.

    Butler returned to start the second quarter and took over de facto point guard duties. It also saw Jonathan Kuminga spend time with Horford and Butler, which produced five quick points to begin the second quarter.

    Podziemski finished the game with five points and three assists, and appeared much more effective when playing off either Butler or Curry. Kuminga, who had two assists, once again played the part of a willing passer against the Blazers. He repeatedly made the extra pass, including a couple of dishes to Curry that did not show up in the stat sheet.

    The Warriors will play their first road game of the season at the Lakers on Sunday.

    Other notables

    • Oakland native Damian Lillard did not make the trip back to the Bay Area. He tore his Achilles in the first round of the playoffs for Milwaukee and is still rehabbing in Portland.
    • After using 18 players in the opener, Kerr slightly cut the rotation down on Wednesday. He played 17, with Marques Bolden not entering.
    • Seth Curry was healthy but did not play. Because he entered training camp a few days later than the rest of the team, Kerr said he is “ramping up” his activity.
    • Summer League sensation Hansen Yang was unable to recreate the magical passing and interior scoring he flashed against the Warriors in Las Vegas. He fouled out, and only had four points and one assist while looking a tad bit frazzled against real NBA competition.
    •  Golden State Valkyries center Iliana Rupert’s younger brother, Rayan, suited up for Portland.
    Portland Trail Blazers' Yang Hansen (16) looks to pass against the Golden State Warriors' Quinten Post (21) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Portland Trail Blazers’ Yang Hansen (16) looks to pass against the Golden State Warriors’ Quinten Post (21) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Golden State Warriors' Jonathan Kuminga (1) lays up a shot against Portland Trail Blazers' Donovan Clingan (23) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga (1) lays up a shot against Portland Trail Blazers’ Donovan Clingan (23) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Golden State Warriors' Jimmy Butler III (10) lays up a shot against Portland Trail Blazers' Jrue Holiday (5) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Jimmy Butler III (10) lays up a shot against Portland Trail Blazers’ Jrue Holiday (5) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Golden State Warriors' Jonathan Kuminga (1), Golden State Warriors' Draymond Green (23) and Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) look on in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga (1), Golden State Warriors’ Draymond Green (23) and Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) look on in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Golden State Warriors' Al Horford (20) dribbles as he looks to pass against the Portland Trail Blazers in the first quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Al Horford (20) dribbles as he looks to pass against the Portland Trail Blazers in the first quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Golden State Warriors' Moses Moody (4) drives past Portland Trail Blazers' Blake Wesley (1) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Moses Moody (4) drives past Portland Trail Blazers’ Blake Wesley (1) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Golden State Warriors' Jonathan Kuminga (1) drives past Portland Trail Blazers' Deni Avdija (8) as Golden State Warriors' Brandin Podziemski (2) and Golden State Warriors' Al Horford (20) move over in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga (1) drives past Portland Trail Blazers’ Deni Avdija (8) as Golden State Warriors’ Brandin Podziemski (2) and Golden State Warriors’ Al Horford (20) move over in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Portland Trail Blazers' Jrue Holiday (5) gains a rebound against the Golden State Warriors' Gary Payton II (0) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Portland Trail Blazers’ Jrue Holiday (5) gains a rebound against the Golden State Warriors’ Gary Payton II (0) in the second quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) lays up a three point basket and draws a foul against the Portland Trail Blazers in the first quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) lays up a three point basket and draws a foul against the Portland Trail Blazers in the first quarter of an NBA preseason game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • Instant Warriors analysis: Al Horford’s versatility on display vs. Lakers

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    SAN FRANCISCO – Steph Curry zipped around screens before burying 3-pointers. Jimmy Butler slalomed into the lane for crafty layups on a tender ankle. Draymond Green got into a scrap with a Lakers big man.

    Curry scored 14 points, Butler put in nine and Green had five assists as a playmaking five. 

    It might have been just the preseason opener against a Lakers team that lacked LeBron James and Luka Doncic, but the Warriors star-led lineup looked identical to the team that went 23-8 to end the regular season early in Sunday’s 111-103 victory. 

    Well, almost identical. 

    That new Al Horford guy … he was pretty difficult to ignore. The stats accrued in just 14 minutes were impressive enough: three points, four rebounds, three assists, a trio of blocks and a steal stood out on the box score.

    But the 39-year-old center’s impact went beyond numbers. 

    “He fits any lineup, makes every lineup better,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said, later adding, “He’s a guy who has been around for a long time and seen everything, and the game comes very naturally for him.”

    Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) and Al Horford (20) attempt to guard Los Angeles Lakers’ Bronny James Jr. (9) in the second quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    It was his shooting gravity pulling Deandre Ayton out of the paint in the first quarter, giving Curry and Butler space to run a two-man game that ended in a layup. 

    It was his quick give-and-go with Curry in the corner a few moments later, hitting the point guard in stride for the layup.   

    It was his rim-protection, which was highlighted by an emphatic swat of LeBron James Jr., his father only able to watch the carnage from the bench. 

    “It’s just more a sign of his basketball IQ than it is him flying around trying to impress anybody,” Kerr said. “He’s just always in the right spot.”

    Kerr stuck to his plan of having the veteran players – Curry, Green, Butler and Horford – play only around 10 to 15 minutes in the first half. 

    And in those 15 minutes, Horford looked even better than the cerebral, well-rounded veteran he was advertised as. Horford might as well have been a longtime Warrior, part of those dynastic teams of the 2010s who knew the intricacies of the offense. 

    While he may not be able to play the big minutes (or back-to-backs) like Horford could as an All-Star in Atlanta or Boston, but if the first game is anything to go by, he will be a high-impact force who fits in perfectly with the stars. 

    Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) shoots past Los Angeles Lakers' Deandre Ayton (5) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) shoots past Los Angeles Lakers’ Deandre Ayton (5) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    Curry looks spry

    Like the rest of his late-30s peers, Curry played around 15 minutes, all in the first half. But in his allotted time on the Chase Center floor, the 37-year-old played like he was 10 years younger.

    Curry scored 14 points and made 5 of 7 shots. He ripped around screens for threes and found openings in the paint for layups like usual, but he also showcased chemistry with his new teammate Horford too.

    “It’s just kind of that unspoken chemistry that will continue to get better,” Curry said. “He’s a multi-dimensional five man and I’m excited to see what that looks like fo rme, for Jimmy, JK and Draymond. You can throw him out in any lineup, at the five, and he lifts any group.”

    His transition layup was the highlight, but he also looked comfortable running a high pick-and-pop with the center, even if it resulted in a rare Curry miss. Like the rest of the Warriors, he benefited from Horford’s shooting prowess as a floor spacer.  

    Golden State Warriors' Jonathan Kuminga (1) waves to someone in the crowd in the third quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga (1) waves to someone in the crowd in the third quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    Kuminga is a … passer?

    After an offseason spent focusing on Jonathan Kuminga’s scoring role with the Warriors, the newly re-signed restricted free agent seemed intent on showing he was capable of making the right play. 

    Coming off the bench with 3:55 left in the first quarter and wearing a new No. 1 on his jersey, the fifth-year forward only attempted three shots in 15 minutes. 

    He instead did his best Aaron Gordon impression, grabbing six rebounds and throwing four assists. Two of those dimes came in the third quarter, when he drew attention on the break and dished to open teammates. Kuminga even had a block.

    He scored six points, on a drive and an open 3-pointer. There were missed box outs and iffy defense, but the Warriors had to be encouraged by what they saw from the new $46.5 million man to start the season. 

    The Warriors will play host to Portland on Wednesday.

    Golden State Warriors' Jimmy Butler III (10) drives past Los Angeles Lakers' R.J. Davis (55) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Golden State Warriors’ Jimmy Butler III (10) drives past Los Angeles Lakers’ R.J. Davis (55) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    Other notables

    • The Warriors mixed in both zone and man defensive looks, as to be expected in a preseason game. They also went 11-deep in the first half, and in total 18 players suited up. 
    • Moses Moody began the game by blowing past Ayton for a dunk and finished with a team-high 19 points. Kerr previously said that he sees Moody as more of a playmaker in the screen-and-roll game, but on Sunday, he diced up the Lakers as a corner shooter and driver. 
    • Will Richard scored three points and had a slick behind-the-back assist to Trayce Jackson-Davis for a third quarter dunk.
    • Buddy Hield and Pat Spencer combined for 23 points, with Hield playing mostly with the regular rotation players, while Spencer ran with the deep reserves. 
    • Seth Curry, De’Anthony Melton and Alex Toohey were not active for the game. Curry is yet to be cleared by the medical team. Melton is still rehabbing from a torn ACL, and Toohey is dealing with tendinitis in his right knee. 
      Golden State Warriors' Al Horford (20) blocks a shot by Los Angeles Lakers' R.J. Davis (55) in the second quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Al Horford (20) blocks a shot by Los Angeles Lakers’ R.J. Davis (55) in the second quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Seth Curry (31) gestures while sitting on the bench in the fourth quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Seth Curry (31) gestures while sitting on the bench in the fourth quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Los Angeles Lakers' Bronny James Jr. (9) drives to the basket past Golden State Warriors' Gui Santos (15) in the third quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Los Angeles Lakers’ Bronny James Jr. (9) drives to the basket past Golden State Warriors’ Gui Santos (15) in the third quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Jonathan Kuminga (1) stands on the court during the national anthem before their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga (1) stands on the court during the national anthem before their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Brandin Podziemski (2) drives past Los Angeles Lakers' Rui Hachimura (28) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Brandin Podziemski (2) drives past Los Angeles Lakers’ Rui Hachimura (28) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Los Angeles Lakers' R.J. Davis (55) stands on the court in the fourth quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Los Angeles Lakers’ R.J. Davis (55) stands on the court in the fourth quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Trayce Jackson-Davis (32) fouls Los Angeles Lakers' Jaxson Hayes (11) in the third quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Trayce Jackson-Davis (32) fouls Los Angeles Lakers’ Jaxson Hayes (11) in the third quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) is introduced before the start of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) is introduced before the start of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Moses Moody (4) attempts to steal a ball from Los Angeles Lakers' Jake LaRavia (12) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Moses Moody (4) attempts to steal a ball from Los Angeles Lakers’ Jake LaRavia (12) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Seth Curry (31) walks on the court before their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Seth Curry (31) walks on the court before their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Buddy Hield (7) goes up for a basket past Los Angeles Lakers' Nate Williams (50) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Buddy Hield (7) goes up for a basket past Los Angeles Lakers’ Nate Williams (50) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Draymond Jamal Green Jr. sits with his father Golden State Warriors' Draymond Green (23) while playing the Los Angeles Lakers in the second quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Draymond Jamal Green Jr. sits with his father Golden State Warriors’ Draymond Green (23) while playing the Los Angeles Lakers in the second quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) guards Los Angeles Lakers' Bronny James Jr. (9) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) guards Los Angeles Lakers’ Bronny James Jr. (9) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Draymond Green (23) drives past Los Angeles Lakers' Rui Hachimura (28) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Draymond Green (23) drives past Los Angeles Lakers’ Rui Hachimura (28) in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Moses Moody (4) shoots a three-point basket against the Los Angeles Lakers in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Moses Moody (4) shoots a three-point basket against the Los Angeles Lakers in the first quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
      Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) is introduced before the start of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) is introduced before the start of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

      Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr watches his team play the Los Angeles Lakers in the fourth quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
      Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr watches his team play the Los Angeles Lakers in the fourth quarter of their preseason NBA game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

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  • Jimmy Butler, Warriors dealing with injuries to start preseason

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    SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors should have all of their stars available for their preseason opener against the Lakers at Chase Center on Sunday.

    Jimmy Butler “tweaked” his ankle during training camp practice on Thursday, and coach Steve Kerr and the medical staff held Butler out during the next two days. A few hours before tipoff, Kerr said the 36-year-old forward should be healthy enough to play.

    “I think he’s gonna play,” Kerr said. “The vets won’t play in the second half. So Steph, Al, Jimmy  and Draymond, first half only, maybe 15 minutes.”

    New signing De’Anthony Melton was also ruled unavailable for Sunday, as the guard is still rehabbing from a torn ACL that ended his 2024-25 season after just six games.

    Rookie forward Alex Toohey’s debut was also delayed by at least one game as the Australian second-round pick is still dealing with tendinitis in his right knee. Seth Curry, Steph’s younger brother, was also a scratch.

    “It’s because he came in late and hasn’t been cleared by the training staff,” Kerr said, noting that Seth Curry is completely healthy. He added that Kuminga is expected to play.

    Third-year center Trayce Jackson-Davis, whom Kerr has praised during training camp after Jackson-Davis entered the preseason having slimmed down to 245 pounds, was questionable with a thumb injury.

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • Warriors sweep Pelicans in rare back-to-back before leaving for road trip

    Warriors sweep Pelicans in rare back-to-back before leaving for road trip

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    SAN FRANCISCO — The Pelicans were even more short-handed than the Warriors, having CJ McCollum, Trey Murphy III, Herb Jones and Dejounte Murray unavailable due to injuries.

    Their skeleton crew couldn’t keep pace with the Warriors, even without Steph Curry, Andrew Wiggins and De’Anthony Melton for a second straight night. Especially with their best two players no-showing.

    Draymond Green (14 points, six assists, five blocks, four rebounds and a steal) and Trayce Jackson-Davis (15 points, nine rebounds) outplayed Brandon Ingram and Zion Williamson, helping key a big third-quarter run. The Warriors outscored the Pelicans 56 to 34 in the paint, a stat that shows equally Green’s defensive brilliance and Golden State’s offensive approach. A night after Buddy Hield and Lindy Waters III lit it up from deep, the Warriors got it done in the front court.

    Williamson had a double-double but went 5-for-20 from the field and Ingram was limited to just 14 points on 11 shots. Green had his fingerprints all over the game.

    “He’s still one of the best defenders in the world, that’s for sure,” head coach Steve Kerr said of Green postgame.

    In a rare back-to-back at home against the same opponent, the shorthanded Warriors (4-1) swept the undermanned Pelicans. Golden State pulled away in the second half for a 104-89 victory in its last home game before heading on a daunting road trip that includes contests against the Celtics, Thunder and Cavaliers.

    Through five games, the Warriors have the second-best defensive rating in the league. They’ve made defense their identity and are convinced that new personnel and assistant coach Jerry Stackhouse’s influence can make them elite on that end. Green, as always, is the anchor.

    “I spent all summer watching everyone talking about Chet (Holmgren) and (Victor Wembanyama) and what they’re doing defensively,” Green said postgame. “But don’t forget about Dray. I want to be in that conversation as well, and I think I’ve earned that right to at least be in the conversation. So every game, I’m coming out here motivated defensively to get back on the First Team All-Defense.”

    In the first matchup with the Pelicans, Williamson went for 31 points on 12-for-19 shooting. Green vowed to make it tougher on the All-Star by meeting “force with force.”

    Beyond Green’s work on both ends — he also hit three of four 3-pointers —Brandin Podziemski played another tremendous all-around game, finishing with 13 points, nine rebounds and eight assists. Hield came alive in the second half, finishing with 21 points. Green also added a trio of 3-pointers.

    Golden State’s ball movement started out much less crisp than it was in the first game of the back-to-back. The Warriors committed nine turnovers in the first 16 minutes of the game. A night before, they turned it over eight times total, dominating the possession game.

    The Warriors’ turnovers prevented them from building a cushion. After going up 32-20, the Warriors surrendered a 16-2 run in the second quarter, with Steve Kerr taking two timeouts to try to settle things down.

    New Orleans Pelicans’ Jose Alvarado (15) defends against Golden State Warriors’ Brandin Podziemski (2) in the fourth quarter at the Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2024. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) 

    After a back-and-forth second quarter, Brandon Ingram sank a 3 with three seconds left in the half to pull the Pelicans within one. But Draymond Green bounced an advance pass up the middle of the court for Buddy Hield, who raced with it for a buzzer-beating trey of his own.

    So, despite turning the ball over 11 times in the first half, Golden State entered halftime with a 48-44 lead. They shot over 50% from the field and 47% from 3-point land in the first half, but allowed New Orleans to take 12 more shots than them because of turnovers and offensive boards.

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Danny Emerman

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  • Why Kerr is optimistic about a bounce-back season for Wiggins on Warriors

    Why Kerr is optimistic about a bounce-back season for Wiggins on Warriors

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    SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors started Andrew Wiggins at shooting guard in their last two preseason games, and while nothing is decided quite yet ahead of Wednesday’s regular-season opener, Wiggins appears headed to reprise that role.

    In a starting-five with Steph Curry, Jonathan Kuminga, Draymond Green and a center — likely Trayce Jackson-Davis — Wiggins’ ability to space the floor and to defend opposing teams’ best scorers will be paramount.

    Coach Steve Kerr believes Wiggins, after missing two weeks of training camp and preseason because of illness, is up to the challenge.

    “The conditioning is looking better and better every day,” Kerr said after Monday’s practice. “The rhythm. I trust Wiggs. It’s been a tough year and a half for him for a number of reasons. But he’s a guy who has won a championship and played an enormous role in that championship. Been a 20-point scorer in the league. We know what Wiggs can do, and I think we’re going to get a really good version of him this year.”

    Over the past two seasons, Wiggins has missed 56 regular-season games, many of which because of personal reasons. He left the team for roughly two months in the spring of 2023 before returning for the postseason because of a personal matter. Then last season, he missed four games at the end of February — again excused for personal reasons.

    The Warriors have supported Wiggins through his issues. This summer, his dad, Mitchell, died.

    After Wiggins’ personal trauma, Kerr said he believes the veteran has a renewed sense of focus and engagement.

    “I do. I think he feels it,” Kerr said. “He worked really hard in the offseason. There’s a little bit of closure with his dad’s passing. As difficult as everything has been over the last couple years, I just think that when you lose someone, especially after a struggle, there’s a little bit of feeling of relief because that person isn’t struggling anymore. That alone, I think, allows a person to free himself up. And I can speak to that from experience. I think that’s a factor.”

    Wiggins never spoke in detail about what he was going through, and the team respected his wishes to keep things private.

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    Danny Emerman

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  • 3 takeaways as Warriors rain 3s over Kings in preseason action

    3 takeaways as Warriors rain 3s over Kings in preseason action

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    SACRAMENTO, Calif. — At the Golden 1 Center, where Golden State’s 2023-24 season ended unceremoniously last April, the Warriors brought a new starting five to their second preseason game.

    Absent from it, of course, was Klay Thompson, who went scoreless in the play-in loss before departing for the Dallas Mavericks.

    The Warriors want to play faster and shoot more 3-pointers, with more athleticism on the court and more defensive flexibility. They brought in three new veterans and want to play with more structure on offense. Many of the changes head coach Steve Kerr and the Warriors want to implement stem with how last season fizzled.

    “I don’t know if it was just that game, I just think the feeling of losing in the play-in and not even making the playoffs is a pretty bitter one,” Kerr said pregame. “But I think we definitely recognized our flaws last year and they were exposed in that game.”

    Although the Warriors looked more equipped to handle Sacramento’s fast-paced style in the first half — when all the regulars played — Golden State headed into the second half down 68-66. They hit 15 of their 27 3s, with Buddy Hield (4-for-4), De’Anthony Melton (3-for-6) and Steph Curry (3-for-6) leading the long-range charge, but the Kings’ offense matched them by creating points in the paint.

    Golden State kept shooting, and draining, 3-pointers as the game progressed. They hit 28 3-pointers in all, exceeding the regular-season franchise record of 27. Eight Warriors hit at least two 3-pointers, leading to a scorching 53.8% clip from behind the arc in a 122-112 victory; in a statistical anomaly, Golden State shot better from 3 than it did from the floor.

    Here are three takeaways from the Warriors’ first preseason game on the mainland, with four remaining before the regular season.

    New starters

    In the Warriors’ first preseason game, in Hawaii, they started Steph Curry, Draymond Green, De’Anthony Melton, Jonathan Kuminga and Trayce Jackson-Davis.

    Looney replaced Jackson-Davis at center and Podziemski swapped in for Melton in the second one.

    Melton played terrific next to Curry in the opener, but the offense seemed easier with Podziemski in the group Wednesday (maybe it was Sacramento’s defense, which is expected to be poor). Podziemski’s a more natural initiator and playmaker. On one play, Curry’s isolation went nowhere, but Podziemski ended up with the ball on the wing and fed Green inside for an easy bucket.

    Podziemski also missed a pair of open 3-pointers that he’s going to need to hit to stay on the floor. With Green, Looney and Kuminga, spacing is at a premium.

    Golden State subbed in Jackson-Davis for Looney after five minutes, but the main core of the starting unit tied the Kings, 18-18, in the first seven minutes of the game.

    It’s a miniscule sample size, and a similar result to the preseason opener’s starting unit, but neither group has jumped off the page yet — merely held their own.

    One note with starting Podziemski: without him coming off the bench, the second unit (Melton, Jackson-Davis, Buddy Hield, Kyle Anderson and Moses Moody) didn’t have a point guard. Staggering minutes in the regular season would fix that fairly easily, but the Warriors want to make sure both their first and second units are cohesive.

    Podziemski (8 points, 8 assists in 23 minutes) left in the first half after getting hit in the face, but returned in the third quarter to lead the second unit as the point guard, driving and dishing while also running effective pick-and-rolls.

    The preseason is all about experimenting with combinations, and Kerr’s next move just might be to slot Hield — who finished with a game-high 22 points on 8-for-9 shooting — in the back court with Curry. That would maximize their 3-point shooting threat, with as close of a movement-shooting facsimile to Thompson as there is.

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    Danny Emerman

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  • DIMES: The Warriors have a new Hall of Famer behind the scenes

    DIMES: The Warriors have a new Hall of Famer behind the scenes

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    Warriors beat writer Danny Emerman shares his thoughts on the NBA offseason and beyond

    The big call came last March when she was at work in Toronto. And like in any other office, her coworkers were elated to hear the news.

    Danielle Langford, the Warriors’ manager of player rehabilitation, was selected to the British Columbia Basketball Hall of Fame for her esteemed playing career in the Vancouver area. Her coworkers, Draymond Green, Chris Paul and Kevon Looney, were ecstatic.

    “They started all quizzing me about my stats and whatnot,” Langford told this news organization. “I don’t know that stuff very well, to be honest. And they were like, ‘How do you not know?’ So they started looking stuff up. They were pumped, they were happy for me.”

    Langford’s accomplishments, they’d discover with some internet sleuthing, are vast. When Langford was in her playing prime, she was like the female Canadian Steph Curry.

    At Simon Fraser University, she still has the school record for 3-pointers made (388) — 119 more than second place. As team captain, she led two separate SFU teams, in 2002 and 2005, to undefeated national championship seasons. She was named tournament MVP in 2005 and ranks third in school history in total assists.

    “She was an excellent leader,” said Langford’s SFU teammate, Laura van den Boogaard. “Everything was about winning, but in a way that made everyone feel included. She was a shooter, she could drive, she could pass. She could do everything, but she made everyone better. She was that person that would get you the ball exactly where you needed it to make the shot.”

    Langford played for her dad, Bruce, at Simon Fraser, whom she joined in the BC Basketball Hall of Fame on Saturday. Her uncle, Paul, also got inducted on Saturday as a coach.

    In 2000, before college, Langford led Heritage Park Secondary School to the provincial championship and played for the junior national team. ​​

    “She was not a 4.4-40, incredible athlete who could bowl people out of the gym with her athleticism,” said Howard Tsumura, a journalist in the area who covered Langford’s career. “But I don’t think anybody got more out of what they were given to play on a basketball court than Dani did.”

    It all feels like a “lifetime ago,” Langford said.

    Entering her fourth season with the Warriors, Langford’s competitive playing days are far behind her, but they help her relate and understand the Warriors she works with. Langford still gets shots up in the Warriors’ facility early in the mornings for exercise, routine and discipline.

    “I feel most like myself when basketball’s around me,” Langford said. “Being in a gym is calming, shooting is calming yet energizing, and watching a game is familiar and fun. And talking basketball to this day is something I love to do as I can have conversations from many angles, from a physiotherapist watching how athletes move, to talking with coaches about plays, to players about what decisions they make and why.”

    Langford’s younger daughter, 8-year-old Maddie, is into basketball and shoots around with her mom in their backyard. The physiotherapist wants to coach her just like her dad did for her.

    One of the biggest challenges Langford has with the Warriors is balancing her family life at home with her work family — and the rigorous travel schedule and season grind that separates them. In her first season with the Warriors, the 2021-22 championship year, she was one of the only women with children who traveled with the team. The Langfords have since made Burlingame their home base and are building the type of village it takes to raise a family.

    In the training room and at home, both of Langford’s families have a new Hall of Famer.

    We watched Steph’s new TV show so you don’t have to

    Steph Curry’s first foray into acting is out, streaming on Peacock, as you may have heard in his media tour this week.

    “Mr. Throwback” — streaming on Peacock and premiering Sept. 12 on NBC — is about a caricatured version of Curry and a down-on-his-luck former high school teammate, Danny (Adam Pally), who returns to Steph’s life in dire straits. Hijinks ensue.

    The scripted show is at its best when it has a Nathan Fielder-esque cringe. It misses when trying to go down the sentimental route; it’s definitely not a Mike Schur show. Some of the dialogue can be corny, and some jokes crude.

    Many parts of the show are surreal (even Steve Kerr and Curry’s personal security, Yusef Wright, makes cameos). But at the same time, the mockumentary format makes other scenes too on-the-nose (Grossman, who can’t escape his past, sells sports memorabilia).

    It’s not all bad. After the first two episodes, as Danny’s despicable lie that drives the plot gets more and more out of control, the show picks up. It’d be unfair to expect Curry to win an Emmy, but playing himself helps hide his unnatural acting.

    The bits with the overexaggerated version of Curry, as with any well-written jokes, have layers of truth to them. He inspires everyone around him to realize their dreams with his relentless positivity, gets invited to Sasha Obama’s graduation dinner and ruins a little girl’s birthday party by buying a Chicago nightclub. Curry’s assistant, Kimberly (Ego Nwodim of SNL fame) is the real breakout star.

    As somewhat of a television snob, I frankly went into “Mr. Throwback” thinking it would be unwatchable dribble-drabble. Watching with low expectations, the show was… fine! I bet my mom would love it.

    Pre-camp workouts

    The Warriors have reportedly brought in Bruno Caboclo, Troy Brown Jr. and Davis Bertans for workouts this past week. Kevin Knox’s inclusion on the Summer League roster seems like a similar flier: the Warriors are interested in adding players with high upside to the back-end of their roster.

    That quartet includes various ages, NBA success, prospect pedigree and skills. The only throughline, really, is that the Warriors (correctly) see no downside in doing their due diligence. It doesn’t hurt to see what’s under the hood.

    Don’t expect any of the pre-training camp workouts to contribute for the Warriors in a meaningful way. Some might get a training camp invite, and most won’t even get that chance. But you never know!

    Who won the offseason?

    Rosters are pretty much finalized, with the dust settled on significant offseason transactions. Brandon Ingram and Zach LaVine appear staying put, Paul George is in Philadelphia, and the Celtics reloaded.

    Biggest winners:

    1. Thunder (Caruso and Hartenstein are slam-dunk role players)
    2. 76ers (Rarely does a team’s offseason Plan A play out so flawlessly)
    3. Nets (That Mikal Bridges haul, though…)
    4. Suns (Monte Morris and Tyus Jones on minimum deals, yes please)
    5. Celtics (The current gold standard in roster building brought the band back)

    Biggest losers:

    1. Clippers (Paul George leaving for nothing means the Clips are relying on James Harden and Kawhi Leonard to be healthy and productive all year)
    2. Lakers (Something something maximizing championship windows for aging superstars…)
    3. Nuggets (Lost KCP and couldn’t replace him… and that Jamal Murray max extension is risky)
    4. Bulls (Even more stuck in no man’s land, but at least the Matas Buzelis pick is fun)
    5. Bucks (Gary Trent Jr. is a nice pickup, but it’s danger time for Milwaukee)

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    Danny Emerman

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  • What’s next for Warriors after Lauri Markkanen extends with Jazz

    What’s next for Warriors after Lauri Markkanen extends with Jazz

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    Now that Lauri Markkanen has signed a five-year, $238 million contract extension with the Utah Jazz, the Warriors can officially turn the page into the last chapter of the offseason.

    The Warriors very well could still make a minor transaction or two before camp opens, but their roster will be more or less the same. They lost Klay Thompson and Chris Paul, brought in De’Anthony Melton, Kyle Anderson and Buddy Hield, returned Gary Payton II and Kevon Looney and added depth pieces Lindy Waters III and Daeqwon Plowden. Golden State’s salary commitments are slightly below the first apron, which it’s hard-capped at.

    An offseason of slight roster improvement but bereft of a major upside swing means the Warriors are poised to enter the 2024-25 season banking on the internal development of Jonathan Kuminga and Brandin Podziemski and a less erratic season from Draymond Green to climb the ladder in a stacked Western Conference.

    With Markkanen settled in Utah, the Warriors’ offseason checklist has dwindled. But there are a few steps, procedurally and in the abstract, left.

    First, the Warriors have to clear a roster spot for Quinten Post, their second-round pick. Plowden, Reece Beekman and Pat Spencer currently take up Golden State’s three two-way spots — a common way teams sign second rounders. And because of Golden State’s hard-cap situation, the team doesn’t have enough room as currently constructed to sign Post to a standard rookie deal.

    That means a small move is just about inevitable.

    The path of least resistance to adding Post would likely be to waive Beekman and replace him with Post as a two-way player. Golden State signed Beekman, the former Virginia guard, after he went undrafted, but he was injured for most of Summer League. It’d still be possible to keep him on an Exhibit 10 contract even after releasing him.

    Golden State could also shed salary by trading or cutting a player on the back-end of the roster, like Gui Santos or Waters.

    Beyond finding a way to officially sign Post, the only real roster consideration the Warriors have is with their players eligible for rookie contract extensions.

    General manager Mike Dunleavy Jr. said the Warriors are interested in extending Jonathan Kuminga and Moses Moody. But there isn’t necessarily pressure on the team to get an extension on either done immediately.

    Kuminga, still just 21 until October, made big strides as a scorer last year, bumping his scoring average from 9.9 to 16.1 points per game. He was especially effective as a power forward next to Green, in lineups where his lack of outside shooting is less detrimental.

    With another leap, Kuminga could earn himself a hefty pay day. His draft classmates Franz Wagner, Scottie Barnes and Evan Mobley each signed five-year, $224 million extensions. They’ve each proven more individually than Kuminga, but have also been afforded more opportunities.

    “We want those guys here,” Dunleavy said of Kuminga and Moody at Summer League. “We believe in them, we drafted them.”

    Steph Curry is also technically eligible for an extension, though Dunleavy stated the obvious when he said he can have “whatever he wants.”

    Markkanen remaining with the Jazz almost certainly precludes the Warriors from adding an elite secondary scorer who could take the burden off Curry’s shoulders. The two most talented players rumored to be available via trade at the moment are Brandon Ingram and Zach LaVine — both of whom have their warts.

    Despite Golden State’s need for a high-end talent infusion and owner Joe Lacob’s appetite for spending to compete, trading assets for Ingram or LaVine at this stage of the offseason appears far-fetched.

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    Danny Emerman

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  • Podziemski flirts with triple double in Warriors’ Summer League win

    Podziemski flirts with triple double in Warriors’ Summer League win

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    LAS VEGAS — Through five games, the Warriors remain undefeated in Summer League play.

    They hoisted the Mitch Richmond Trophy with a 3-0 California Classic and have now started the major showcase in Vegas with two straight wins.

    In their latest victory, a 92-82 pull-away from Chicago, Brandin Podziemski neared a triple-double, finishing with 21 points, 12 rebounds and seven assists. His running mate, Trayce Jackson-Davis, tallied 17 points and 10 boards.

    Sunday is expected to be Podziemski and Jackson-Davis’ last Summer League game. It’s standard for established second-year NBA players like themselves to play a few games to get extra offseason reps.

    “My wish list is that they play, but we have to look at the big picture,” head coach Anthony Vereen said. “I don’t know what the next plan will be, but I know they’re competitive guys. If you give it up to them, they’re gonna play…It’s been a pleasure to coach them, and I hope I get to coach them a little bit more.”

    Golden State fell behind early, but Podziemski keyed an 11-1 run to help them take a 24-23 lead after the first quarter. In that run, the point guard assisted on a Kevin Knox II corner 3 and canned two triples of his own.

    Back-to-back buckets from Podziemski in the last 26 seconds of the second quarter sent the Warriors into halftime with some extra rhythm, up three. At half, Podziemski had 14 points, five rebounds and four assists — including an alley-oop dime to Summer League standout Daeqwon Plowden.

    Triple-double watch continued for Podziemski. Although he said postgame it wasn’t on his mind, it was clear the guard put an emphasis on setting up his teammates. He opened the second half with an assist to Plowden and a perfect outlet pass for a fast-break dunk off a rebound. Then he found Trayce Jackson-Davis on a no-look pass underneath for an easy jam. That brought his totals to six boards and seven assists.

    “I’m not mad if you’re hunting assists,” Vereen said. “If you’re hunting points, I’ve got a problem.”

    Podziemski wasn’t hunting his shot, but he did find pockets of the game to get buckets. He dropped in a baseline fadeaway at the end of the shot clock, displaying the level of calm an established NBA player like himself should in Summer League play. As the Warriors earned a double-digit lead, he looked even more comfortable.

    In the fourth, Podziemski canned a catch-and-shoot 3, then drove the baseline off a pump fake for a one-handed jam. The last time he dunked like that, Podziemski said, was last year in his hometown of Milwaukee against the Bucks.

    “I’ve been putting in work the last 10 weeks on my body,” Podziemski said. “So I figured I’d make it work.”

    Podziemski was efficient, going 8-for-14 from the floor, but he also committed seven turnovers.

    “A bunch of them were just stupid,” Podziemski said. “Like, why would I do that? A lot of them were in transition, hit-ahead passes. But I feel like in the regular season, I’m going to have guys in different spots. Just our spacing was a little jacked up, but that’s on me to get that organized.”

    Bulls rookie Matas Buzelis surged in the second half, draining several tough shots against smaller defenders. The 6-foot-10 wing recorded 28 points on 10-for-22 shooting.

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    Danny Emerman

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  • 3 takeaways from Warriors’ California Classic win over Lakers

    3 takeaways from Warriors’ California Classic win over Lakers

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    SAN FRANCISCO — There were gloriously flubbed layups, an absence of one highly anticipated rookie in particular, and another Warriors blowout victory.

    Anthony Vereen remains undefeated in his lifetime as a head coach.

    “We talked about some of our core principles, some things we really wanted to set our culture (with), and we said commitment,” Vereen said postgame. “Individual commitment to our team effort, and we said connection — not just on the court, but off the court. And if you see these guys hang with each other, you’d swear that they’ve been on the team for, like, years.

    “So that’s really humbling as a coach to see that, that they want to play for each other. They know your success equals my success equals our success.”

    Much to the chagrin of the rather full Chase Center stands, the Lakers held Bronny James out as a precautionary measure due to swelling in his knee. At various points during the game, scattered “We want Bronny” chants broke out from the crowd.

    Warriors second-round pick Quinten Post also missed his second straight game as he continues to ramp up from a minor leg injury.

    Daeqwon Plowden, Ethan Thompson and Marques Bolden stood out for a second straight game for the Warriors, leading them to a 92-68 victory.

    Here are three observations from the action.

    Plenty of minutes to go around

    With Trayce Jackson-Davis and Brandin Podziemski training with the US Select Team, the Warriors have had fewer NBA-caliber players rostered through the first couple games than most teams.

    The bench got even thinner Sunday against the young Lakers.

    Post missed his second straight game as he awaits clearance from the performance team. Pat Spencer, who had a terrific California Classic opener, was also in street clothes on Sunday. Yuri Collins also missed the first game.

    The absences provided more opportunities for guys like Bolden, Plowden, Mantas Rubstavicius and Kevin Knox II. That’s not such a bad thing. And for the Warriors, more opportunities meant more impressive team basketball.

    First look at Knox

    Kevin Knox II, the ninth overall pick in the 2018 Draft, made his Warriors Summer League debut. He was on Golden State’s initial roster, but a calf injury caused some confusion about his availability. On Sunday, he was ready to roll.

    Players of Knox’s pedigree and experience shouldn’t have much trouble with Summer League competition. But because of the calf injury, this was the 24-year-old’s first real run of the summer, he said postgame. He certainly didn’t dominate.

    Knox flubbed a pair of layups and went 0-for-4 at the free throw line overall. The former Knick, Hawk, Piston and Blazer snagged a couple steals and sank a 3 in the second half.

    Knox logged seven points, five assists and four rebounds in 19 minutes, going 3-for-10 from the field. He wants to use the Summer League as an opportunity to compete while playing organized basketball, get in game shape and prove that he can be a leader.

    “I love the game of basketball,” Knox said. “I love playing. I just really want to go out there and show teams that I can compete on a nightly basis no matter the stage I’m playing.”

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    Danny Emerman

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  • Warriors to hire pair of veteran coaches to bench

    Warriors to hire pair of veteran coaches to bench

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    The Warriors wanted to add more experience to their coaching staff, and appear to have accomplished as much.

    The Warriors are planning to hire Terry Stotts as their new lead assistant and Jerry Stackhouse as another assistant, league sources confirmed to this news organization. The additions come after Kenny Atkinson, Steve Kerr’s top assistant from last season, departed for the Cleveland job.

    ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski was the first to report the news.

    Stotts has 13 years of head coaching experience at the NBA level, most recently from 2012 to 2021 with the Blazers. In Portland, Stotts amassed a 402-318 record and helped the Blazers to eight postseason appearances in nine seasons.

    In the 2004-05 season, Stotts served as an assistant coach for the Warriors under Mike Montgomery.

    Stackhouse has spent the last five seasons as Vanderbilt’s head coach. He took a rebuilding program to a 22-15 record in 2022-23, but the Commodores took a step back and went 9-23 last year.

    Stackhouse played 18 seasons in the NBA and was named to two All-Star teams. He averaged 16.9 points per game in his career and retired in 2013, having played for Detroit, Dallas, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Washington, Milwaukee, Miami and Atlanta.

    If the Warriors’ coaching staff from last year returns, Stotts and Stackhouse will be joined by Chris DeMarco, Bruce Fraser, Anthony Vereen, Ron Adams and others.

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    Danny Emerman

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  • Kurtenbach: Why I’m not worried about the Warriors losing Klay Thompson (and other Dubs thoughts)

    Kurtenbach: Why I’m not worried about the Warriors losing Klay Thompson (and other Dubs thoughts)

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    Warriors fans might be fretting, but Golden State shouldn’t fear Klay Thompson going onto the open market in free agency.

    That’s because I don’t expect Thompson to find the kind of big-money, long-term deal he wants from the rest of the league.

    There are only five teams with salary cap space of $30 million or more coming into the season — enough space to sign Thompson to that big-money deal he wants: Detroit, Philadelphia, Utah, Oklahoma City, and Orlando.

    Are any of those teams going to use that cap space on Thompson?

    More importantly, are they keen to spend on him for three or four seasons?

    I don’t see it.

    Thompson would have zero interest in going to Detroit — no matter the number. I don’t think Detroit would be interested in him, either. The same is probably true in Utah.

    Orlando is being held up as a possibility — the Magic need a 3-point shooter. But there’s no evidence of traction there.

    It’s also hard to see Oklahoma City viewing Thompson as a game-changing piece, particularly after trading for Alex Caruso. Plus, you know Thompson would be a bench player for the Thunder.

    The team that should elicit some concern from Dubs fans is Philadelphia. But Thompson isn’t even close to the Sixers’ first choice in a use-it-or-lose-it offseason. They have the cap space and the draft picks to go big-game hunting — Thompson is no longer big game.

    Outside of that, who is going to move players and money to make room to add Thompson?

    And in this new CBA environment, there will simply be fewer participants in free agency — at least when it comes to players on Thompson’s level.

    Thompson can land either the term or the money from another team— someone will make an honest offer for him.

    But the only place he can reasonably land both is Golden State. I’d be stunned if he doesn’t return.

    Another exit

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    Dieter Kurtenbach

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  • Kings relish taking revenge on Warriors, pushing Golden State dynasty into uncertainty

    Kings relish taking revenge on Warriors, pushing Golden State dynasty into uncertainty

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    SACRAMENTO – Sacramento Kings coach Mike Brown wasn’t in a sentimental mood after his team routed Golden State 118-94 in a do-or-die play-in game on Tuesday night. 

    Sure, he spent six years as an assistant from 2016 to 2022 under Steve Kerr and helped the Warriors win three titles. 

    And yes, his former team faces a franchise-defining offseason as the dynastic trio of Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Klay Thompson is in jeopardy of dissolving once Thompson reaches free agency.

    And of course those familiar players, who already looked awfully old and slow in the blowout, will only get older and slower as they approach the back half of their 30s. Even if they do come back, making the playoffs wouldn’t be easy. 

    So what did Brown think of his team possibly dealing the lethal blow to what was left of the famed “Death Lineup” he once coached?

    He had more important things to worry about.

    “The reality of it is, is that it’s not my problem, and it’s not my concern,” Brown said, more focused on planning for the Pelicans and the Kings’ second play-in game on Friday. “We’re getting ready for New Orleans.”

    He added that he thinks that the trio is still capable of playing great basketball: “Those three guys in my opinion are special, and I was a part of many championships and good memories with them. Whatever they decide to do at the end of the day, that’s what they decide to do.”

    The Kings players were happy with, but not overly celebratory, after dispatching the team that eliminated them in the first round last season. Keegan Murray scored a game-high 32 and hit a Splash Bros.-esque eight 3-pointers. 

    He said that the win wouldn’t take away the sting of last year’s gutting Game 7 defeat at home, but admitted that getting revenge didn’t hurt either.

    “It kind of peels the band-aid off a little bit,” Murray said. “They got us last year, and we got them this year under a different circumstance.”

    Brown, Murray and guard De’Aaron Fox all credited the team’s dedication to physicality as a key to their success on Tuesday. 

    One player they raved about was defensive savant Keon Ellis, who went from a fringe rotation player on a two-way contract to the defender who helped hold Thompson to zero points in what could be his Warriors finale. 

    Brown couldn’t help but compare the stellar stopper to Golden State’s own Draymond Green, a scrappy but unheralded defender who carved out an incredible career on high-flying offenses.  

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • Pelicans shoot down Warriors’ hopes of escaping lowest play-in round

    Pelicans shoot down Warriors’ hopes of escaping lowest play-in round

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    SAN FRANCISCO — Earlier this week, the Warriors shot an earth-shattering 63.4% from behind the arc to stun the Lakers.

    Now they know how it feels.

    Playing with a chance to climb up to the eighth seed in the West, the Warriors couldn’t find an answer to the Pelicans’ aerial assault. New Orleans shot 20-for-38 (52.6%). CJ McCollum alone went 8-for-13 from deep, pouring in 28 points. Draymond Green played stout individual defense on Zion Williamson, but the Pelicans star still finished with 26 points.

    The Pelicans held off a fourth-quarter push from Steph Curry and Golden State. Curry scored 16 of his 33 points in the fourth quarter, but committed seven turnovers in the game.

    Curry’s flurry came too late in a 114-109 loss. Because the Warriors (45-36) had to win both of their remaining games for a chance to advance up to eight place, they’re likely locked into the play-in round between the ninth and 10th seeded teams.

    It was a night of pandemonium in the Western Conference — both at the top and bottom. Denver blew a 23-point lead to the last-place Spurs, falling from first place to third. The Timberwolves survived a scare to Atlanta, as did the Lakers against a Grizzlies team with 13 inactive players.

    The Lakers’ win exerted pressure on both the Warriors and Kings to win; all three California teams are vying for the eighth seed.

    Golden State came out of the tunnel with life.Draymond Green stonewalled Zion Williamson inside before tossing an alley-oop off the glass to Trayce Jackson-Davis. Moments later, Steph Curry found Jackson-Davis for a dunk over Williamson.

    The Warriors opened on a 17-6 run. Both teams were on the second night of a back-to-back, but the older Warriors, at home, looked like they had more energy.

    But the younger Pelicans had fresh legs — they just needed some time to heat up. An 11-0 surge in the second quarter turned a double-digit Warriors lead into a Pelicans edge. When Steve Kerr re-inserted his starters into the game to quell the Pelicans’ run, things got even worse for Golden State.

    McCollum started raining 3s. Trey Murphy III joined him. Nobody on the Pelicans could miss, as they put up a 45-point second quarter.

    McCollum dropped 15 points in the period, each of which came from behind the arc. The Pelicans hit 10 of their 13 shots from deep as the Warriors helped too frequently off Pelicans shooters, particularly  in the corners.

    The Pelicans were taking advantage of a Warriors team often backpedaling on defense, as turnovers prevented them from getting set. Curry, a night after playing 36 minutes in Portland, committed four turnovers in the second quarter alone and five in the first half.

    Herb Jones, Jose Alvarado and Murphy blanketed him tightly, but several mistakes Curry made were unlike him. Kerr has said that an indicator of Curry being fatigued is his decision-making.

    At one point in New Orleans’ second quarter barrage, cameras caught McCollum jawing with Klay Thompson. Golden State’s sharpshooter didn’t have much of a leg to stand on in the moment, as the Pelicans won the frame by 23, taking a 62-48 lead into halftime.

    Thompson got the next word, though. His 3 in transition capped an 18-9 burst for the Warriors to open the second half. Andrew Wiggins spent more time guarding McCollum and was aggressive on the offensive end. The Warriors cut New Orleans’ lead to five and made it a game of runs.

    New Orleans had a counter. Triples from Jones, Murphy, McCollum and even Williamson quelled the Warriors’ momentum.

    The Warriors were getting crushed in the 3-point battle and in the turnover department. But they were tough on the glass, creating extra opportunities and getting to the free throw line. A Green offensive rebound created a Chris Paul 3-pointer, inching the Warriors within six early in the fourth. Then he found Thompson for another 3 on the wing.

    The Chase Center crowd erupted when Curry checked back in, his team down 92-89 with 7:57 left. Moments later, when Curry nailed a step-back 3 over Williamson, the building got all sorts of ideas.

    But Curry committed another turnover, Williamson went into freight train mode, and Murphy converted a tough 3 of his own. Just like that, New Orleans pushed its lead back up to nine. Then Jones found himself wide open in the corner for yet another 3.

    Curry drilled another step-back and sandwiched it with two layups. He certainly didn’t look tired anymore. Thompson stripped Williamson and Wiggins got to the line to bring the Warriors within three as the clock ticked under 90 seconds.

    The Chase Center crowd rose to its feet. McCollum sat them down right away with his eighth 3. Curry responded with his seventh. Back and forth. 112-109.

    The Warriors had a chance to tie the game with 20 seconds left, but Curry rushed a one-handed 3-pointer over two defenders. The Warriors had the last run, but it wasn’t big enough.

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    Danny Emerman

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  • Warriors adjusting rotation with Steph Curry sidelined

    Warriors adjusting rotation with Steph Curry sidelined

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    SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors have a new starting lineup, at least temporarily.

    With Steph Curry sidelined with a sprained right ankle, Golden State is turning the offense over to veteran point guard Chris Paul. In an additional wrinkle, the Warriors removed Andrew Wiggins from the starting lineup, replacing him with rookie center Trayce Jackson-Davis. That gives Golden State a starting-five of Paul, Jackson-Davis, Brandin Podziemski, Jonathan Kuminga and Draymond Green.

    “We’ll lean on certain actions that Chris likes to run,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “Look at some different lineups as well. I’m kind of looking at is as: while Steph is out, we’ve got to figure out what do we have to do to win tonight? And we’ll worry about the next game then. But within that, we’ll have a lot of decisions to make. Who’s going to play off the bench — it’s hard to script it, because we don’t know how the game’s going to go. If we need some shooting, we’ll put our shooters out there. If we need more rim protection, we can go back to Loon. There’s minutes to be had, but it’s really dependent on how the game’s going.”

    Jackson-Davis sprained his ankle on Thursday night and was initially listed as questionable, but will play through the injury. He has impressed recently as a lob threat and rim protector. He and Paul have developed a strong rapport, with the point guard finding him either on alley-oop dishes or pocket passes when he rolls to the basket.

    Wiggins has started the past two games after returning from an absence caused by an unspecified personal matter, but only played 15 and 14 minutes. He’s averaging a career-low 12.5 points and 26.7 minutes per game in the first year of a 4-year, $109 million contract.

    The non-Curry starters should be an athletic, defensive-minded combination. Green, Kuminga, and Jackson-Davis are three of Golden State’s best and most switchable defenders. The question may be if the group can muster up enough outside shooting.

    The new starting five gives Golden State a bench unit of Wiggins, Klay Thompson, Moses Moody, Kevon Looney and Lester Quinones. Gary Payton II would normally slot into that group as well, but he’s out with general illness. Dario Saric, who’s been out of the rotation, could see more time. His minutes got trimmed because of a  brutal shooting slump, but chemistry with Paul could prove helpful.

    Golden State’s new rotation is subject to change and will naturally fluctuate. It also is probably ephemeral. Because the Warriors got good news on Curry’s MRI, he could return to the court as soon as Wednesday. If that’s the case, everything will probably revert back to normal, as that group has gone 14-5 since Jan. 30 — the best record in the NBA in that span.

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    Danny Emerman

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