Author Archive

2
18
Nov

On the New Owners

It’s strange how anticlimactic the actual ownership takeover has been for the Warriors. I guess that’s because the real shock came when we found out that Lacob & Gruber had bested Larry Ellison (interesting bit of back story on that here), and we’ve now had months to get to know Lacob in particular (even despite his inability to really discuss roster moves in detail).

But now that it’s official, and their first round of media interviews are done, we’re finally getting a bit more details on what to expect. On the basketball side, a bigger and stronger team that can hang with the elites of the league; on the entertainment side, a new mascot and and emphasis on a better “entertainment experience” (not sure how that’s much different than before, mascot excepted).

A few scattered thoughts on the new guys:

Joe Lacob. I like this guy. Unlike the Wall Street bankers who offer little real value to the economy or the Fortune-500 CEOs who make a ton of money seemingly no matter what happens under their watch, venture capital guys make a real contribution in spurring innovation and (for the most part) only make money when they can push a start-up to a successful breakthrough.

My hope is that many of the same skills that make for a successful V.C. operative — patience, quick identification of the major structural factors holding a firm back from success, smart investments, good judgment of people, a penchant for avoiding drama, and a willingness to take a hand-off approach (to a point) in order to let the magic makers do their thing — will translate well to the NBA. And Lacob is certainly well-informed when it comes to basketball, so it’s not like he’s going to force things into the shape of the cookie cutters that he is used to in Silicon Valley.

This is a guy who clearly wants to win. Not in a joyous Mark Cuban way, but in a stone-cold-ruthless-back-room-deal sort of way. He clearly has confidence in his own basketball instincts, and has already made quite the mark on the team even while ostensibly sitting on the sidelines. Unlike, say, Kawakami, I like the patience he has shown with the current Warriors leadership team. Nelson was the obvious guy to change — especially with Smart in the wings as an obvious backup — and I have no problem with going the rest of the season with the current leadership before getting down to business in the off-season. I certainly prefer that to — as Lacob noted in one of his interviews — the Chris Mullin approach of trying to make your mark as quickly as possible.

The smartest criticism I’ve seen of Lacob is that his Boston experience might have made it all seem a little too easy to Lacob, and that experience won’t necessarily translate well. Boston was in the right place at the right time and got Kevin Garnett in a way that can hardly be duplicated — but I’d have to imagine that Lacob is aware of that. Time will tell, of course, though his emphasis in interviews on the Garnett trade and the impact of just one player suggests that he’s a guy who will be very willing to be aggressive on the trade front if there’s a chance to land a superstar.

So the bottom line is that, so far, I really like this guy’s style. I like that he’s pushed the team toward better rebounding and a more “normal” roster in terms of height match-ups. I like that he’s aware that the NBA is a “star” league, and the in order to win the big prize you need several clear stars. I like that he’s a numbers guys (I’ve noticed several times already that he loves to correct slightly inaccurate numbers — it’s a bit pedantic, sure, but I do like that he knows the numbers), which gives me hope that he’ll pursue the right stars while building this team instead of just going for the big names (Amare Stoudamire, anyone?). I know it’s still early, so label me cautiously super-optimistic.

One more note on Lacob — there’s been a lot of talk about the fact that right after the purchase became official, Joe hired his son Kirk as “Director of Basketball Operations” in the front office (it’s not nearly as impressive a job as the title suggests — he’ll be the low man on the totem pole and will be working on stats work, scouting, and salary cap issues). First off, like any good liberal, I’m not exactly thrilled at the nepotism on clear display and the fact that a guy named Joe LaFool would never in a million years get this job. But I’m much more concerned with what this will mean for the team, and on that front I see very little downside. He’s clearly qualified for what is essentially an entry-level positions, and hopefully Kirk will be focusing on advanced statistics and other metric-based judgments on players. That’s something that has been non-existent for this franchise (hello, Troy Murphy’s extension), and if that’s the case then I’ll be glad that he has his dad’s ear when it comes to making roster decisions. So file this one under things I’m not very concerned about, at least until Kirk gets some real responsibility.

Peter Guber. Thing guy seems like he’ll provide plenty of entertainment over the next few years, and is destined for at least one national-level foot-in-mouth incident. I like the enthusiasm he brings, and despite the avalanche of buzzwords he does seem to have a solid grasp of how to build a quality entertainment product. The guy clearly loves bringing joy to people (and being a part of it), which is more than you can ever say for Cohan.

And while it’s easy to cast him as a bit of a huckster, I was really struck by the way he described their ownership during their Chronicle Live segment earlier this week. The question was about whether the Warriors fans would be interested in watching a more plodding, half-court team (this was after Lacob talked about wanting “more beef” and a more defensive mindset), and Guber gave a ton of deference to the fans and described him and Lacob not as “owners,” but as “stewards” of a team that really belongs to the fans. Maybe he’s just talking a fan-centric game here at the start, but it came across as fairly genuine and is the sort of well thought out description that I wouldn’t expect from someone who was just bullshitting.

So while Lacob is the one I care about more right now since he’ll be in charge of the on-court product, I do like the energy and enthusiasm that Guber brings to the entertainment side. My guess is that the half-priced night on Monday was all Guber’s idea — and it was a good one.

The bottom line. Obviously, this ownership team will be a huge upgrade over Cohan. But the question will always linger: would things have been better with Ellison? Aside from the bottomless pockets (which certainly matter), I’m not sure it would be.

Lacob is passionate about basketball (compare that to Ellison, who attended his first Warriors game last season), has seen a well-run franchise from the inside, and from the sounds of things will basically be working full-time with the Warriors from now on. I think he’s just as ruthlessly dedicated to winning as Ellison ever would be, but brings a lot more basketball experience to the table than Ellison ever could.

I’ve liked the roster moves made so far (still not sure Lee is worth $80M, but he’s clearly a massive upgrade in a department — rebounding — where they desperately needed help before they could ever hope to be consistently good), and the basketball philosophy he describes in interviews is one that I can definitely get behind. Sure, there are still questions (Do these guys really have enough money? Will they ever go into the luxury tax, or will “salary protection” once again emerge as a Warriors buzzword? Do they have an actual plan to become this Celtics-Lakers hybrid they keep describing?), but all-in-all I definitely like the direction things are headed in terms of the on-court product.

So here’s to a new day for Warriors basketball. Chris Cohan’s ownership is dead — long live Lacob and Guber!

UPDATE BY JAKE: A good take from Truehoop on Kirk Lacob

3
17
Nov

MOAR Stats

Updated the stats dashboard on the left to introduce some net statistics graphics. First thing that popped out was how badly the Warriors are getting beaten in terms of foul calls and trips to the line — so far, they’ve only drawn more fouls than their opponent once in 11 games. Yikes!

These were the net stats that seemed obvious to add — anything I missed that you’d like to see added?

0
16
Nov

Game #11: Warriors 101, Pistons 97

Pistons 97

@

Warriors 101

Pistons 21 21 27 28 97
Warriors 34 31 22 14 101
  Net 13 10 -5 -14 4
  Season Avg -2.9 0.8 -0.4 -0.1 -2.2
  Compare to Season Avg 15.9 9.2 -4.6 -13.9 6.2
 Warriors Stats
  FG% 3P% FT% FTA Fouls OReb TReb Assists Steals Blocks Turns POTurns PIPaint FBPoints
Game 42.4% 38.9% 81.5% 27 25 14 44 22 13 5 12 18 42 23
Season Avg 46.2% 39.2% 76.1% 20.7 22 11.6 40.5 22.5 9 5 14.1 17.5 42.6 18.6
Difference -3.8% -0.3% 5.4% 6.3 3 2.4 3.5 -0.5 4 0 -2.1 6.5 -0.6 4.4
 Net Comparison
  FG% 3P% FT% FTA Fouls OReb TReb Assists Steals Blocks Turns POTurns PIPaint FBPoints
Net Game -2.2% 2% 14.8% -9 -5 5 2 0 5 2 4 8 6 9
Net Season Avg -0.6% 3.5% -1.2% -7 -3.6 -1.2 -4.3 -2.2 0.8 0.7 1.2 2 -2.9 -0.8
Net Difference -1.6% -1.5% 16% -2 -1.4 6.2 6.3 2.2 4.2 1.3 2.8 6 8.9 9.8

Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images

Enjoyed the first half of the Lacob/Guber Welcome Game a lot, the second half not so much. How they go from 65 points in the first to only 36 in the second is beyond me.

It was nice to see a game in the Arena for the first time this year, and the atmosphere was great with the half-off promotion. Enjoyed a delicious blackened chicken nachos that was ridiculously tasty for only $5.50!

Back to the game, my main takeaways are that a) this team really misses David Lee, and b) until he comes back, we need to see more of Jeff Adrien. His offense may never come around, but if it ever does he could turn into an amazing find. He led the Warriors with a +16 in only 16 minutes.

While I in no way wish we still had Maggette, this was the sort of game where he could get to the line and help the team score when nothing else was working. If Monta could ever figure out how to get to the line reliably, we could potentially spare ourselves the sort of pathetic offensive endgame we saw from the Warriors last night.

This also gives me a chance to highlight how disappointing Reggie Williams has been so far this year. He was billed as a scoring spark-plug off the bench, but so far his late-season form from last year has been nothing but a distant memory. I think they’re putting a lot on him in having him pick up some PG duties, so maybe just going back to the basics — scoring — would help at this point.

This was their first win with Lee out, which is great because they have a few more to go now that he’s out for an extended recovery period. Hopefully we’ll get to see a bit more of Adrien, and also a few less fouls from the guards, pls.

Some photos from the game below above the box score:

1 2 3 4 T
DET 21 21 27 28 97
GS 34 31 22 14 101
Detroit Pistons (4-7)
field goalsrebounds
pos min fgm-a 3pm-a ftm-a +/- off def tot ast pf st to bs ba pts
T. Prince F 28:17 7-13 0-0 1-2 -6 1 4 5 1 1 0 3 0 0 15
A. Daye F 25:17 5-7 2-3 2-4 +2 1 2 3 3 0 0 1 0 0 14
B. Wallace C 24:00 1-2 0-0 0-0 -8 2 4 6 2 1 1 1 1 0 2
R. Hamilton G 24:13 4-11 1-4 4-5 +3 0 4 4 4 2 1 0 0 0 13
R. Stuckey G 33:30 2-8 0-1 7-8 +8 3 5 8 6 4 0 2 0 2 11
W. Bynum 12:10 1-3 0-1 2-2 -5 0 1 1 2 4 1 4 0 1 4
T. McGrady 25:56 3-8 0-2 0-2 -16 2 3 5 1 1 0 1 0 0 6
B. Gordon 18:28 5-11 2-4 2-2 -3 0 2 2 1 3 2 3 0 1 14
C. Villanueva 25:02 5-10 2-4 6-7 +1 0 8 8 2 2 1 1 1 0 18
J. Maxiell 05:29 0-0 0-0 0-2 -9 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
G. Monroe 17:38 0-1 0-0 0-2 +13 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 1 0
C. Wilcox DNP – Coach’s Decision
Total 240 33-74 7-19 24-36 9 33 42 22 20 8 16 3 5 97
44.6% 36.8% 66.7% team rebs: 14 total to: 16
Golden State Warriors (7-4)
field goalsrebounds
pos min fgm-a 3pm-a ftm-a +/- off def tot ast pf st to bs ba pts
D. Wright G-F 45:09 5-15 1-6 5-5 +7 1 6 7 6 3 1 1 0 0 16
V. Radmanovic F 22:35 2-6 0-3 0-0 -13 1 1 2 4 0 2 0 0 0 4
A. Biedrins C 31:10 4-5 0-0 1-2 -5 4 4 8 3 4 0 2 3 1 9
M. Ellis G 31:19 9-18 2-2 7-9 +14 0 3 3 3 5 1 1 0 0 27
S. Curry G 29:30 7-14 2-3 5-5 +15 0 5 5 4 6 2 3 0 0 21
J. Adrien 15:33 0-3 0-0 0-0 +16 1 2 3 0 1 3 1 0 0 0
R. Carney 14:58 2-5 0-1 3-4 +9 0 3 3 0 0 3 0 0 1 7
R. Williams 30:12 6-10 2-3 0-0 -16 0 1 1 2 4 0 2 1 0 14
D. Gadzuric 12:22 0-6 0-0 1-2 0 7 4 11 0 1 0 1 0 1 1
J. Lin 07:13 1-3 0-0 0-0 -7 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 2
C. Bell DNP – Coach’s Decision
B. Wright DNP – Coach’s Decision
Total 240 36-85 7-18 22-27 14 30 44 22 25 13 12 5 3 101
42.4% 38.9% 81.5% team rebs: 7 total to: 13

inactive

  • Pistons: Jerebko, Summers, White
  • Warriors: Amundson, Lee, Udoh

technical fouls

  • Pistons: –
  • Warriors: –

scoring

  • Lead Changes: 5
  • Times Tied: 7

arena stats

  • Arena: ORACLE Arena, Oakland, CA
  • Officials: #8 Marc Davis, #28 Tommy Nunez Jr., #40 Leon Wood
  • Attendance: 19123
  • Duration: 2:27
8
15
Nov

Preview: Pistons at Warriors

Detroit
Pistons

@

Golden State
Warriors

Oracle Arena
7:30pm | CSNBA

Official Game Preview

2010-11 Meetings
Warriors 97
Pistons 102
 
Pistons 97
Warriors 101
 

The Warriors debut their new ownership team tonight, as the team returns to the Oracle for some much needed home cooking. I’ll be headed out to the game tonight to enjoy some half-priced fun, and it will be great to get a good look at this team from up close. Unless his status has changed since Saturday, Lee is not expected to play tonight. What to watch for:

  • Return of the shot. In their last two games, the Warriors have shot 34% and 41%. Can they get back on track now that they’ll be playing at home and with good rest for the next two games?
  • Get to the stripe. As Owen at the Golden State Worriers notes in his stats-based recap of the first ten games, one place that the Warriors have really fallen off this year is in getting to the line. I think this starts with hitting enough outside shots to make the other team pay attention to the shooters, which creates the space for Monta to drive and draw obvious fouls against recovering defenders. But if the other team doesn’t need to honor the shooters, they can pack the lane and watch as the refs swallow their whistles while Monta drives right into a brick wall of interior defenders.
  • A new backup 4? In Saturday’s game, Jeff Adrien did what Brandon Wright seems congenitally incapable of: taking full advantage of an opportunity. Adrien grabbed 8 boards in 19 minutes with a +10 and was by far their most productive backup at the power forward spot. With Lee out another game, will Adrien get the start? And if he does, can he make it count?

UPDATE: View from here

0
14
Nov

Game #10: Bucks 79, Warriors 72

Warriors 72

@

Bucks 79

Warriors 16 14 21 21 72
Bucks 24 19 23 13 79
  Net -8 -5 -2 8 -7
  Season Avg -2.9 0.8 -0.4 -0.1 -2.2
  Compare to Season Avg -5.1 -5.8 -1.6 8.1 -4.8
 Warriors Stats
  FG% 3P% FT% FTA Fouls OReb TReb Assists Steals Blocks Turns POTurns PIPaint FBPoints
Game 34.1% 45.5% 60% 10 23 11 42 18 10 4 15 19 26 16
Season Avg 46.2% 39.2% 76.1% 20.7 22 11.6 40.5 22.5 9 5 14.1 17.5 42.6 18.6
Difference -12% 6.3% -16.1% -10.7 1 -0.6 1.5 -4.5 1 -1 0.9 3.5 -16.6 -2.6
 Net Comparison
  FG% 3P% FT% FTA Fouls OReb TReb Assists Steals Blocks Turns POTurns PIPaint FBPoints
Net Game 0.4% 8% -21% -11 -9 -8 -16 3 2 -5 3 4 -6 5
Net Season Avg -0.6% 3.5% -1.2% -7 -3.6 -1.2 -4.3 -2.2 0.8 0.7 1.2 2 -2.9 -0.8
Net Difference 1% 4.5% -19.8% -4 -5.4 -6.8 -11.7 5.2 1.2 -5.7 1.8 2 -3.1 5.8
Monta Ellis

AP Photo/Jeffrey Phelps

The road trip mercifully comes to an end, and one can only hope that a good night’s sleep in their own beds will remind these guys (Monta excluded) how to shoot. Outside of his 9-16, the rest of the team went 19-66 (29%). Ugly.

And the board-work wasn’t much better. The Warriors got creamed 58-42, a margin that would have been worse without Adrien’s solid contribution of 8 boards in 19 minutes. Adrien posted a +10, and after Brandon Wright’s lifeless zero-rebound performance I’d like to see Adrien get some more playing time in the games ahead. Adrien’s already 6th on the team in Wins Produced in just 30 minutes, so might as well see what you’ve got before Amundson and Udoh return.

Aside from Adrien’s nice contribution off the bench, Monta deserves a ton of credit for being the only starter to really show up tonight. Curry went 3-14, Dorell Wright went 2-14, and Biedrins went 0-4. These are just not the sorts of lines you can get from your starters on the road and expect to win (especially with a guy like Lee out).

With the new owner’s half-price promotion on Monday, I’d expect to see a sold out, extremely drunk crowd in their return to the Oracle. If that doesn’t give this team some energy and snap them out of their scoring funk, I’m not sure what will.

1 2 3 4 T
GS 16 14 21 21 72
MIL 24 19 23 13 79
Golden State Warriors (6-4)
field goalsrebounds
pos min fgm-a 3pm-a ftm-a +/- off def tot ast pf st to bs ba pts
D. Wright G-F 31:51 2-14 1-5 2-4 -10 1 3 4 2 1 1 1 0 1 7
A. Biedrins C 28:06 0-4 0-0 0-0 -7 2 7 9 1 3 1 1 1 1 0
D. Gadzuric C 11:49 1-3 0-0 0-0 -11 2 1 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 2
M. Ellis G 41:32 9-16 4-5 2-2 -2 0 5 5 8 5 3 7 0 0 24
S. Curry G 30:02 3-14 0-3 1-2 -12 1 1 2 4 5 3 2 1 3 7
V. Radmanovic 25:52 3-8 2-4 0-0 -5 1 2 3 2 5 0 1 0 1 8
B. Wright 07:50 1-2 0-0 0-0 -1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
R. Williams 24:00 4-11 2-4 1-2 +3 0 5 5 0 2 0 2 0 2 11
R. Carney 07:17 1-4 1-1 0-0 -5 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 3
J. Adrien 19:16 3-4 0-0 0-0 +10 3 5 8 0 1 0 0 2 0 6
C. Bell 12:26 1-2 0-0 0-0 +5 0 2 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 2
J. Lin DNP – Coach’s Decision
Total 240 28-82 10-22 6-10 11 31 42 18 23 10 15 4 9 72
34.1% 45.5% 60.0% team rebs: 6 total to: 17
Milwaukee Bucks (5-5)
field goalsrebounds
pos min fgm-a 3pm-a ftm-a +/- off def tot ast pf st to bs ba pts
L. Mbah a Moute F 38:47 1-2 0-0 4-5 +13 3 9 12 3 3 1 0 0 0 6
D. Gooden F 31:27 7-15 0-1 2-3 +8 6 4 10 3 3 2 2 0 1 16
A. Bogut C 39:13 4-12 0-0 0-2 +13 5 12 17 0 2 0 2 7 1 8
J. Salmons G-F 40:16 9-17 4-6 4-4 +12 0 4 4 1 1 2 3 0 0 26
B. Jennings G 41:34 6-19 2-5 5-5 +14 4 7 11 6 2 2 5 2 1 19
E. Ilyasova 11:04 0-6 0-2 0-0 -8 1 2 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
C. Maggette 14:39 1-6 0-0 0-0 -9 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 2
E. Boykins 04:50 0-1 0-0 0-0 -2 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 1 0
K. Dooling 12:16 0-5 0-2 2-2 +2 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 2
J. Brockman 05:54 0-0 0-0 0-0 -8 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0
C. Delfino DNP – Coach’s Decision
L. Sanders DNP – Coach’s Decision
Total 240 28-83 6-16 17-21 19 39 58 15 14 8 18 9 4 79
33.7% 37.5% 81.0% team rebs: 11 total to: 20

inactive

  • Warriors: Amundson, Lee, Udoh
  • Bucks: Douglas-Roberts, Hobson, Redd

technical fouls

  • Warriors: –
  • Bucks: –

scoring

  • Lead Changes: 0
  • Times Tied: 0

arena stats

  • Arena: Bradley Center, Milwaukee, WI
  • Officials: #41 Ken Mauer, #7 Kevin Fehr, #78 Scott Bolnick
  • Attendance: 17049
  • Duration: 2:5
4
13
Nov

Preview: Warriors at Bucks

Golden State
Warriors

@

Milwaukee
Bucks

Bradley Center
5:30pm | CSNBA/NBA TV

Official Game Preview

2010-11 Meetings
Warriors 72
Bucks 79
 
Bucks 94
Warriors 100
 

The Warriors (finally!) wrap up their road trip with a last stand in Milwaukee. A win gets them an impressive winning record on their first long roadie of the year, and a loss makes them wonder what might have been had they beat the Pistons six nights ago. What to watch for tonight:

  • The Wonder Duo. Can Monta and/or Curry go nuts and will the team to the victory? I have a hard time imagining the Warriors winning this game without an all-world performance from one of their two available stars; Curry seems the better bet with his matchup tonight against Jennings.
  • Second Chances. Brandon Wright totally blew his chance to turn some heads in his start against the Bulls, and did nothing to prove he can get the job done. He gets relegated to the bench tonight, but with Lee out he’ll have ample opportunity to make up for his missed chance in the last game. But will he?
0
12
Nov

David Lee out for 2 weeks

That elbow injury got infected — he’s now heading back to the bay area for surgery (!) to clean it out. Estimated time table for his return is 2 weeks. Let’s hope it doesn’t go much longer as last night didn’t give me much confidence in the Warriors’ back-up plan…

3
12
Nov

Game #9: Bulls 120, Warriors 90

Warriors 90

@

Bulls 120

Warriors 20 18 25 27 90
Bulls 34 32 28 26 120
  Net -14 -14 -3 1 -30
  Season Avg -2.9 0.8 -0.4 -0.1 -2.2
  Compare to Season Avg -11.1 -14.8 -2.6 1.1 -27.8
 Warriors Stats
  FG% 3P% FT% FTA Fouls OReb TReb Assists Steals Blocks Turns POTurns PIPaint FBPoints
Game 41.1% 30.4% 71.4% 7 16 18 39 20 9 4 19 31 44 20
Season Avg 46.2% 39.2% 76.1% 20.7 22 11.6 40.5 22.5 9 5 14.1 17.5 42.6 18.6
Difference -5.1% -8.8% -4.7% -13.7 -6 6.4 -1.5 -2.5 0 -1 4.9 -3.5 1.4 1.4
 Net Comparison
  FG% 3P% FT% FTA Fouls OReb TReb Assists Steals Blocks Turns POTurns PIPaint FBPoints
Net Game -13.7% -6.4% -19.9% -16 -9 7 -7 -9 -5 -6 -7 -15 -14 -17
Net Season Avg -0.6% 3.5% -1.2% -7 -3.6 -1.2 -4.3 -2.2 0.8 0.7 1.2 2 -2.9 -0.8
Net Difference -13.1% -9.9% -18.7% -9 -5.4 8.2 -2.7 -6.8 -5.8 -6.7 -8.2 -17 -11.1 -16.2

Ugly loss. When you’re missing your best inside player and then turn the ball over 9 times in the opening period on the road, you’re basically giving yourself no chance. Hopefully they can forget this one before finishing up the roadie tomorrow night in Milwaukee.

Read Feltbot for a recap of just how awful Brandon Wright was in his first start of the year. File this one under “Not seizing the opportunity.”

Upsides to this game? None that I can really see. The deficit hit 30 points in the second quarter, and still Monta played 37 minutes. You get the opportunity to see if Jeremy Lin and Jeff Adrien have anything to offer, and they get 9 and 6 minutes, respectively. They lose the rebounding battle, shoot 41%, and give up 55% shooting.

At least it’s just one game, and no one really faults them for losing to the Bulls on the road without Lee. Still, you’d hope to have at least seen a better effort. Let’s hope they get some needed rest before playing the red-hot Bucks tomorrow night.

1 2 3 4 T
GS 20 18 25 27 90
CHI 34 32 28 26 120
Golden State Warriors (6-3)
field goalsrebounds
pos min fgm-a 3pm-a ftm-a +/- off def tot ast pf st to bs ba pts
D. Wright G-F 35:10 5-13 2-7 0-0 -20 1 7 8 2 1 0 3 1 1 12
B. Wright F 15:36 2-6 0-0 0-0 -15 2 1 3 0 1 0 1 1 2 4
A. Biedrins C 22:20 1-3 0-0 0-0 -14 5 0 5 2 3 1 3 0 0 2
M. Ellis G 36:40 10-20 0-3 4-4 -37 0 5 5 5 0 1 4 0 0 24
S. Curry G 30:58 7-18 2-5 1-2 -13 0 3 3 6 2 5 5 0 4 17
V. Radmanovic 23:25 4-9 1-3 0-0 -9 4 2 6 0 5 0 0 1 0 9
D. Gadzuric 20:42 4-8 0-0 0-0 -11 5 1 6 0 3 0 0 1 2 8
J. Lin 09:01 0-2 0-0 0-0 -7 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0
R. Carney 17:38 2-5 1-1 0-1 -10 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 5
R. Williams 14:39 3-7 1-3 0-0 -10 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 7
J. Adrien 06:26 1-2 0-0 0-0 -6 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 2
C. Bell 07:25 0-2 0-1 0-0 +2 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0
Total 240 39-95 7-23 5-7 18 21 39 20 16 9 19 4 10 90
41.1% 30.4% 71.4% team rebs: 6 total to: 19
Chicago Bulls (4-3)
field goalsrebounds
pos min fgm-a 3pm-a ftm-a +/- off def tot ast pf st to bs ba pts
L. Deng F 39:35 9-19 2-5 6-7 +27 3 8 11 6 0 1 0 2 3 26
T. Gibson F 25:46 5-10 0-0 4-4 +31 3 4 7 0 3 2 1 3 0 14
J. Noah C-F 32:56 6-10 0-0 5-6 +19 3 4 7 5 1 1 1 2 0 17
K. Bogans G-F 35:34 6-10 2-6 0-0 +25 0 5 5 2 1 6 1 1 0 14
D. Rose G 36:42 10-17 0-3 2-2 +31 1 2 3 13 0 1 3 1 0 22
R. Brewer 21:06 1-4 0-0 0-0 +1 1 1 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 2
O. Asik 11:03 3-4 0-0 2-2 +4 0 5 5 0 0 0 2 0 0 8
C. Watson 17:05 2-3 1-2 2-2 +4 0 4 4 2 0 1 0 0 0 7
K. Korver 13:56 4-5 2-3 0-0 +5 0 1 1 0 1 0 2 1 0 10
J. Johnson 03:31 0-2 0-0 0-0 +4 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0
B. Scalabrine 02:46 0-0 0-0 0-0 -1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0
K. Thomas 00:00 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total 240 46-84 7-19 21-23 11 35 46 29 7 14 12 10 4 120
54.8% 36.8% 91.3% team rebs: 7 total to: 14

inactive

  • Warriors: Amundson, Lee, Udoh
  • Bulls: Boozer

technical fouls

  • Warriors: –
  • Bulls: Bogans

scoring

  • Lead Changes: 4
  • Times Tied: 4

arena stats

  • Arena: United Center, Chicago, IL
  • Officials: #10 Ron Garretson, #23 Jason Phillips, #77 Karl Lane
  • Attendance: 21140
  • Duration: 2:4
0
11
Nov

Preview: Warriors at Bulls

Golden State
Warriors

@

Chicago
Bulls

United Center
5:00pm | CSNBA

Official Game Preview

2010-11 Meetings
Warriors 90
Bulls 120
 
Bulls 90
Warriors 101
 

The Warriors gain an hour as they move to the central time zone, but still have to play their fourth game in five nights. With Saturday night opponent Milwaukee having blown out their last two opponents, this might be the best chance for the Warriors to secure a winning record on this road trip. What to watch for tonight:

  • Da Bench. Four of the five starters played 40+ minutes last night, so to have any chance the Warriors are going to need some quality minutes from the bench. Wright and Lin have been making progress, so I’d hope to see them get some run tonight. Reggie Williams was decent last night, but I think the team will need a lot more scoring from him to have a chance. And can Radmonovic turn around his recent woeful play?
  • Da Boards. Boozer is still out with an injury, but Joakim Noah has been an animal on the glass and is averaging 15 boards a game. I’d expect Lee to be a bit stiff tonight after the elbow injury (not to mention the emotions from last night’s return to the Garden), so Biedrins better bring it against Noah in the middle. If Biedrins can equal Noah’s rebounding total tonight, then the Warriors should be in good shape to steal one.
  • Controlling Rose and Deng. Derrick Rose had the hot hand early for the Bulls, but in recent games it was been Luol Deng who’s done the most damage. This will be a hell of a test for Dorrell Wright — let’s see if he can be the perimeter stopper he was advertised as when the Warriors signed him (though, in fairness, he’s been doing a hell of a lot more than just defending so far this season).

Regret watch: after seeing Anthony Randolph last night, tonight the Warriors get to see how C.J. Watson is adjusting to the Bulls. Despite the Warriors’ obvious hole at the backup PG spot this year, I still don’t miss Watson much: he just isn’t a PG, can’t play defense, and does little more but give you a backup Monta with a better outside shot but little to no inside game.

UPDATE: Per the twitter, Lee is out tonight as he rests his lacerated elbow. An already tough back-to-back just got a whole lot harder…

1
11
Nov

Game #8: Warriors 122, Knicks 117

Warriors 122

@

Knicks 117

Warriors 34 26 29 33 122
Knicks 32 24 25 36 117
  Net 2 2 4 -3 5
  Season Avg -2.9 0.8 -0.4 -0.1 -2.2
  Compare to Season Avg 4.9 1.2 4.4 -2.9 7.2
 Warriors Stats
  FG% 3P% FT% FTA Fouls OReb TReb Assists Steals Blocks Turns POTurns PIPaint FBPoints
Game 52.8% 50% 71.9% 32 33 9 36 23 13 3 14 22 74 20
Season Avg 46.2% 39.2% 76.1% 20.7 22 11.6 40.5 22.5 9 5 14.1 17.5 42.6 18.6
Difference 6.6% 10.8% -4.2% 11.3 11 -2.6 -4.5 0.5 4 -2 -0.1 10.5 31.4 1.4
 Net Comparison
  FG% 3P% FT% FTA Fouls OReb TReb Assists Steals Blocks Turns POTurns PIPaint FBPoints
Net Game 6.1% 27.4% -16.5% -11 -8 0 -5 6 3 -1 6 8 30 5
Net Season Avg -0.6% 3.5% -1.2% -7 -3.6 -1.2 -4.3 -2.2 0.8 0.7 1.2 2 -2.9 -0.8
Net Difference 6.7% 23.9% -15.3% -4 -4.4 1.2 -0.7 8.2 2.2 -1.7 4.8 6 32.9 5.8

Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

An ugly win, but a win nonetheless. After blowing a huge lead and falling behind in the closing minutes, the Warriors rallied behind a pair of clutch plays by Dorrell Wright and solid rebounding by David Lee.

I missed most of this game, and my DVR cut out right after the Knicks had tied it near the end. The endless and-1 procession to the free throw line for the Knicks was depressing, and I thought Reggie Williams was generally woeful down the stretch. Dude needs a confidence booster, stat.

But the Warriors pulled it off: Lee put up his best game as a Warriors in his New York homecoming, and played Amare to a standstill in terms of stats. Monta recovered well enough to play 40 minutes and had a solid game (his kick-out pass to Wright for his big 3-pointer was huge), while Curry did his best to remind the Knicks of what might have been had they been able to leapfrog the Warriors in last year’s draft.

With a quick turnaround before tonight’s game in Chicago, this was a game that would have been a devastating loss if they hadn’t recovered. So kudos to the team for gutting it out, and picking up their first back-to-back road wins since 2007.

Postscript: Along with Anthony Randolph’s scoreless 7-minute performance (no trade regrets tonight!), this was satisfying to read:

Thanks for nothing: Asked about the offseason deal between the Warriors and the Knicks, one New York writer said, “Thanks for the 6-foot-11 guy who can’t play.” No, he wasn’t talking about Ronny Turiaf; he was referring to Anthony Randolph.

Slam!

1 2 3 4 T
GS 34 26 29 33 122
NY 32 24 25 36 117
Golden State Warriors (6-2)
field goalsrebounds
pos min fgm-a 3pm-a ftm-a +/- off def tot ast pf st to bs ba pts
D. Lee F-C 40:16 11-17 0-0 6-8 +9 4 6 10 2 1 4 4 0 0 28
D. Wright G-F 41:41 5-11 3-5 2-2 +3 1 6 7 3 5 0 2 0 0 15
A. Biedrins C 26:24 5-10 0-0 0-2 +14 3 6 9 1 4 1 0 2 0 10
S. Curry G 45:03 11-20 1-1 2-3 +6 0 6 6 8 4 2 2 1 0 25
M. Ellis G 40:30 7-16 0-2 8-11 +7 0 2 2 6 4 4 2 0 0 22
B. Wright 09:22 2-3 0-0 3-4 +3 1 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 0 7
V. Radmanovic 06:03 1-3 1-2 0-0 -9 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 1 3
J. Lin 02:57 0-0 0-0 0-0 -1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0
R. Williams 22:48 5-9 0-0 2-2 -6 0 1 1 1 5 1 2 0 3 12
R. Carney 04:56 0-0 0-0 0-0 -1 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0
J. Adrien 00:00 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
C. Bell 00:00 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total 240 47-89 5-10 23-32 9 27 36 23 33 13 14 3 4 122
52.8% 50.0% 71.9% team rebs: 11 total to: 14
New York Knicks (3-5)
field goalsrebounds
pos min fgm-a 3pm-a ftm-a +/- off def tot ast pf st to bs ba pts
W. Chandler G-F 41:00 9-20 4-10 5-7 -5 2 4 6 0 1 1 2 3 0 27
D. Gallinari F 32:43 3-9 0-5 9-9 -7 1 6 7 3 5 2 3 0 0 15
A. Stoudemire F-C 40:54 9-15 1-1 14-16 -2 1 9 10 3 3 3 6 1 2 33
R. Felton G 37:33 6-12 2-5 6-6 -13 3 3 6 6 5 2 4 0 0 20
L. Fields G-F 34:07 5-7 0-2 1-2 +9 1 5 6 1 3 0 3 0 0 11
T. Mozgov 01:59 0-0 0-0 2-2 -3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 2
T. Douglas 34:06 4-12 0-7 1-1 -1 1 0 1 2 4 2 2 0 1 9
A. Randolph 07:33 0-2 0-1 0-0 -5 0 3 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
B. Walker 10:05 0-0 0-0 0-0 +2 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
R. Mason Jr. 00:00 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
A. Rautins 00:00 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
S. Williams 00:00 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total 240 36-77 7-31 38-43 9 32 41 17 25 10 20 4 3 117
46.8% 22.6% 88.4% team rebs: 9 total to: 21

inactive

  • Warriors: Amundson, Gadzuric, Udoh
  • Knicks: Azubuike, Curry, Turiaf

technical fouls

  • Warriors: –
  • Knicks: Stoudemire

scoring

  • Lead Changes: 10
  • Times Tied: 11

arena stats

  • Arena: Madison Square Garden, New York, NY
  • Officials: #48 Scott Foster, #46 Matt Boland, #60 James Williams
  • Attendance: 19763
  • Duration: 2:40