If you’ve watched Steph Curry play since he came into the league in 2009, you’d have a fundamental understanding that over time, Curry would regress to the mean. He owns a 47 percent career shooting percentage, and a 44 percent career mark from beyond the arc, and over time, even an 0-for-10 corrects itself.
Shaun Livingston in the paint >>> pic.twitter.com/z9kRmehVG7 — KNBR (@KNBR) November 26, 2017 OAKLAND–It’s not often the Warriors are forced to live out their worst-case scenario, but in the first half on Saturday night at Oracle Arena, Golden State was in the midst of a nightmare. What do the Warriors look like when they’re merely […]
The Warriors brought just about everyone back from a team that needed just five games to down the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 2017 NBA Finals. Everyone except for Ian Clark.
Kevin Durant missed Friday’s game against the Chicago Bulls with a sore ankle and for that same reason, Steve Kerr plans to proceed cautiously with his forward Saturday night against New Orleans Pelicans.
That money sign celebration? There was some meaning to it, as Jordan Bell admitted after the game he was trying to troll the Bulls for trading him for “cash considerations.”
Armed with a record of 3-13, Fred Hoiberg’s squad entered Oracle Arena on Friday night without much of a chance to take down the Golden State Warriors. And that was after Warriors’ head coach Steve Kerr helped level the playing field by sitting Kevin Durant (ankle) and Draymond Green (rest).