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Denver vs. GSW: The Most Warriorific Game

I'll try to make this short (Hehe, that's my Tim Kawakami impression!), but this crappy, nationally ignored Nuggs-Dubs game really had it all: It emblematic'd the metaphorical of epitomizing it up. Or, as sportswriters lazily shovel say, it summed up the Warriors season.

  • The snatching of defeat from the splash whiskers of victory (I'm trying to poke fun at Nellie in vague, non libelous ways).

I watched the game with my friend and we came to the collective halftime conclusion that Nellie would get scared in the fourth quarter, then turn to empirically discredited small ball.  Our crystal ball also said this panic attack would lose the Warriors another close game. Guess we're psychic. Or sentient.

  • Embarrassment for Warriors management

On the heels of the Blazers, the Nuggets represent another injury-rocked team that can overcome adversity.

  • An easy way to shift the blame

In real time, it looked like Monta landed on Earl's butt. In slow-mo, he merely grazed it. In retrospect, it was a stupid thing for Ellis to do. Currently, it's funny to say 'Monta grazed Earl's ass.'  I loved how Bob Fitzgerald turned into Howard Beale when it happened, considering how sub-marine the stakes were.  If anything,this puts GSW one step closer towards getting a soon-to-disgruntled high lottery pick.

  • Dark Nellie comedy

This was sad, inexcusable, and incomprehensible. In the third quarter Ronny Turiaf injured his ankle,  went to the training room, and bravely reentered the game.  He's a professional, someone who would give full effort no matter the circumstances.  But Nellie should have stopped him.  Holy sh**, this  game was not the time for Turiaf torture porn.  I felt like this was the most under talked about subplot in Twitterland--possibly because we've become immune to Nellie's insanity.  Ronny Turiaf limped up and down the court while visibly grimacing. His rotations weren't slow so much as they weren't there.  As Turiaf trudged on possession switches, he looked like an old, dying, dog dragging his body towards a final resting spot.  The absence of a fifth man was a big factor in the quarter, most noticeably felt when JR Smith waltzed towards an easy dunk.

Even when healthy Turiaf's a 'meh' rebounder.  On a bad wheel, he could only receive rebounds--not get them.  Of course he nearly played the whole fourth quarter alongside an awful rebounding lineup.  Of course we lost.

No game would be complete without it.  Randolph played badly in the first half, but was pretty much left to his own devices.  I don't have an issue with keeping the kid on the court, even through mistakes.  What didn't make sense was Nellie's benching of Randolph after some inspired second half play.  Or, maybe it would have made sense if Randolph weren't the only healthy big at that point (I'm not counting Chris Hunter, he's D-Leaguer till proven otherwise). It's as though Don Nelson's trying to get Anthony Randolph to suck through Pavlovian conditioning.  Who knew the old man could find such creative outlets for his whimsy?

Can't blame the guy. Can't do it. Just can't.

Poll
Fault goes where?
Nellie's Fault
20 votes
Refs' Fault
191 votes

211 votes | Poll has closed

This FanPost is a submission from a member of the mighty Golden State of Mind community. While we're all here to throw up that W, these words do not necessarily reflect the views of the GSoM Crew. Still, chances are the preceding post is Unstoppable Baby!

Comment 12 comments  |  0 recs  | 

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There is no excuse for what happened last night

You can’t blame it on no one but Stern and his sidekicks(refs)

by buky on Jan 6, 2010 5:37 AM PST reply actions  

wait

so who voted for “nellie’s fault” instead of “refs fault”

by Morrow is wet!!! on Jan 6, 2010 7:55 AM PST reply actions  

Meh, meh, meh…

You never fail to rag on the big guy, and much of it is deserved, but I am really not sure how you put this loss on Nellie.

1. Smallball is a stupid strategy with this team as presently constructed. We know this. However, it isn’t like our big lineup was doing any better at keeping Kmart, Nene, and Mutumbo’s Ghost off the glass. I do understand the thought process. If your bigs aren’t rebounding and aren’t scoring, you might as well go smaller.

2. Nellie doesn’t trust Randolph to be in at the end of a game. It may be silly, but that’s why he wasn’t in. It isn’t some wierd conspiracy against the kid. Likewise, Nellie is not a coach who is going to tell a player he can’t play. If Turiaf says he’s good to go, Nellie is going to honor the fact that he’s getting paid to play the game and deserves to write his own injury report.

3. Monta Ellis has a tendency to over relax in crunchtime. It’s like he is so afraid of getting tight and making a mistake that he totally dissociates from the situation, causing him to be overly casual and turn the ball over. This has always been my number one concern about him. I think he can do a fine job as either our PG or offguard, but we need a veteran who can handle the ball and the pressure of the final two minutes. Raja Bell would be really useful right now.

4. The foul call at the end was bad, given the prevailing standard to allow almost anything short of full-blown assault on the final play of a game. What was even worse was the double standard, played out in realtime, applied to the granting of timeouts. Maggette clearly got the rebound and then fell to the ground while controlling the ball. Even if the ref decided that he didn’t call timeout (which he did, clearly), the Warriors sideline should have been given the TO. After the tip, JR Smith had barely touched the ball and had certainly not controlled possession (with two Warriors battling for the steal), and yet George Karl was allowed to call TO from the sideline. This sequence was utterly inexcusable. You can laugh it off by saying it gets us that much closer to a lottery pick, but at some point you have to actually learn what it feels like to win a close game if you ever hope to be a good team.

Sittin in my scraper watchin Oakland goin wild, ta-dow!

by Supafishal on Jan 6, 2010 8:48 AM PST reply actions   2 recs

well put sir...

"Better a Has-been than a Never-was. But better a Never-was than a Never-tried-to-be"

by BritWarriorGSW on Jan 6, 2010 3:55 PM PST up reply actions  

What a joke that was last night! The final call should be reviewed by the league. I don’t understand how the Refs can review the play on video and not see that they made a mistake. They should have reversed the call and given the warriors the game.
And, I know this would cost him some cash so I understand why he didn’t, but I thought Nelson should have gave the refs his best Bobby Knight impression. If nothing else, it shows his players he is willing to fight for them.

by ajtrinc on Jan 6, 2010 6:24 PM PST up reply actions  

I don’t understand how the Refs can review the play on video and not see that they made a mistake. They should have reversed the call and given the warriors the game.

It’s a pretty easy concept to understand. You can’t reverse a foul call with replay. Replay can only be used to verify that the clock didn’t run out before the call was made or shot was taken (in this instance).

by Missing Barry on Jan 7, 2010 8:21 AM PST up reply actions  

" The officials will use the following to make their final decision in the order listed below regarding scoring, timing or fouls at the end of any period." NBA.com regarding the use of replay.
I may be misreading the rule as it applies to a game, but it does sound like they can review a foul at the end of a period. Someone may be better able to clarify that for me if I’m wrong.
No matter, this should be a situation reviewed by the league.

by ajtrinc on Jan 7, 2010 11:38 AM PST up reply actions  

They can review if the foul happened in regulation or the clock expired. They can’t rule that there was no foul – just that the foul happened after the clock ended….so unless the clock hit 0 (which in this instance it clearly did not), they cannot overrule it.

And it will be reviewed by the league – not because something wrong might have happened, but because the league reviews all the calls with its officials. They have a pretty good system in place to try to give us the highest quality officials possible.

by Missing Barry on Jan 7, 2010 11:53 AM PST up reply actions  

So...

…seeing as there really wasn’t a foul, a fact which has been regrettably diluted the past few days, why not just watch the replay and say, “Oh, sorry, the foul was committed after the clock expired.” Everybody would know what happened- that they saw on the replay that they screwed up. Denver wouldn’t have anything to complain about, cosidering I haven’t heard any of them vehemently insist a foul WAS committed.

by Zack Vank on Jan 7, 2010 12:35 PM PST up reply actions  

Well, that’s an interesting solution. My guess is it would more likely cause more controversy (since it’d be pretty obvious what happened and it’s a pretty big bend of the rules and it would be a first time for it) than what actually happened….but I dunno – then again, maybe it wouldn’t. Denver fans would definitely be upset! At least the conversation would be over there, not here, right?

by Missing Barry on Jan 7, 2010 2:33 PM PST up reply actions  

Both.

Rookie: "Why did you bench me?"
Nellie: "You're a rookie"

by dubzfan on Jan 6, 2010 4:58 PM PST reply actions  

very big conspiracy going on for this game

No post game conference, no fines for the post game tweeting, no nba.com recap, not even one kind of controversial mention from espn.com, no headline in nba.com even though it was against denver that gets plenty of media attention and was the most exciting game that night. Stern hates the warriors. He gave us the hardest schedule for the past 3 years. I don’t think he liked us booing him allstar break in oakland.

by bojangles408 on Jan 7, 2010 8:58 PM PST reply actions  

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