Recap: Warriors 111, Trailblazers 95- Taking Care of Bidness
With the Denver Nougats playing sweeter than the sweetest confection in the second half of first game of the doubleheader against the Dirk-less Mavs, the Warriors were dangerously close to falling to the 9th spot in the Wild Wild West. Things didn't look so pretty after the first quarter at the Roaracle with the Warriors down by 8 to a Greg Oden and Brandon Roy-less Blazers squad, but then Nellie and the gang decided it was time to take care of bidness.
Preview/ Open Thread (235+ Comments)

"Don't look at me. I'm just taking care of bidness!"
We get down to bidness after the jump!

Golden Statements
The Warriors did a lot of good things tonight. They took care of bidness like a hungry playoff team.
- 2 + 3 = W! After being doing by 8 at the end of the first, Nellie must've said something "interesting" to his crew. The Dubs buckled down and outscored the Blazers 69-42 in the second and third quarters. Very impressive.
- Przybilla who? The 7-1 Warrior Killer went scoreless after giving the Warriors some major problems in the previous 3 games. It looked like he was going to dominate the glass with his 6 rodmans in the 1st quarter, but Coach Nate McMillan didn't stick with him. Thank you Mr. Sonic!
- Boom Dizzle Chillin. Baron came into tonight's game battling the flu. With the upcoming weekend of critical back to back games against the Nuggets and Mavericks, the worst thing that could have possibly happened was BD playing big minutes and the Warriors losing. Thankfully the Dubs got a big win and Baron only had to play 27 minutes. Credit Nellie and the bench crew, particularly Kelenna Azubuike and Matt Barnes for making this happen.
- Winning Without Biedrins. Andris Biedrins hasn't stepped up his game all that much this season compared to last year (although his dribbling skills are vastly improved), but he's been consistently good on the glass and an extremely reliable catch and dunk option for the Warriors on screen and rolls. Unfortunately he's in a pretty major slump right now especially in terms of fouling. As of late Biedrins has been dropping interior passes a la Erik Dampier that he usually grabs and finishes with ease, isn't making as big of an impact on the glass, has poor and somewhat lazy defensive positioning, and just looks Charmin soft out there on both sides of the ball. We can harp on how he just needs to get hard like Onyx, but let's not dismiss how this team has stepped up during his absence and throughout his recent struggles. The Warriors have gone 11-6 since their leading rebounder and shot blocker and the only center on this roster Nellie thinks is good enough to play had to sit out some games with that appendectomy. This is a team game and it's good to see the team stepping up during his absence and struggles. I'm sure he'll pick up the slack for his teammates later on.
- Croshere can throw it down SCARY HOT! Tell me you saw Austin go up for that baseline turnaround reverse slam. It was up there with the Martell Webster jam- maybe even nastier. If only Croshere didn't do that awkward leg kick and extension, it would've been on SportsCenter. Just SCARY HOT!
- Kosta COAST! This man just had the most stunning 1:28 you could ask for. Do you realize he was on pace to grab a whopping 32 rebounds tonight? Seriously, this might go down as the worst usage of the midlevel exception of all time. It makes Isiah's Jerome James signing look brilliant- and that's very, very, very hard to do.

More of that famous Zero Threat Position!
Blazing Forward
The Warriors won this game fairly easily, but that doesn't mean the Blazers didn't do a lot of nice things tonight.
- Once a Warrior Killer always a Warrior Killer. Steve Blake is good for 8.4 ppg, but of course tonight he went off for 22 points. Was it the poor rotations on the Blazers perimeter shooters or just Monta Ellis' Steve Nash-like defense? I'll leave that question to you folks in the comments as I enjoy this big win. Whatever it was, Blake has cemented his status as a bonafide Warrior killer. For the season he put up 15.5 ppg against the Dubs.
- LaMarcus Aldridge in the 1st. Early on it looked like Aldridge was going to go off for 40 points. He doesn't have the biggest frame, but he looked like Shaq standing next to Warriors young big men Andris Biedrins and Brandan Wright. Aldridge looked like Tim Duncan out there with his smooth short and mid range jumpers in the 1st too. Thankfully he came back down the earth after that scoring outburst. Later on in the game there was one time where Biedrins guarded him on-on-one. Biedrins is a poor man defender, but he played excellent D on Aldridge on this set, using his reach to seemingly really bother Aldridge. But L.A. still scored on a nice, sweet little jumper. Aldridge seems like a perfect complimentary forward to Greg Oden.
- Von Wafer has a cool name. Sorry had to get that in.
- Martell- Tell Me How You Do It.
That's Austin Croshere SCARY.
Martell and the Blazers will be NICE in 2009 and beyond. Next year barring injuries there will be 10 good teams battling for 8 spots in the West. As Beyonce would say the Warriors need a serious upgrade of this roster this offseason if they're going to hang. Just simply retaining and extending their current roster might not cut it.
Nellie Knows What's Wright
Nellie's got this very flawed squad overachieving big time. Find me one person who thought this team would be 17 games over .500 at end of March during that painful 0-6 opening. Find me another coach that could take this miscast and oddly assembled roster that no one else wanted this far. Look up and down the Western Conference and talent-wise this team isn't really that far ahead of clubs like the Kings and Blazers, yet they'll be in the thick of things till the last day of the season. Health has been a big factor no doubt, but realize that Nellie has weathered the storm of Monta's early struggles, the Stephen Jackson suspension, Baron Davis' offnights here and there, overall poor seasons from Mickael Pietrus and Matt Barnes, Andris Biedrins' appendectomy and poor recent play, Kelenna Azubuike's poor defense, lack of contribution from Marco Belinelli, Patrick O'Bryant, and Kosta Perovic, and the loss of Jason Richardson.
It's sad Nellie has so many critics this season in spite of the marvelous coaching job he's done. Instead of giving him props, people consistently and rather annoyingly harp on Nellie for not giving more playing time to rookie Brandan Wright. Critics and doubters whine for him to play Wright more, but unless they're at practice it's pretty ignorant and arrogant to think they know what's best for this team more so than our current hall of fame coach. If Nellie doesn't think Brandan Wright can play big, meaningful minutes right now, chances are he probably can't.
Nellie knows what he's doing. This isn't your Mike Montgomery Warriors here.

Quit bashing the legend.
For all the clamoring critics have done for Nellie to play Wright more, you hope they'd take note of games like this and others this season in which he's struggled in limited playing time. Whether it was Martell Webster running down the lane and jamming it home or Channing Frye stuffing him, Wright looked like a boy among men tonight.
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We're in the middle of a thrilling, nerve-wrecking playoff run. It's not the time to develop players for the future. It's time to win. Thank god Nellie knows this and doesn't give in to all the critics.
Let me be clear though. I think Wright's a nice prospect and can help the Warriors in some select spot situations as Nellie's been trying to do lately. I seriously doubt he'll ever be an All-Star and I'm not even sure he'll even be an average starting power forward in this league given his slender frame and build, but I do think he'll be a solid player with an amazing shot blocking ability. I'm not saying he'll be better than Andris Biedrins (he still has a long way to go to reach Biedrins' usual consistency), but he does have a far greater ceiling with his smooth hooks, insane reach and timing, and more developed jump shot. But the time to experiment, develop him, and give him playing time is not now. If Nellie sees some matchup or situation he likes for Wright this season during the final stretch, then he'll undoubtedly play him. Complaining that Nellie doesn't play Wright more than he does right now, is pretty odd though,
Also, the common ideology that Nellie hates rookies is a joke. I count two Rookie of the Years under Nellie and guess what? They were both Golden State Warriors: 1) Mitch Richmond (1989) and 2) Chris Webber (1994). Don't forget that Tim Hardaway did big thangs for Nellie as a rookie in the 1989-1990 season as well putting up 14.7 ppg, 8.7 apg, and 2.09 stls. Nellie runs a merticocracy. He doesn't care if you're a 1st year or 7th year player. Nellie plays whoever can help him win.
Again, it shocks me that so many fans and the media at large are giving the Warriors a free pass for their front office blunders dating back to draft day 2007. They moved a guy for pennies on the dollar after an odd injury plagued season for an extremely raw rookie that the real mastermind of the operation doesn't even want to play. Yes, the same guy who's putting up 25.2 ppg, 6.4 rpg, 3.1 apg, 1.9 steals, and 0.7 swats in the month of March through 13 games. Think a tired team team starving for depth could use that right now or at least benefit from not giving him away on the cheap at a "CLEARANCE! Everything must go price!"? It's still way too early to say, but I've been having nightmares of Mitch Richmond for Billy Owens Part II the past few nights.
Making matters worse, the Warriors front office and ownership was either too cheap or too clueless to wisely use the 10 million dollar exception at this past trading deadline. It could have been a brilliant trade if they used the trade exception for a guy like Drew Gooden, Ron Artest, or Kurt Thomas. If the Warriors miss the playoffs this season and suffer from a bad 1st round loss in the playoffs, don't blame the coach or the players. They gave it their all and overachieved. The front office and ownership failed them, the fans, and thousands of first time season ticket holders this year.
Open Roster Spot
With Chris Webber retiring two days ago, the Warriors have open roster spot. They obviously don't want any distractions, but two guys I might take a chance on are GSoM friend Rod Benson (see our recent Q&A) and big time dunker Gerald Green. I doubt Nellie would play either of them right now, but it might be worth a shot for next year and beyond just to see what they can do in practice now. Rod brings the rebounds and Green looks like the type of player who Nellie can work some magic with.

Stack Jack put up a nice statline tonight leading the Warriors with 24 points and adding 5 boards and 2 dimes, but that's somewhat expected. I would like to award Kelenna Azubuike with the honors for bringing the unexpected. He pitched in 14 points, 5 boards, and a nice swat. But even more impressive than the numbers is the vastly improved defense he's been showcasing as of late. Kaz has been struggling big time on that end all year long. If he steps up his D and ups his instincts on that side of the ball like he has the past few games, this becomes a much deeper Warriors ballclub.
Recaps, Recaps, Recaps of the Thursday Night Double Header:
- Game 73 Recap: Blazers 95, Warriors 111 [Blazers Edge]
- Combustible (Warriors 111, Blazers 95) [Fast Break]
- Game 72 Recap: Nuggets 118, Mavericks 105 [Pickaxe and Roll]
Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images and Ben Margot (AP)
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51 comments
Comments
No M.B. love?

http://thecitygirlsf.blogspot.com A woman's touch on ball (sports)
by warriorgirl on
Mar 28, 2008 10:29 AM PDT
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where ya been girl?
by baller90210 on
Mar 28, 2008 11:48 AM PDT
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Sorry

http://thecitygirlsf.blogspot.com A woman's touch on ball (sports)
by warriorgirl on
Mar 28, 2008 1:49 PM PDT
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if ever Barnes
obviously with MP out for a bit more MB's role is even more critical now
by hardcore on
Mar 28, 2008 10:33 AM PDT
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Matty B...

copy & paste: geocities.com/nellieballtee
by JonDoe on
Mar 28, 2008 1:05 PM PDT
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Boom Got Them DOS!
It was great to see solid minutes by Barnes last night. Some swished threes, some good hustle defense. Let's hope it keeps up.

then we will fight in the shade.
by Swamp Thing on
Mar 28, 2008 10:40 AM PDT
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good game
The trade paved the way for getting monta ellis more playing time. Looking at their stats you see that Monta is a more efficient player than j rich. J rich is a solid nba starter, not an all-star caliber player. He is a great guy but is not a franchise player or even a guy who can lead a team to the playoffs (see this year's bobcats). The warriors do miss his rebounding and shooting, but it honestly looks like the warriors are better off in the long run without him. They did not get "pennies on the dollar" for a guy who is a shooter and good rebounder for a guard. The warriors set themselves up financially to resign monta and andris and acquired a prospect for the future who has looked very good this year albeit in a small sample. I honestly think they don't get enough praise for the move.
by stujackson6 on
Mar 28, 2008 10:49 AM PDT
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Monta makes the JRich trade
by hardcore on
Mar 28, 2008 12:48 PM PDT
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Air France approved...

The guy loved it! A genuinely nice guy! Funny to talk to!
...and it's like that! Coz' that's the way it is... Dubz!
by Tony.psd on
Mar 28, 2008 10:50 AM PDT
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U
by warrior510 on
Mar 28, 2008 2:09 PM PDT
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Man!
by RubberDubDubs on
Mar 28, 2008 11:42 PM PDT
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I support the dubs' front office
by Bug10 on
Mar 28, 2008 11:01 AM PDT
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BringBackBoykins?

copy & paste: geocities.com/nellieballtee
by JonDoe on
Mar 28, 2008 1:07 PM PDT
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Agreed ...
Other GMs and players also have a role/decision in what the Dubs front office can do. How do you know they didn't try everything you suggested -- and more?
But other than that minor area, enjoyed the recap.
by soem on
Mar 28, 2008 4:49 PM PDT
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No Love for Ownership
by WilliamVanLandingham on
Mar 28, 2008 11:05 AM PDT
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Oh yeah
Those three will develop. They're rookies. None of them are used to the NBA grind. They're all young. Remember when you were 21? Now imagine that instead of having to grow a foot in 3 years you've just grown 2+ feet. Yeah, you'd be skinny too. Not everybody can be LeBron, Dwight Howard, or Shaq. Patience.
by Dubs fan in Boston on
Mar 28, 2008 11:22 AM PDT
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Yeah...
The answer with JRich is no. He doesn't provide enough. We'd maybe be one game ahead of where we are in the standings. We'd still get creamed by Utah in the playoffs, and we'd still be on the losing end of a toss up against everybody else.
When you add that to his ridiculous contract and that he had knee surgery just a year ago, it was a phenomenal trade for us going forward. Imagine trying to resign Monta/Beans/etc. in the offseason with $11.1111M already committed to JRich. Imagine paying $14.4444M for his services is 2011 when he's 30... marinate on that for a moment.
by Dubs fan in Boston on
Mar 28, 2008 11:17 AM PDT
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Wright has star potential.
He has shown glimpses of being a great rebounder and shotblocker, but his slight frame is too easy to knock around at this point.
Under Nellie (And Monta), Wright should become a crazy finisher on the fast break and a great option in the high and low post. Also, we have no idea if he has a jumper because the W's have so many good jump shooters. Monta said he could become like another Chris Bosh. I don't see why not if he's given the opportunity. However, it will be years until he gets the shots that he would need to see if he could put up Bosh-like numbers.
by peteb24 on
Mar 28, 2008 11:27 AM PDT
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pretty early judgment there...
by wander7 on
Mar 28, 2008 11:32 AM PDT
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JRICH?

Am I Michael Scott? I don't know. I might just be a basketball machine.
by disguy on
Mar 28, 2008 11:35 AM PDT
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this killed me
what does usual consistency mean? that he's inconsistent?
brandan wright is way better than biedrins was at 20. He doesn't have far to go at all to match biedrins "usual consistency."
by Iggy_Zohn on
Mar 28, 2008 12:27 PM PDT
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Beans at 20?
by Dubs fan in Boston on
Mar 28, 2008 12:59 PM PDT
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I completely agree with you on Nellie
I think he'll be a bigger contributor in the future but you're right (No pun intended), now is not the time to develop younger players when we're fighting for every game and one loss can make or break our playoff chances.
Much props on the assessment. Critics say stuff just to create hype without actual facts to justify their opinions.
by MAZarate21 on
Mar 28, 2008 12:29 PM PDT
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ATMA passes to J-Rich for Three!
by illmaticwarrior on
Mar 28, 2008 12:55 PM PDT
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Man...
On the topic of Brandan Wright's playing time, I've never insisted that we'd be better off without Nelson by any means, nor do I think there's a grudge against Wright in the way there seems to be against POB. I think that Nelson's problem is that he worries too much. If we're up twenty points to start the fourth, Nelson needs to have the confidence that the bench can close it out. Have we lost big leads? Of course we have. But I'd suspect in many cases a fresher bench unit would be more apt to polish off a blowout win that Baron Davis on zero minutes of rest would be.
Similarly, he worries about rookies making mistakes. When A young player screws up, he's visibly much more upset than he is when Harrington touch fouls an opposing center during a dunk, Jackson dribbles the ball off his leg, or Pietrus fumbles a pass. He has a habit of hyperpressurizing every situation in his mind that dissuades him from spreading around the minutes even when the team needs it.
As far as the ROY winners mentioned, Mitch Richmond and Chris Webber are both hall-of-fame candidates, and by my objective analysis should both be enshrined. Tim Hardaway is a worthwhile subject I suppose, although Nelson has traditionally put a lot more faith in guards than big men (Webber and Dirk excepted).
So, I guess my point is, I don't think it's accurate to point to them and say (or imply) that because Brandan isn't getting minutes like Webber did, he's not at a level where he couldn't help the team. Even though I like Brandan and suspect he'll be at least a two time all-star someday (and Atma doesn't, and that's fine), he simply doesn't have the pedigree and talent set that Webber had. I guess my point is, if you're going to compare every Nelson rookie experience to how it went for Hardaway (very well), Richmond (very well), and Webber (very well on the court), you're gonna have a long day since those three were in the top three at their positions at some point while playing (maybe not Hardaway, but he was easily top-5).
I look at POB as an ironclad example of Nelson being prickly with rookies. Arguemtns about his work ethic aside, Nelson followed up the best game of his career, our first win on the season, by signing DJ Mbenga, a wonderful and inspiring guy who was simply not very good on the court for us and gave us less than we likely would've gotten out of more burn for Patrick.
The Richardson thing is starting to turn my hair gray, and I'm willing to concede that it's clear Atma feels so strongly about that deal that it's unlikely I or anybody else could convince him otherwise (with the possible exception of Brandan Wright). Whenever I write something about the Richardson trade (mostly only when it gets brought up in a recap), I never hear anybody give me an answer as to what our starting five is with Richardson still on the team, and I think it bears repeating... with Richardson, we're likely playing Jackson at starting PF. That team has a worse record than we do, and I'd put money on that.
by Zack Vank on
Mar 28, 2008 1:00 PM PDT
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Belinelli...

copy & paste: geocities.com/nellieballtee
by JonDoe on
Mar 28, 2008 1:13 PM PDT
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I really
by warrior510 on
Mar 28, 2008 2:08 PM PDT
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correction
by warrior510 on
Mar 28, 2008 2:10 PM PDT
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that
What you thought that I only played basketball? I AM A Golden State WARRIOR!
by 24k state fan since 87 on
Mar 28, 2008 2:24 PM PDT
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Oh my god
For one, J-Rich is putting up those numbers, but you forgot to mention that he would be the fourth scoring option here as opposed to the 1st or 2nd option in Charlotte.
For another, More J-Rich means less Monta Ellis. We are getting massive numbers in J-Rich's absence from Ellis, and if you had to take one, would you really take J-Rich?
Because if J-Rich was still here then how are we going to sign Ellis AND Biedrins in the offseason. You can't just ignore the salary situation. If we still had J-Rich people would be panicking because we would be about to lose Ellis or Biedrins this summer. You can't just act like the salary cap doesn't exist so you can build a super team. We aren't the New York Knicks.
Part of me thinks the only reason you say Brandan Wright won't even be average is because you want the J-Rich trade to fail, because Wright doing well means it was an even better move than it already is. Tell me, what will we need more of next season, guards or forwards? And if Belinelli pans out, then the forwards are in even higher demand.
You say that you take Year 1 into account of any trade, and you should, because the Warriors are big winners in Year 1. Much better record, much better financial flexibility, much brighter future, and just as good if not better present.
And I'm not saying he will be good by any means, but can't you at least give Perovic the benefit of the doubt until he plays? Or Belinelli, or Wright, or anyone for that matter? People were saying Biedrins was a bust too, but it's just too early to say.
Come on now, next you are going to be saying that getting Ron Artest makes the Warriors a championship conte...oh, wait.
Great win by the Warriors though, we can both agree on that.
by belilaugh on
Mar 28, 2008 2:16 PM PDT
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ATMA
My opinion is that Nellie's coaching job so far is a "C". Average. He has excelled this season at out-of-bounds plays, end-of-game coaching decisions, and forming a fairly cohesive team in which players know their role. Well, except Harrington. He has struggled mightily with a substitution pattern, developing the young centers, general overuse of starters, and in some games, he's been very slow to respond to obvious mismatches.
I was at the game last night, and I loved Nellie's decision to put B. Wright in the game at around the 6:00 mark of the 1st quarter. And it was immediately quite apparent that Aldridge was just bigger and stronger than Wright, and he repeatedly overpowered him. Also, it was obvious that Portland's athletic lineup neutralized Wright's strengths. So, when Nellie yanked Wright a few minutes later, it was a very good decision.
This moment of clarity, however, does not mean that Wright will have a mediocre NBA career, nor does it showcase Nelson's amazing touch with rookies. It was apparent to most that the Warriors were playoff contenders in mid-December, when the 0-6 start was a distant memory. But as Zack Vank says above:
In other words, only play players you can trust. There were many games in December, January, and Feburary in which B. Wright (and POB and maybe even Kosta) should have gotten burn. How about in the middle of the 2nd quarter of a game in Milwaukee? Or Minnesota? Or Seattle? There's just no logical defense here.
That said, I could not agree more that the front office has made a number of large blunders, starting with the J-Rich trade. While I was somewhat wrong with regards to the trade, clearly this statement I made a while back illustrates the blunder you point out:
Five years from now, the Warriors biggest mistake will probably not have been trading J-Rich; rather, in the whirlwind sequence that culminated in the deal, the front office did a lousy job of scouting and, subsequently, choosing the correct player to fit the W's biggest needs. Look at some of the players who were taken after Wright:
*Joakim Noah
*Thaddeus Young
*Julian Wright
*Al Thornton
*Sean Williams
*Jared Dudley
*Carl Landry
*Glen Davis
One could argue that all of these players were better "fits" than Wright, that they would have helped fix the major holes in the Warriors current game (namely shot blocking and rebounding). I want to make it clear that I like Wright, that I want Nellie to use him, especially against non-athletic teams, and that he just had a bad game last night. But harping praise on Nellie's "marvelous" coaching this season because he noticed an obvious mismatch with Wright in the game last night seems a bit naive and jaded.
by UncleCliffy on
Mar 28, 2008 2:31 PM PDT
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Did you really just add Glen Davis to that list?
If we'd played Wright/Kosta/Belinelli in a few games in the middle of the season and lost one of them, we'd be on the outside looking in. If we'd let the Bucks get back into the game a little, would they have made a push to come back? Hindsight is 20/20. What difference would 5 minutes of game time be for a guy who gets tons of minutes in practice? These guys aren't ready right now, and we just have to deal with that.
The one player from your list I would have liked is Noah. Though he's much older. I'm tired of people looking at drafts and saying "We should have taken Carlos Boozer, Tracy McGrady, KG, and Kobe." Anybody can look at a draft 5 years afterwards and determine who the better players are. It's hard to do it beforehand.
It's like saying "I can't believe the Celtics drafted Len Bias... they totally should have known he would OD on coke later that night."
by Dubs fan in Boston on
Mar 28, 2008 3:24 PM PDT
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do
by saintdee on
Mar 28, 2008 5:03 PM PDT
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DFiB
I have posted many times that I felt Al Horford and Noah were the two best fits, though obviously Horford was unreachable without a major deal.
But you can't honestly tell me that when the deal went down, you thought "Wow! I can't believe we got Brandan Wright!!! The missing piece!!"
by UncleCliffy on
Mar 29, 2008 2:28 PM PDT
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offtopic
by John Patrick on
Mar 28, 2008 4:34 PM PDT
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Steve Blake
Plus one other thing I notice is that NBA players usually like it if a player "challenges" them by going one-on-one. Even if said NBA player is not a good defender, he'll give it a effort.
But guys like Steve Blake don't usually go one-on-one. They bide their time and look for openings instead. That's tough for guys like Monta who's use to the Kobe's and DWades's of the world attacking one-on-one.
by coach41 on
Mar 28, 2008 4:56 PM PDT
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props to GSOM
ive yet to see a major league site like this one...it reminds me of the tagging movement in the 80's and 90's around the bay, especially in SF
by NuestroOcho on
Mar 28, 2008 10:14 PM PDT
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Nowhere else to put this
by IQofaWarrior on
Mar 28, 2008 10:25 PM PDT
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Barkley needs
C-Web represented himsef AND GSW really well. He's great on camera, very smooth. And yes, he gave it right back to Charles, it was great. He didn't let Barkley get away with talking about gsw being weak inside, pointing out that not every team can pound it inside. And when that happens he said Baron, Jax, and Monta will "eat you alive". Thanks C-Web. I hope TNT brings you back soon!!
by in for life on
Mar 28, 2008 11:08 PM PDT
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Funny how Chuck talks about "D",
"To my dear brother, Noompsy."
by Tim N Chris Burger on
Mar 29, 2008 12:39 AM PDT
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gerald green
plus, he'd be a good lifting partner for brandan wright! i can see it now... green and wright bench pressing, getting all excited that they're getting stronger with the 16 pound bench press... then special K walks by, lays down on the bench next to them, and benches like four thousand pounds.
by Run Dubz Run on
Mar 29, 2008 1:34 AM PDT
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Warrior Love
A buddy of mine sent me this post about why the Warriors are so unique.
I thought it was great.
http://pondculture.wordpress.com/2008/03/26/is-it-possible-to-love-twelve-men-at-the-same-time/
by StevieB on
Mar 29, 2008 10:55 AM PDT
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Warrior Wonder
by WarriorGirlReject on
Mar 29, 2008 11:06 AM PDT
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nellie's done a good job...
by NuestroOcho on
Mar 29, 2008 12:44 PM PDT
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the better for us all
by NuestroOcho on
Mar 29, 2008 12:45 PM PDT
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atma one
by NuestroOcho on
Mar 29, 2008 1:18 PM PDT
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atma one
Go Dubz!
by NuestroOcho on
Mar 29, 2008 1:25 PM PDT
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people
by BD4mvp on
Mar 29, 2008 10:30 PM PDT
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