Mar 15

CLE133
MEM124
Final
CHA145
SAS134
Final
DAL96
HOU133
Final
ORL111
MIN118
Final
TOR126
UTA118
Final
LAL126
DEN131
Final
SAC106
PHX122
Final
BOS115
BKN113
Final
OKC113
DET107
Final

Mar 16

MIA91
MEM125
Final
CHI114
HOU117
Final
IND119
MIL126
Final
NYK94
GSW97
Final
NOP115
SAS119
Final
WAS126
DEN123
Final
ORL31-37
CLE56-10
ABC @5:00 PM UTC
PHI22-44
DAL33-35
NBCSP @5:00 PM UTC
PHX31-36
LAL40-25
ABC @7:30 PM UTC
ATL32-35
BKN22-45
FDSE @10:00 PM UTC
TOR24-43
POR28-39
KUNP @10:00 PM UTC
UTA15-52
MIN39-29
KJZZ @11:00 PM UTC
CHA17-49
LAC37-30
FDCH @11:00 PM UTC

Mar 17

OKC55-12
MIL38-28
ESPN @1:00 AM UTC
MIA29-38
NYK42-24
ESPN @11:30 PM UTC

Mar 18

PHI22-44
HOU43-25
NBCSP+ @12:00 AM UTC
DET37-31
NOP18-50
FDDT @12:00 AM UTC
IND37-29
MIN39-29
FDIN @12:00 AM UTC
CHI28-39
UTA15-52
CHSN @1:00 AM UTC
DEN43-24
GSW39-28
NBCSBAY @2:00 AM UTC
MEM43-25
SAC33-33
NBCSCA @2:00 AM UTC
WAS14-51
POR28-39
KUNP @2:00 AM UTC
TOR24-43
PHX31-36
KTVK @2:00 AM UTC
SAS28-38
LAL40-25
FDSW @2:30 AM UTC
ATL32-35
CHA17-49
FDCH @11:00 PM UTC
BKN22-45
BOS49-19
NBCSB @11:30 PM UTC
Warriors Observations

What we learned as Steph makes history in Warriors' win vs. Kings

NBC Universal, Inc.

BOX SCORE

SAN FRANCISCO – The Warriors on Thursday night at Chase Center began with back-to-back booms by Draymond Green, who hit threes from the right corner on Golden State’s first two possessions, but all eyes were on Steph Curry’s countdown to 4,000 career 3-pointers. 

History was made during the third quarter, and the Warriors held off the Kings for a 130-104 win to continue their successful homestand. 

Curry played 30 minutes and was held to 11 points on the Kings’ defense that looked to make anybody else beat them. 

The Warriors’ leading scorer, however, was a surprise. Green scored a season-high 23 points on 8-of-14 shooting and was 4 of 7 on threes. He also added five rebounds and four assists.

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The anticipation of Curry’s latest historic shot wasn’t the only storyline everyone was waiting to see unfold. Jonathan Kuminga returned from an ankle injury that had sidelined him since Jan. 4 and looked like he hadn’t missed a beat. Kuminga was spry and active, scoring 18 points off the bench in 20 minutes, going 7 of 10 from the field and was a plus-8.

This was a group project aced by many. The Warriors had eight players score in double figures, from the starting lineup and four off the bench.

Here are three takeaways from the Warriors’ season-best sixth win in a row.

4K Curry

Before Curry even took one three, the Warriors already had shot four and made half of them. But the first time Curry let it fly, he cashed in from the left wing. Curry then missed his first chance at making his 4,000th career three, clanking from the top of the arc. 

The next three Curry took again was unsuccessful, putting him one three away from his major milestone through the first half.

A little under four minutes into the third quarter, Curry hit 4K on his fourth attempt of the game. Curry used a pump fake to get Trey Lyles to fly past him, dribbled once to his left and again defied basketball history for the umpteenth time. 

During the next timeout, the Warriors played a special tribute video that began with former Warrior Andris Biedrins, who assisted Curry on his first career made 3-pointer as a Warrior on Oct. 30, 2009, his second game in the NBA. Curry made his 1,000th three in his sixth season. He made it to 2,000 early in his ninth season, 3,000 in his 13th season and now 4,000 in his 16th season.

Now, imagine if Curry played more than 26 games in his third season, and wasn’t held to five games in the pandemic-riddled 2019-20 NBA season. The record books will never be the same.

Kuminga’s Impressive Return

The wait finally ended at the 7:23 mark of the first quarter. Kuminga, after missing the Warriors’ previous 31 games, was back on the court following a Kings timeout. He replaced Jimmy Butler, joining Curry, Green, Moses Moody and Quinten Post. 

His first shot attempt was a tough finish at the rim on Kings center Jonas Valančiūnas that didn’t fall through. Still, the Warriors loved Kuminga’s intent and decision. He also pushed the ball in transition and assisted Curry on his first three of the night. Then with a little more than three minutes left in the first quarter, Kuminga scored his first points in 68 days. 

Kuminga went coast to coast, hesitated for a second with his left and then blew by Malik Monk for a strong left-handed layup.

That’s exactly what the Warriors want to see out of Kuminga. His first stint was lively, lasting five minutes in which he was a plus-4. Kuminga in the first half played nine minutes and scored six points on 2-of-3 shooting, and also had three rebounds and one assist.

He played another 11 minutes in the second half, scoring 12 points on 5-of-7 shooting. Aside from Curry’s three, the best moment of the night was Kuminga throwing down multiple dunks in the fourth quarter, including an alley-oop from Green.

Kings’ 4-On-4 Strategy

If Keegan Murray was in the game when Curry was on the court, he face guarded Curry everywhere he went. The same goes for Kings guard Keon Ellis. The game turned to 4-on-4 to prevent Curry from making more history. 

Turns out that Curry guy is a pretty decent decoy. 

The Warriors in the first quarter shot 13 threes, with only two coming from Curry. They went 7 of 13 in that span. Going into halftime, the Warriors were shooting 57.1 percent beyond the arc, going 12 of 21, and Curry only was responsible for one made three. 

Before Curry made his 4,000th career 3-pointer, the Warriors as a team were 14 of 23, amounting to 60.1 percent. Green had made four threes. Post and Gary Payton II had made three, and Moody, Buddy Hield and Gui Santos each had made one. 

Kings interim coach Doug Christie’s strategy worked for stretches, taking Curry out of the game as a scorer. More often than not, however, the Warriors as a whole made him pay for it. They made 22 of their 39 3-point attempts while the Kings finished 14 of 37, giving Golden State a 24-point advantage from long distance.

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