For one thing, there was Jayson Tatum - freshly back from his injury and already looking like a star. He isn't entirely himself, but he's shifty, and he's incredibly skilled. He's defending and rebounding at a high level. He's collapsing the defense and kicking to 3-point shooters when multiple defenders swarm him. He's swooping around defenders and finishing at the rim with his absurdly long arms.
The Warriors played the game with a skeleton crew. Steph Curry (runner's knee) and Kristaps Porzingis (illness) were both ruled out. The frontcourt got even thinner as Draymond Green was scratched five minutes before tipoff with lower back soreness. Horford took his place and drew the unenviable assignment of guarding Jokic. But riding an electric finish by Brandin Podziemski, the Warriors notched a spirited 128-117 win.
Despite the beautiful arena and the constant development around it, the Golden State Warriors have officially moved into basketball's worst neighborhood. The Celtics strolled in and methodically dismantled the Dubs. Even with a little garbage-time hustle, the Steph-less Warriors looked exactly like what they are right now: a team walking slowly toward a dead end. This isn't hell. NBA hell comes with lottery ping-pong balls and a shiny new 19-year-old savior to sell the fanbase.
Seth Curry, the younger brother of Warriors superstar Steph, still has a ways to go before he returns to the Golden State rotation. Seth Curry has missed the past 24 games with sciatica, and the Warriors announced on Wednesday that he will be re-evaluated in two weeks. The re-evaluation indicated that Curry continues to make good progress, the press release read. He will begin to intensify his on-court workouts this week, including live play.
The NBA has thrown the kitchen sink at its tanking problem over the years. They flattened the lottery odds. They invented a tournament to incentivize regular-season games. They've levied fines, tried public shaming, and probably discussed relegation in a dark room in Secaucus, New Jersey. (Okay, maybe not that last one, but they should.) None of it has worked.
Golden State announced it was signing Jeenathan Nate Williams, 27, on Tuesday morning. With Pat Spencer now on a standard contract, the Warriors had space to sign Williams to a contract that will likely see him spend most of his time with Santa Cruz's G-League SeaDubs. He spent his senior year of high school at Prolific Prep, then located in Napa, where Williams averaged 15.8 points per game. He then went on to play at Buffalo.
The Golden State Warriors have spent the better part of this season searching for an identity. Are they contenders? Are they pretenders? Are they a localized art installation dedicated to the concept of the turnover? Heading into the All-Star break at 29-26, they seem to have finally stumbled upon a guiding philosophy, one as chaotic as it is strangely comforting: They're just making this up as they go along. And I think that's just great.
The Warriors were without most of their top players. Steph Curry (knee inflammation) and Draymond Green (back) were held out after being questionable earlier in the day. Without their best players and several others the Warriors fell to the Timberwolves 108-83 while suiting up only 10 players. Gui Santos had his first career double-double with 11 points and 10 rebounds, and Brandin Podziemski had 12 points and seven rebounds.