Warriors fade in tale of two halves loss to Kings – Paradise Post

Warriors fade in tale of two halves loss to Kings – Paradise Post

SACRAMENTO — The Warriors are a .500 team, and they played a .500 game.

As excellent as the Warriors played in the first half, when the 3s were flowing and the defense held Sacramento to 39% shooting, they stumbled just as hard in the second half.

Golden State led by as much as 18, but hellacious ball pressure and trick defensive schemes from Sacramento in the third quarter slowed them down. The Warriors allowed 75 second-half points and scored just four points in the last four minutes of the game.

The Kings trapped the ball out of Steph Curry’s hands all night, and he responded by dishing a season-high 12 assists. Andrew Wiggins poured in 25 and Gui Santos (16 points) provided a major lift off the bench. But DeMar DeRozan (32 points, 24 in the second half) was too much for the short-handed Warriors to overcome.

In the early stages of a “make-or-break” stretch of games before the Feb. 6 trade deadline, what looked like a promising night for Golden State (21-22) ended with “Light The Beam” chants and a 123-117 loss. The Warriors committed 19 turnovers, negating a hot shooting night.

Steve Kerr moved some puzzle pieces around, removing Dennis Schroder and Trayce Jackson-Davis from the starting lineup and replacing them with Buddy Hield and Kevon Looney. He tried to make lineup choices to “jumpstart” Golden State’s offense that ranks 26th since December.

Looney matches up well with Kings center Domantas Sabonis, and the Warriors are undefeated when Hield scores at least 18 points.

Not only did Kerr shake up the starting lineup, he dug deep into his bench. Rookie Quinten Post started the second quarter to add spacing and Gui Santos checked in shortly after him as the 11th Warrior to touch the court.

Any choices are impermanent given the Warriors’ injury report. Draymond Green and Jonathan Kuminga will miss at least another week or two, while Brandin Podziemski and Kyle Anderson could return from absences Thursday against the Bulls but watched in street clothes in Golden 1 Center.

Any coaching decisions look great when shots fall. Moses Moody drained his first two 3-pointers, Hield buried a pair and Andrew Wiggins sank three early triples — including a four-point play. Even Santos joined the barrage with three of his own. Golden State started 12-for-21 from behind the arc.

The 3-point onslaught opened up the lane for Golden State. Curry found Santos on a cut for his fifth assist and threw a slick dime in the pick-and-roll to Jackson-Davis for an and-1 reverse layup.

Source: Paradise Post