Why Brandin Podziemski can be the offensive spark the Warriors need

Why Brandin Podziemski can be the offensive spark the Warriors need

SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors lost their fourth straight game, to Minnesota, on Tuesday night. Steph Curry sat out out injured. Klay Thompson and Draymond Green were tossed into a kerfuffle and ejected before a point was even scored — and a suspension may be imminent for the latter as the Warriors find themselves 6-6 still trying to find their flow.

But no frustration read on coach Steve Kerr’s face after the game, just satisfaction.

“It was just an amazing performance by our guys, to be so shorthanded and to fight and compete the way they did,” Kerr said. “It was just beautiful to watch.”

The moral victory in this loss: The Warriors found ways to score without Curry on the court. And rookie Brandin Podziemski may have taken the lead, for now, as a much-needed source for buckets. He became the first non-Curry Warrior to score more than 20 points this season — 23 points shooting 3-for-8 from 3 against the NBA’s No. 1 defense in a career-high 39 minutes. It earned him a full time job.

“He’s gonna play,” Kerr said. “He’s going to play every night.”

Lack of a second scorer was a became consistent issue through the 6-2 start and the four-game skid alike. With Andrew Wiggins missing bunny layups and shooting 15% from 3, Thompson taking fewer field goal attempts and Chris Paul still looking for his mid-range as he adjusts to life on and off the bench, all six wins mostly came down to Curry heroics.

Curry flurries separate the Warriors from the rest, but a smaller, older team built to out-smart opponents and space the floor has to make shots to keep defenses honest. Otherwise they get congested on offense and “drive into the paint with no plan” as Green put it after their first loss to the Timberwolves.

Jordan Poole may be remembered around Warriors world for his late-game turnovers or ill-timed heat checks, but at his best over two seasons he averaged 19.5 points per game shooting 35% from 3 on 7.7 attempts per game. The Warriors need someone to fill that void.

Podziemski did something of a Poole impression on Tuesday, challenging the Timberwolves’ length, he hit floaters, took a few 3-pointers and drove to the rim for a few and-1 makes around or over the outstretched arms of their seven footer duo of Karl-Anthony Towns and Rudy Gobert. It was a stunner given how Podziemski approached his five previous stints as more of a passer and high-flying rebounder.

“That’s what the game called for,” Podziemski said. “With the guys being out there, me and Chris (Paul) were the main scorers out there. That is what the game called for. Some games I will get one shot and some games I will get 18 like I did tonight.

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