Warriors’ Dennis Schroder trade is a bet on their evolution

Warriors' Dennis Schroder trade is a bet on their evolution

SAN FRANCISCO — Dennis Schroder isn’t really the Warriors’ type. At least not historically.

Schroder likes having the ball and running pick-and-rolls, where he punishes defenders who go under screens with his streaky jumper or zips past them to the rim. The Warriors will be his ninth team in 13 seasons, meaning he has worn out his welcome a time or two.

The Warriors are nevertheless ecstatic to acquire him, especially at a low-risk price. They know that at this point of their team-building arc, they can’t wait around for the perfect fit — stylistically, personality or otherwise. They know they need to evolve by bringing new dimensions to their pace-and-space, read-and-react, split-action and off-ball movement offense.

“Everything that we need, we feel like he can provide,” Steve Kerr said on Sunday.

The Warriors envision Schroder playing on and off the ball, with and without Steph Curry. He’ll have a convincing bid to join the starting lineup and to close games. He’ll fill the role De’Anthony Melton — who headed to Brooklyn in the trade — held before his season-ending injury.

Still, the Warriors probably wouldn’t have traded for Schroder three, five or 10 years ago; given Schroder’s career trajectory, they probably had chances to. But as Kerr and the Warriors have repeated this year, their margin for error is much slimmer now than it was in the past. When that’s the case, risks become necessary.

“I don’t think he was necessarily brought here to fit,” Draymond Green said. “We play a certain style of basketball that he does not really play. And I don’t think the goal is to get him to play the style of basketball we play. We need someone who does the things that he does. I’m looking forward to us adjusting to him.”

The league is evolving to the point that the best teams have multiple on-ball engines. The Celtics have Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Derrick White, Jrue Holiday and Payton Pritchard — all players capable of running pick-and-rolls effectively. The Mavericks, Golden State’s Sunday opponent, have Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving.

Before the trade, the Warriors had just one reliable on-ball creator in Curry. Jonathan Kuminga has shown flashes, too, but not enough to prevent the team’s current 2-8 slide in which their late-game offense has gotten painfully stagnant in several losses.

In crunch time, teams have face-guarded Curry and anticipated Golden State’s pet actions. The counter, as the Warriors have shown at times, is to run pick-and-rolls to create an advantage, be it a mismatch, 4-on-3 or driving lane.

The Warriors run the fourth fewest pick-and-rolls per game and rank 23rd in efficiency on the play types. It’s just not a big part of their offensive approach.

Unless the team adjusts the philosophy that helped bring them four championships.

“It’s what we’ve been talking about all year: trying to cater to the strengths of what this team is,” Curry said. “There’s a lot of experimenting been going on with us, and there will be even more with Dennis in the sense of how he can shift the geometry on the offensive end.”

Schroder would be part of that change. Among ballhandlers who run at least five pick-and-rolls per game, Schroder ranks in the 73rd percentile in points per possession.

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