Warriors need Jonathan Kuminga and Moses Moody to make “Year 3 Leap”

Warriors need Jonathan Kuminga and Moses Moody to make "Year 3 Leap"

HOUSTON —  It may seem like the Warriors are leaning into their old age.

The core that distinguishes them are all in their mid-30s, and where they lack in speed or athleticism they make up for by outsmarting their opponents. Teammates call 35-year-old Steph Curry a cheat code and 38-year-old Chris Paul a cheat sheet.

The superstars may carry the load and set the standard, but it’s internally understood that the Warriors can reach new heights as title contenders if Jonathan Kuminga and Moses Moody take the “Year 3 Leap.” That not only means the third-year players making the “Non-Steph” parts of the game competitive, but challenging the regulars for crunch time minutes.

That “Year 3 Leap” is the idea that players in their third NBA season can solidify themselves as rotation mainstays if they’ve pocketed enough game experience to pair with their youth and athleticism. The Warriors can right their bench woes from last year if Moody and Kuminga make that leap flanking the older veteran core.

With Andrew Wiggins and Klay Thompson easing into the year, Kuminga and Moody, both 21, have jumped in their shoes on the wings. Kuminga even closed the Phoenix loss over Wiggins and both were playing key minutes down the stretch in Sacramento.

It’s early, but the Warriors have been waiting for this upward trend from their former first-rounders. Poor bench play was a main contributor to the Warriors’ road woes last year; a double-digit deficit would spiral them in minutes when Curry wasn’t on the floor to mop the mess.

Last year, the Warriors probably lose Friday night’s road game against the Sacramento Kings. They were down 11 early in the first half and outscored by 12 in the first and fourth quarters combined. But there was no desperate scramble to survive or costly mistakes — instead Moody and Kuminga helped lead a second unit surge, with Paul as the primary playmaker, to turn the deficit into a 20-point lead high.

“Last year it took us a long time to win a road game,” Curry said after his 41-point effort against the Kings. “And we used everybody to get (this one) done.”

Moody is playing himself into a regular rotation role as a constant shooter and scrappy defender. Turnovers and defensive lapses pushed him out of the rotation last year, only for coach Steve Kerr to pull him off the shelf to defend LeBron James in the Western Conference Semifinals.

His 18 minutes in the season opener against Phoenix changed the tenor of Golden State’s sluggish start. He was a plus-11 shooting 4-of-5 from the field, including a pair of 3-pointers, in 21 minutes against the Kings.

Moody has been on a shot-making kick for a while now. He’s shooting 53.6% from 3 in 18 games since February of last year, but has averaged 1.6 attempts in an average 11.2 minutes per game over that span. In these firs two games, Moody has gone 2-of-3 and 2-of-4, respectively, as he’s earned more minutes.

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