Why Warriors are sticking with jumbo starters to begin season

Why Warriors are sticking with jumbo starters to begin season

PORTLAND, Ore. — After tinkering with a myriad of lineup configurations during the preseason, Steve Kerr settled on a starting-five for the team’s first game of the 2024-25 regular season.

Against the Blazers, the Warriors went with Steph Curry, Andrew Wiggins, Jonathan Kuminga, Draymond Green and Trayce Jackson-Davis.

“I’m looking to see if that group can set a tone defensively, obviously very athletic group, lot of size,” Kerr said pregame at the Moda Center. “We have rim protection with Draymond and Trayce. Those two were really good defensively together last year. It’s going to require us to execute offensively and play downhill, play fast.”

Kerr said that he hopes the starting lineup he appointed opening night is the one he’ll go with all year. It doesn’t sound like Golden State plans to adjust its starting lineup on a matchup basis, at least to start the season. The preference is for this group to be effective enough to force opponents to adjust to them.

Starting Wiggins at shooting guard and Kuminga at the three along with two non-shooting bigs means the group is light on floor spacing. But they aim to counteract that by amping up their defense and running in transition.

Kuminga in particular is dangerous on fast breaks. Although the Warriors struggled in transition in both directions last year, Kuminga individually ranked in the 79.7th percentile in fast-break scoring efficiency.

“We’re really pushing him to run the floor,” Kerr said of Kuminga earlier this week. “That’s his gift — his athleticism and his speed. He has a tendency at times to kind of get into a home run trot instead of going Usain Bolt and sprinting as fast as he can.”

Because Wiggins is playing the two, Curry is the only player in the lineup shorter than 6-foot-6. That mirrored Portland’s starting unit of Anfernee Simons (6-foot-4), Toumani Camara (6-foot-8), Deni Avdija (6-foot-9), Jerami Grant (6-foot-8) and Deandre Ayton (7 feet).

In his career, Wiggins has played an estimated 18% of his minutes as a shooting guard, per Basketball-Reference — but most of that came early in his career in Minnesota. He didn’t play a minute at shooting guard last season.

The five of Curry, Wiggins, Kuminga, Green and Jackson-Davis played just one preseason game together. They would’ve started another, but Curry’s sprained right index finger sidelined him for Golden State’s preseason finale.

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