Warriors' late run allows them to survive vs. Pelicans
Published in Basketball
SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors with Stephen Curry have hardly put the fear into the eyes of NBA defenses this season. Without him, they have been the league’s least-threatening offensive group and did little to shirk that reputation Saturday against the Western Conference’s lowliest team.
It required nearly every possession of regulation, but the Warriors made just enough shots to pull out a 104-96 win over the New Orleans Pelicans.
Golden State trailed 88-87 with 4:02 to play but scored 11 straight points to seal a win in the first game of what is expected to be at least a week without Curry as he heals from a left quad strain. In his absence, five Warriors scored in double-figures, led by 21 from Jimmy Butler, who also secured a double-double when he dished his 10th assist of the night to Gary Payton II, who finished the play to make it 94-88 with 2:59 to play.
Brandin Podziemski sank a 3-pointer to give the Warriors the lead for good, 90-88, and finished with 15 points, six assists and five rebounds. Payton contributed seven of his 19 total points during the decisive run to close the game and grabbed a team-high 11 rebounds for a double-double.
Listed as questionable, Jonathan Kuminga went through pregame warmups and was cleared to return after missing the past seven games with bilateral knee patellar tendonitis. He started and ended the game on the bench but drained both of his 3-point attempts after halftime and finished with 10 points in 19 minutes.
The scoreboard hanging over center court malfunctioned and kept both teams’ totals at zero until late in the first quarter, which should have come as a relief to both offenses. The Warriors missed 13 of their 14 looks from beyond the arc, and the teams combined to shot 13 of 51 from the field, a paltry 25.5%.
Golden State opened a 13-7 lead but allowed New Orleans to answer with a 22-6 run. Despite holding a 42-38 lead at intermission, it amounted to the fewest points the Warriors have taken into the locker room this season — just one more than their season-low in scoring for any half.
After shooting 2 of 21 (9.5%) from 3 in the second half of Wednesday’s loss to Houston, Golden State connected on just two of its 22 attempts from 3 in the first half against the Pelicans (9.1%). They amounted to the two worst shooting performances the team has had under Kerr when attempting at least 20 shots from distance.
The Warriors’ only salvation was the equally dreadful New Orleans offense — and Butler’s persistent attacks at the basket. All seven of Butler’s makes from the field came inside the paint, and he made it to the foul line 14 more times, which he converted into 10 points, but he sent a scare through the arena when he fell hard to the floor attempting to convert a lob pass in traffic from Pat Spencer late the first half.
Undercut by his defender, Butler fell directly on his left arm and was slow to get up but eventually returned to the game. The Warriors survived another injury scare when Will Richard returned to the game in the third quarter after heading into the locker room and spending the remainder of the first half with his midsection wrapped in a heating/cooling pad. He seized up and grabbed his right side while attempting to corral a defensive rebound early in the second quarter.
Making his return to Chase Center, where he played the final five years of his decade-long tenure with Golden State, Kevon Looney was greeted by a compilation of his highlights over the years and an extended standing ovation before tipoff. After not playing during the Warriors’ win in New Orleans earlier this month, Looney entered for the first time toward the end of the first quarter and finished with four points and five rebounds in 11 minutes.
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