Contact Form

 

Five takeaways from the Warriors blowout victory over the Thunder


Lou Williams goes up for the layup but David West is there for the rejection.

West With The Block

West With The Block

Lou Williams goes up for the layup but David West is there for the rejection.

2 days ago


Last night was a big match-up for the Golden State Warriors. After getting their backsides roundly kicked the last two times they met the Oklahoma City Thunder, the stakes were high.

Another game struggling against the Thunder might have pointed to a serious match-up problem, rather than an issue of regular season focus and intensity.

After all, this Thunder team is not so different from the 2016 version that was arguably the toughest opponent the Warriors have faced in this epic run over the last four years.

Using their length to disrupt our motion offense, and with Steven Adams bulldozing his way to offensive rebounds galore, they are uniquely built to exploit the Warriors’ biggest weaknesses - a penchant for sloppy turnovers and a lack of rebounding prowess.

So the big question on everyone’s lips was the one Duby Dub Dubs asked in the preview - ‘Is that flip switched yet?’

Well, last night we got a resounding answer.

Intensity, defensive effort, and offensive execution

After two showings against the Thunder where the Warriors came out with very little intensity, playing hardly any defense and throwing the ball carelessly around, tonight was a very different affair.

The Warriors ended up holding the Thunder to just 80 points on 33% shooting. The Thunder’s big three - Russell Westbrook (15 points on 4-15 shooting), Paul George (5 points on 1-14 shooting), and Carmelo Anthony (14 points on 6-17 shooting) were kept quiet by a playoff-like level of intensity.

Crucially it was a team effort, with no weak links. Bodies were flying around, shots were contested, rotations were made. And while Adams continued to pound the glass, the Warriors battled hard. He ended with just seven rebounds.

The Warriors won the battle of points in the paint (36-28), fastbreak points (13-10), and points off turnovers (25-18) - all signs of a more engaged, active defense leading to offensive opportunities.

Some of the turnover problems were less pronounced too, with good execution leading to a lot of clean looks. Early on the Warriors struggled to convert, with Klay Thompson in particular ice cold, but the carelessness for the most part wasn’t there, though Draymond Green did have a few head-scratchers.

But defensively Thompson was tremendous on the perimeter, and Green was back to his snarling best inside. Here’s an example of Klay’s smothering defense tonight.

KLAY PUT THE CLAMPS ON PG. pic.twitter.com/dTRqMSNMFg — Warriors Talk (@JaeAzizi) February 25, 2018

Green also had the capper on the evening, finishing with a statement dunk off a fastbreak sparked by his fine defensive work.

Draymond forces the turnover, then throws it down on the other end! pic.twitter.com/6fuRVjPKCR — Golden State Warriors (@warriors) February 25, 2018

Given the effort both put forwards on that end, some offensive miscues can be overlooked.

OKC Kevin Durant vs Golden State Kevin Durant

Kevin Durant had a great night, finishing with 28 points, five rebounds, two assists, and a block and a steal apiece. In particular he came to life in the second quarter, firing up the Warriors and helping them re-take the lead.

But within that came some interesting moments of contrast.

His first two possessions on checking back in during the second quarter were some classic OKC isolations. The first he received the ball matched up with Westbrook and was goaded into an iso-jumper that bricked. He followed that up with another iso-jumper on the wing with the same result.

After Steph Curry checked back in, the offense started rolling. The ‘Hamptons 5‘ looked as good as they have been this year, creating opportunities in transition and off good ball movement.

Hamptons 5 closed the half 22-10 — Tim Kawakami (@timkawakami) February 25, 2018

Durant was a major factor in the run, which started with him finishing a nice dunk on a backdoor cut.

He followed that up with a couple of threes. The first came off some nice off-ball action and the second from a good, hard screen. Following a wrestling match with Anthony that resulted in a double technical, Durant nailed another open three.

Now he was cooking and nailed a nice in-rhythm mid-range pull up jumper.

Kevin Durant scores 19 PTS in the first half to help give the @warriors the lead at the break!#DubNation pic.twitter.com/i64AwPWKVz — NBA (@NBA) February 25, 2018

On top of that he was actively engaged in that defensive effort, using his length to contest shots and fighting hard in a physical game.

Overall it was an interesting mini-window into how Durant’s game has grown since joining the Warriors. It’s not that he couldn’t do these things in OKC, or that the Warriors don’t need some of those isolation buckets when the going gets tough.

It’s more that he’s in a system that elevates his whole game, and allows him to shine for the wonderful all-around basketball player that he is.

The ups and downs of the Cinnamon Brothers

The Warriors won the first quarter for the second straight game. Part of that was the active presence of JaVale McGee to open. From the tip it looked like the Warriors were playing 5-on-5 on offense, as he got free for an alley-oop dunk.

On the defensive end he was engaged, battling with the notoriously tricky Adams, forcing a miss from Anthony, poking the ball away in the post, and intimidating George on the drive. He helped set the tone as the Warriors looked ready to play from the off.

But McGee giveth, and McGee taketh away. In a sign of why it’s difficult to rely on him during the playoffs, the second half opened with the Thunder clearly targeting him in the pick and roll, helping them get back into the game. And while he battled well with Adams in the first half, in the second he resorted to hacking away.

McGee was replaced midway through the third with Zaza Pachulia, who played an all round solid game and demonstrated why Kerr relies on him.

Who knows how this experiment will go, but it lends credence to the idea that McGee starting is a place-holder until Jordan Bell is ready. Bell can bring the same energy and athleticism, but is much more mobile in switches and can play a fuller role on the offensive end.

McGee’s fellow Cinnamon Bro, Nick Young, had a similarly contrasting game. Frankly he was not good to start. He opened by dribbling into a contested, turn-around, long range two which predictably clanged off the rim. Matched up on Westbrook on the other end, he couldn’t keep up.

It looked like another one of those games where you’d end up shaking your head thinking he just doesn’t play winning basketball.

And then... wow, what a second half. The Swaggy one was raining hot fire, at one point reeling off 11 straight points as part of the Warriors’ massive run. Much of it was off the catch and shoot opportunities created by the offense, though by the fourth quarter he was so hot it didn’t really matter.

This was definitely one of Young’s best games, and crucially he delivered during a playoff-intensity match-up against one of the premier contenders in the West.

And, of course, his podium game is no less Swaggy.

Swaggy breaking down his outfit to reporters pic.twitter.com/MOWYJ2A0MA — Warriors on NBCS (@NBCSWarriors) February 25, 2018

Steph Curry remains in MVP form

Who creates all this afore-mentioned offensive flow and movement? Steph Curry, of course. He was brilliant again, albeit playing more of the floor general tonight than the sky-um, pleasurer we have seen on multiple occasions this year, most recently against the Clippers a couple of nights ago.

He finished with 21 points, including nailing five three pointers, nine assists, six rebounds, and three steals.

This gorgeous behind-the-back pass was the pick of the bunch.

Steph goes behind the back to Zaza for a dunk pic.twitter.com/tug9NtPypY — Golden State Warriors (@warriors) February 25, 2018

I predicted before the season started that he would win his third MVP. Presently some guy in Houston may be the front-runner, but Curry is every bit as good as he has been in previous years and should there be a slight stumble he’s right there.

Poise counts

Thinking back to the epic 2016 Western Conference Finals, there were several keys to the Warriors turning the tide. Of course everyone rightly remembers Klay Thompson’s heroics in Game 6.

But beyond that the Warriors’ key to victory was to goad Westbrook into ill-advised shots, and test the Thunder’s poise. Tonight, the Warriors showed again that poise counts.

The game turned after an altercation between Anthony and Green. It was a close affair with four minutes to go in the third quarter when Green got what looked like a clean block on Anthony, but followed through and hit him in the head. In an already testy atmosphere which had seen several technicals, Anthony took exception.

The Warriors followed that with an absolute monster run that buried the Thunder. Quite simply the Thunder lost their poise and the Warriors took full advantage.

The cool headed veterans, led by Andre Iguodala (who was magnificent throughout with 7 points, 6 rebounds, 6 assists, a three pointer, and a team-high +29), ensured the fourth quarter remained out of touch, while the afore-mentioned Nick Young rained down lava from the heavens. By the end of the game it was a total blowout.

All in all, it was a tremendously satisfying evening that hinted at a Warriors team ready to click it up a notch as the playoffs approach.


It was a tit-for-tat game in the first half. The Thunder hung with the defending champion Warriors despite an awful shooting percentage in the first two quarters. Oklahoma City beat Golden State by 17 points in their first meeting and by 20 in the second. There was reason to believe the pendulum would swing the Thunder’s way this time around, too.

But then the third quarter happened, and it reminded the world that this Golden State Warriors team, when playing inspired basketball, is far and away better than most teams in the NBA. And even in an emotional showdown that saw Carmelo Anthony jaw with both Kevin Durant and Draymond Green, the Warriors found their stride with a convincing 112-80 win against a team they very well might see in the playoffs.

And it all started in that third quarter

The Warriors only led by seven points entering the second half. It was a welcome sign for Thunder fans given Paul George didn’t make a single field goal on nine first-half attempts and since Russell Westbrook shot just 2-of-10 from the field through the first two periods. OKC only needed one of their two faltering stars to heat up if it was going to pick up a third straight win. Just one of the two.

And then it happened.

MELO is PISSED at Draymond pic.twitter.com/lhOVK3VUjf — gifdsports (@gifdsports) February 25, 2018

Anthony and Draymond Green got into it after Green inadvertently whacked Melo in the head while going for a block. Anthony slammed his headband into the hardwood in frustration. Little did he know he was about to wake a sleeping giant.

The Warriors defense was already set to hold the Thunder below 100 points. But their offense hadn’t taken off against OKC’s stingy defense either. That all changed after Melo and Green got into things.

First Durant hit a three. Then he hit a layup. Then Andre Iguodala hit a top-of-the-key triple. And in the final minute of the fourth, Nick Young caught fire and drained back-to-back threes. In all, the Warriors went on a 14-0 run in the final 3:50 of the third quarter. Golden State extended it to a 31-7 run midway through the fourth quarter.

All the while, George only got two shots up in the third quarter. Westbrook shot two-of-five from the field. Melo shot three-of-nine for eight points in the period. The Oklahoma City defense had no answer for Golden State and couldn’t muster up any points of their own.

This game was over.

This is what the Warriors are capable of at the drop of a dime

Golden State seemed to have lost its way. The Warriors had only won five of their last nine games and were .500 between Jan. 30 and the All-Star break. They had continuously gotten off to slow starts and incredible third quarters. Saturday night was no different.

But to do this against a Thunder team that had drubbed them in their past two meetings proves the Warriors may have just needed a challenge to wake them up from their recent slumber. Oklahoma City may have poked a sleeping bear in their 32-point loss to Golden State. If there was any question whether the Warriors had lost a step, they answered that question with five exclamation points on Saturday.

No, they did not.

Total comment

Author

fw

0   comments

Cancel Reply