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Warriors are for real, All-Star Game tweak, Ty Jerome and more

Warriors are for real, All-Star Game tweak, Ty Jerome and more

Warriors beat writer Danny Emerman shares his thoughts on the NBA

For all the talk of needing to adapt to the times and change their ways, the Warriors are leaning into their classic playbook amid their 10-2 start: Defense and depth.

Remember those four championship teams? They ranked second, 11th, second and first in defense.

Remember the pre-KD days? They were “strength in numbers”.

“When we’ve had great teams, we’ve had incredible depth,” Draymond Green said after Friday night’s win over Memphis.

Golden State already has wins over the Rockets, Celtics, Thunder and Mavericks. They’ve taken care of business against lottery teams or depleted ones and more than held their own with the contender class.

They rank fourth in both offensive and defensive rating — the only team in the top-five in both efficiency metrics.

Steph Curry is playing at an MVP level and delivering in the clutch on demand. Green looks like he’s in his prime, wreaking havoc on a nightly basis (and shooting 45% of 3).

“I don’t think we had the depth and versatility defensively last year that we have now. So, to me, the model is 2022,” said coach Steve Kerr. “We won the championship in 22 with a similar mix that we have now: good on both sides of the ball, establishing a defense…We won a title two years ago with a group built around Steph and defense, and that’s the formula this year , too.”

In Curry’s words, they’re doing what relevant teams do. But really, they’re doing what championship-caliber teams do.

There have been changes, to be sure. Jonathan Kuminga has improved and has excelled off the bench in a more all-around role — mostly at the power forward. The Warriors’ additions of De’Anthony Melton, Buddy Hield and Kyle Anderson have been somewhere between revelations and rock-solid. Jerry Stackhouse has helped the defense and Terry Stotts has cleaned some things up offensively.

And the Warriors are bound to hit a wall at some point. It’s a long season. Injuries are inevitable. So are rough shooting stretches.

But the Warriors’ defense, as long as Green is available, is legit. The sample size is big enough at this point to declare that. And while their 13-depth rotation will get trimmed at some point, it’ll also help withstand unplanned absences.

I was fairly skeptical about this team heading into the year (the receipts are printed weekly in this column). A bunch of C+ or B- players around Curry and Green didn’t seem like a championship formula to me. The roster felt unfinished yet bloated at the same time.

What I didn’t factor in as much was how well all the pieces would fit and how much everyone would buy-in. Kerr is coaching him behind off and it’s showing.

The Warriors are definitely fun again, but they’re more than that. They’re a team no one is excited to play.

All-Star facelift

The NBA is reportedly in serious discussions about a revamped All-Star format for the 2025 festivities in the Bay Area. The new format, per ESPNwould include three eight-man All-Star teams playing in a four-team tournament against the winner of the Rising Stars game.

There must be more in these “serious discussions” than has been revealed. Because if the big fix is ​​simply turning the All-Star Game into a mini tournament, that’s not going to work.

Why would more meaningless games be better than just one? Are there more stakes?

At least they’re trying something. Anything.

At least it seems likely that Curry and Sabrina Ionescu will reprise their roles in the interleague 3-point shooting contest. If the league can put Steph and Sabrina vs. Klay Thompson and Caitlin Clark together, that’d be a massive draw.

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