Tag Archives: Andrew Wiggins

Golden State Warriors want to keep ‘all of those guys,’ GM Bob Myers says as trio of contract decisions loom

SAN FRANCISCO — The Golden State Warriors have several key players entering, or coming up on, contract seasons, but as it stands there’s no clear indication whether those extensions will be agreed upon any time soon.

Jordan Poole has until Oct. 17 to come to a rookie extension deal but could become a restricted free agent in 2023. Andrew Wiggins is set to become an unrestricted free agent at the end of this coming season, and Draymond Green has a player option for 2023-24.

“We want all of those guys,” Warriors general manager Bob Myers said at a news conference Thursday. “Can we get all of them? I don’t know.

“It depends on what the money ends up being. What the ask is what we can end up doing. We’re not at a point to make those decisions yet.

“Some of these decisions may be made in the next two weeks, some might be made in the next seven, eight months.”

Golden State was the most expensive team in NBA history last season, paying approximately $346 million in salary and luxury taxes. The Warriors also will be subject to the repeater penalty this season.

In Poole’s case, the Warriors plan to use the Oct. 17 deadline as the driving force to come to an agreement. Myers and the front office will sit down with Poole’s representation in early October, after the team returns from its preseason games in Japan.

“Where that’ll go, I don’t know,” Myers said. “But I know they want to meet. And we want to meet. And then we’ll see what the next two weeks give us.”

Myers said he has met with Wiggins’ and Green’s camps but that nothing substantial came from those conversations. Because there is no imminent deadline for Wiggins and Green, those negotiations most likely will happen over the course of the season and into the summer.

But even if no deals are agreed upon for any of the three players, Myers doesn’t see it becoming a problem behind the scenes.

“The good news for us is that I don’t hear that anybody wants to leave,” Myers said. “That would be a worse problem if they said, ‘I don’t want to be here, I’m out of here at the end of the season’ or, ‘Trade me.’ Not hearing any of that. The goal is to figure it out as best we can.”

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NBA playoffs 2022 – ‘OMG WIGGS,’ sports world reacts to Andrew Wiggins’ monster dunk over Luka Doncic

Dunk of the postseason? Dunk of the postseason. The 2022 NBA playoffs rolled on Sunday night with the Golden State Warriors defeating the Dallas Mavericks 109-100 to take a 3-0 series lead in the Western Conference finals. But the story of the night was centered solely around Andrew Wiggins.

More specifically, Wiggins’ preposterous dunk over Luka Doncic. Wiggins, who scored a playoff career-high 27 points, took flight over Doncic midway through the fourth quarter for what was originally ruled an offensive foul. Golden State challenged, and the ruling was Wiggins’ elbow to Doncic was incidental contact, giving the Warriors a 93-83 lead.

The sports world immediately turned to Twitter to react to Wiggins putting Luka on a poster. Here’s what everyone from Magic Johnson to Terrell Owens had to say about the moment. We also included an old Joel Embiid tweet that didn’t age particularly well, because we’re petty like that.

Basketball world …

NFL stars of past and present …

An old take exposed …



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Golden State Warriors give ‘scary’ glimpse at new ‘death lineup’ in Game 1 win

SAN FRANCISCO — The Golden State Warriors have a long-standing history of small-ball lineups. During the first championship run of their dynastic era, their small lineup was so lethal it was dubbed the “death lineup.”

It has gone through a few different renditions since then, but as the Warriors embark on their first playoff run in three years, it appears they have the newest version.

Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson, Jordan Poole, Draymond Green and Andrew Wiggins played just five minutes together in Game 1 of their first-round series against the Denver Nuggets, but in those minutes, they outscored the Nuggets by 14 points. And it was those five minutes that shifted the momentum to the Warriors going into halftime of their eventual 123-107 win on Saturday night.

“It’s a scary sight when we really get going,” Thompson said. “This is really only our first time really playing together.”

Poole has been peppering his veteran teammates with questions about the playoffs for the past three years. He wanted to be ready whenever his chance to perform on the NBA’s biggest stage came. But according to Warriors coach Steve Kerr, it’s not just his questions that prepared the third-year guard. Their two play-in games last year gave Poole a taste of the pressure he’d face during their run this season.

“He’s not afraid of the moment,” Kerr said of Poole. “He’s looking forward to it.”

Curry singled out a play that occurred with about three minutes left in the first half, when Poole came in transition and cut back and forth through the key for a layup.

“He doesn’t lack confidence,” Curry said. “That play embodied it. Because you just have the creativity and confidence in yourself to make that play. You don’t second-guess yourself. You kind of live with the results and we’ve done it for years, and he’s stepping into that … It’s fun to see.”

Poole finished the night with a game-high 30 points on 9-of-13 shooting, including 5-of-7 from 3. Only one player in Warriors history scored more points in his playoff debut: Wilt Chamberlain (35 points).

On Friday, Nuggets coach Michael Malone said not to check Poole’s statistics against Denver during the regular season because “they were just off the charts.” In the three games he played against the Nuggets, Poole averaged 22.7 points, 58% shooting from the field and 61% shooting from the 3-point line.

Curry said that Poole’s play as of late — he has hit a league-best 78 3-pointers since March — is a reason he is comfortable easing his way back into his own play more slowly.

Saturday’s outing was the first time Curry had played a game since March 16, and he came in off the bench.

It was Curry’s decision not to start. He said that watching Thompson come back from his injuries — particularly the way the Warriors would allow Thompson to get 45 minutes of rest in real time before he returned to the floor — gave Curry insight into how to manage his minutes restriction. But it also gave the Warriors the flexibility they wanted within the limits of Curry’s minute restriction.

Curry played 22 minutes total, finishing with 16 points on 5-of-13 shooting, including 3-of-6 from 3-point range.

“I thought he looked great,” Thompson said. “His shot was short in the first half, but that’s to be expected when you come off a long layoff. But he’s still Steph Curry. … Just his gravity and the threat of him being out there is the best. It makes us a championship team.”

As Thompson said, Curry’s biggest impact on the game was simply his presence on the court. It forced the Nuggets to decide if they wanted to leave him in single coverage — which could have allowed him to catch fire — or throw multiple defenders his way, leaving another capable shooter wide open.

“It’s really hard to guard us,” Thompson said. “Technically, I guess, we are undersized, but you have to bring a defensive force and effort and energy.”

As Curry added, “Seeing [Poole] be able to make plays in the pick-and-roll with me and Klay spaced and Draymond setting and Wiggs splashing, it checks a lot of boxes on the list of like what would you want for a potent offense.”

The spacing Curry created was especially apparent playing in the Warriors’ three-guard lineup with Poole and Thompson. Thompson finished with 19 points on 7-of-15 shooting, including five 3-pointers.

Of course, the “death lineup 3.0” was brought together by Green, as it has been since the 2014-15 season.

Green did not play in any of the four regular-season matchups against Denver, and Malone cited that as a reason the Nuggets went 3-1 in the series.

The Nuggets shot just 5-of-19 from the floor on Saturday when Green was the primary defender. Nikola Jokic went 3-of-12. On offense, the Warriors finished 9-of-14 on field goals off Green’s passes, including 5-of-6 on uncontested shots.

“You need tough and smart, and that’s Draymond,” Kerr said.

Poole agreed.

“He stepped it up a notch,” Poole said of Green. “Him being our leader, we feed off his energy and being able to see head honcho go out there, be aggressive, knock down huge stops against the MVP, we feed off that. Being able to have the force that he is back there, and the way he controls our offense helps a lot.”

The Warriors only got a five-minute glimpse of their potential closing lineup. But in those five minutes, Golden State could finally see the lineup it has been talking about since Curry went down in March with injuries to his left foot. It’s been in their playbook for longer — for nearly a decade.

Golden State has seen players rotate out, such as Harrison Barnes and Kevin Durant, but at the end of the day, it will always be a key for the Warriors in the playoffs.

As for a new nickname for it?

“No,” Curry said. “See, it’s hard to keep doing it over and over again. Hard stuff we all must do.”

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LeBron James, Kevin Durant named captains again for All-Star Game as starter pool announced

LeBron James and Kevin Durant again will be the captains of the two teams in this year’s All-Star Game, as the NBA announced on Thursday night the starters for its annual midseason showcase to be held Feb. 20 in Cleveland.

James, who now has been a captain in each of the five years the NBA has used the current system to pick its teams, and Durant, who is one for a second straight year, earned the honor by finishing with more fan votes than anyone in their respective conferences.

James has now made 18 All-Star teams, tying Kobe Bryant for second place all time behind Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (19).

Joining James as starters from the Western Conference are Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry and Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant in the backcourt, along with reigning NBA MVP Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets and forward Andrew Wiggins of the Warriors in the frontcourt.

From the East, Durant, a 12-time All-Star, is joined by Chicago Bulls guard DeMar DeRozan and Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young in the backcourt, and Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid and Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo in the frontcourt. Durant’s availability for the game is a question mark as he continues to recover from a sprained knee ligament.

Wiggins’ selection as a starter was somewhat of a surprise, even though he’s averaging 18.1 points per game.

The selection for the starters was based on fan ballots for 50% of the vote, and a media panel and current players each made up 25%.

Wiggins was able to edge teammate Draymond Green for the third West frontcourt spot. Wiggins received fewer player and media votes, but he ranked third among the fans’ voting while Green was sixth. As a result, Wiggins ended up with a weighted score of 4.25 points; Green came in at 4.75.

“It was mind blowing,” Wiggins said of finding out he was an All-Star starter. “I was taking my pregame nap and my girl and daughter woke me up and told me, ‘You are a starter, you are a starter.’ I thought I was dreaming for a second. I was like, what is going on? It was a good way to learn that I made it to the All-Star, and I am thankful.

“I have been putting in a lot of work and I have found a home here. Hopefully I can keep it going and this is not the last one.”

Per Elias Sports Bureau research, Wiggins is the third first-time All-Star to be named a starter in his eighth season or later (Bob Boozer in his eighth season in 1967-68; Kyle Lowry in his ninth season in 2014-15). He is the 40th different No. 1 overall pick in the modern draft era (since 1966) to make an All-Star team in his career — but the first of those not to make it until his eighth season or later.

Warriors coach Steve Kerr said he was happy to see Wiggins’ work rewarded.

“One of the proudest moments just to see what Wiggs has done since he got here a couple of years go,” Kerr said. “The journey he has traveled has been rocky at times, and to see how hard he’s worked and to see all the work rewarded, just could not be happier for him.”

Curry, now an eight-time All-Star, has helped lead Golden State back to the upper tier of the Western Conference after two injury-plagued years interrupted the Warriors’ string of five consecutive NBA Finals trips. Morant, meanwhile, makes his first All-Star appearance as Memphis, one of the most entertaining teams in the league, has pushed itself into third in the West.

Jokic, playing in his fourth straight All-Star Game, has followed up winning last year’s MVP by averaging 26.2 points, 13.8 rebounds and 7.6 assists per game for Denver this season, keeping the Nuggets afloat while missing Jamal Murray for the entire season thus far and Michael Porter Jr. for all but a handful of games.

DeRozan, who joined the Bulls as a free agent this summer after playing the prior two seasons with the San Antonio Spurs, has played a massive role in Chicago’s resurgence toward the top of the Eastern Conference standings, earning MVP consideration thanks to impressive clutch play while averaging 26.4 points, 5.0 rebounds and 4.8 assists. This is his fifth All-Star selection.

His starting nod was announced by Bulls teammate Zach LaVine — who finished just behind Young in the East backcourt vote — while the team was aboard its flight to San Antonio for a game Friday night.

“We don’t get younger in this league,” DeRozan said later. “So for me just to overcome everything I overcame. And coming into a new situation and everything that is going on team wise, it just makes it special to come back and not just be All-Star but to be voted in as a starter. It’s just one of those moments you know I don’t know what to call it, I can’t even give it a title; but it just feels good.”

Young made his second All-Star team; he’s averaging 27.7 points and 9.3 assists while posting career-best shooting percentages of 45.3% overall and 38% from 3-point range.

While Philadelphia has spent the season without All-Star guard Ben Simmons, Embiid has more than picked up the slack, averaging career highs in points (29) and assists (4.3) per game, as well as 3-point percentage (38%) to keep the 76ers in the middle of the East playoff picture. And Antetokounmpo has been the one constant for the defending champion Bucks this season amid a constant stream of injuries and COVID-19 absences, averaging 28.6 points, 11.2 rebounds and a career-high 6.0 assists per game.

The All-Star reserves, who will be selected by the coaches in both conferences, will be unveiled next Thursday on TNT. James and Durant then will pick their respective teams, a format the league first instituted in 2018.

ESPN’s Jamal Collier contributed to this report



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LeBron James, Kevin Durant named captains again for All-Star Game as starter pool announced

LeBron James and Kevin Durant again will be the captains of the two teams in this year’s All-Star Game, as the NBA on Thursday night announced the starters for its annual midseason showcase to be held Feb. 20 in Cleveland.

James, who has now been a captain in each of the five years the NBA has used this system to pick its teams, and Durant, who is one for a second straight year, earned the honor by finishing with more fan votes than anyone in their respective conferences.

James has now made 18 All-Star teams, tying Kobe Bryant for second place all-time behind Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (19).

Joining James as starters from the Western Conference are Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry and Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant in the backcourt, along with reigning NBA MVP Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets and forward Andrew Wiggins of the Warriors in the frontcourt.

From the East, Durant, a 12-time All-Star, is joined by Chicago Bulls guard DeMar DeRozan and Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young in the backcourt, and Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid and Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo in the frontcourt.

Curry, now an 8-time All-Star, has helped lead Golden State back to the upper tier of the Western Conference after two injury-plagued years interrupted the Warriors’ string of five straight NBA Finals trips. Morant, meanwhile, makes his first All-Star appearance as Memphis, one of the most entertaining teams in the league, has pushed itself into third in the West.

Jokic, playing in his fourth straight All-Star Game, has followed up winning last year’s MVP by averaging 26.2 points, 13.8 rebounds and 7.6 assists per game for Denver this season, keeping the Nuggets afloat while missing Jamal Murray for the entire season thus far and Michael Porter Jr. for all but a handful of games. Wiggins, who is averaging 18.1 points per game and shooting 40% from 3-point range, will make his first All-Star appearance.

DeRozan, who joined the Bulls as a free agent this summer after playing the prior two seasons with the San Antonio Spurs, has played a massive role in Chicago’s resurgence toward the top of the Eastern Conference standings, earning MVP consideration thanks to impressive clutch play while averaging 26.4 points, 5.0 rebounds and 4.8 assists. Young makes his second All-Star team after averaging 27.7 points and 9.3 assists while posting career-best shooting percentages of 45.3 overall and 38 from 3-point range.

While Philadelphia has spent the season without All-Star guard Ben Simmons, Embiid has more than picked up the slack, averaging career-highs in points (29) and assists (4.3) per game, as well as 3-point percentage (38) to keep the 76ers in the middle of the East playoff picture. And Antetokounmpo has been the one constant for the defending champion Bucks this season amid a constant stream of injuries and COVID-19 absences, averaging 28.6 points, 11.2 rebounds and a career-high 6.0 assists per game.

The All-Star reserves, which will be selected by the coaches in both conferences, will be unveiled next Thursday on TNT. James and Durant then will pick their respective teams, a format the league first instituted in 2018.



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NBA won’t pay some unvaccinated players who miss games — the tactic could work

Kyrie Irving #11 of the Brooklyn Nets drives to the basket against the Milwaukee Bucks during Round 2, Game 3 of the 2021 NBA Playoffs on June 10, 2021 at the Fiserv Forum Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Nathaniel S. Butler | National Basketball Association | Getty Images

The National Basketball Association wants to fully embrace its upcoming 75th anniversary, but internal problems around Covid policies and vaccinations continue to overshadow the milestone.

The NBA’s Covid problems returned to the national spotlight when it announced unvaccinated players in New York and San Francisco won’t be paid if they miss games.

The cities, not the league, issued a mandate that requires eligible people to be vaccinated for entry to public places, including sports arenas. NBA teams opened training camps this week, and most of the chatter was centered around unvaccinated players.

“There’s a whole lot of ignorance on the part of players who will not get vaccinated,” said former NBA player turned scholar Len Elmore. “The NBA is flexing its muscle and has to support mandates for the greater good because that’s really what we’re talking about here.”

How the NBA got here

Like most vaccine advocates, including NBA legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Elmore said science supports requiring vaccinations. Now a professor for Columbia University’s sports management program, Elmore noted the Black community remains at high risk for contracting Covid, adding NBA players should recognize the power they hold through positive messaging.

“We’ve got to protect our communities, and in a league that’s 80 percent Black, these guys have got to understand that,” Elmore said. “The impact of your decision goes way beyond your personal interest,” he added.

The NFL used a similar tactic when it said it plans to finish its 2021 season without delays. The NFL said in July it’s fining players and forfeiting teams if unvaccinated individuals cause outbreaks that lead to postponements. The NFL also fined players who violate mask guidelines at team practice sites.  

Sports leagues are taking a hard stance on vaccines, in part, because media partners lost money on postponed games during the 2020 season. Networks like CNBC parent company NBCUniversal needed to provide make-goods to marketers who didn’t receive viewership impressions for primetime games that were moved due to Covid outbreaks.

The NBA agreed to vaccine mandate terms with its referees last August to avoid disruptions for the upcoming season. The Athletic said in July that 90 percent of NBA players are vaccinated. But, the league hasn’t issued a mandate for players since it can’t find common ground with its players’ union.

In Brooklyn and San Francisco, where mandates are in place, players Kyrie Irving (Nets) and Andrew Wiggins (Golden State Warriors) are two prominent faces in the NBA that remain unvaccinated. Wiggins attempted to use religious reasons to excuse his status, which the league office denied. And Irving spoke on the Nets’ media day away from the team, which shed further light on his vaccination status. Both players downplayed questions around the vaccine and asked for privacy during recent media events.

Leagues often have to go after players’ salaries to get attention. It’s a financial loss that players will never get back.

NBA spokesperson Mike Bass said players who miss games due to vaccination status during the upcoming season will forfeit their paychecks. That means, should Irving elect to sit home games, he’ll miss an estimated $425,000 per game. Irving, 29, is scheduled to make $34.9 million this season. Wiggins will bring in approximately $31 million.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver attends an NBA basketball game between the Dallas Mavericks and the Los Angeles Clippers during game two of the first round of the NBA playoffs at AdventHealth Arena at ESPN Wide World Of Sports Complex on August 19, 2020 in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

Ashley Landis | Getty Images

Protecting the NBA’s image

Penalties will only help the league if other NBA cities decide to issue vaccine mandates. Elmore praised the NBA’s stance on pushing for vaccinations, noting a player’s “decision goes way beyond your personal interest.”

“I think they are being smart,” added sports marketing executive Tony Ponturo of the NBA’s threat to withhold payments. “People are still getting Covid – it’s not like we escaped it. And as a marketer, I would also respect someone that’s not doing the easy thing, but they are doing the right thing.”

The NBA will return to a standard 82-game format next month, limiting room for postponements due to Covid. The NBA will also lose its flexibility to shift games to different venues as other sports leagues and entertainment properties return to arenas where teams play. 

Ponturo, the former vice president of global sports and entertainment marketing at Anheuser-Busch, said sponsors should be concerned since they’ll lose impressions on rescheduled games, which could cost them millions.

“Sponsors are underwriting not only the broadcast rights but the local team signage and trademarks and other forms of sponsorships that they do with leagues and athletes,” he said. “All of a sudden, if you have a widespread Covid situation and you lose games, there’s going to be a pro-rata situation.”

Ponturo said the NBA’s image is at risk if it makes excuses for unvaccinated players. He said NBA commissioner Adam Silver is “sensitive to looking like the NBA gets an exception” and wants to avoid “stepping on government laws.”

There is a confusing exception, though. Visiting players could be allowed to play in mandated cities even if they aren’t vaccinated. So, though Wiggins and Irving can’t play at home, they’d be able to play on the road. Elmore said that exception is unfair and questioned its legitimacy.

“I would suspect that anybody that’s not vaccinated can’t go inside the arena,” Elmore said. “How is it in those cities that visitors can get inside? How do they get into the arena? I’m still trying to figure out how guys are allowed to play if the jurisdiction requires you show your vaccination.”

Ponturo pointed to a recent Broadway outbreak that led to a canceled show even though performers were vaccinated. He said the NBA wants to avoid a similar situation with unvaccinated players. Since the pandemic, NBA issued protocols designed to help prevent outbreaks, including mask mandates. 

But will the NBA really enforce its guidelines and issue fines as the NFL does? Or is it just creating a scare tactic? Bass did not respond to a CNBC request on Wednesday evening for additional comment.

Patrick Rishe, the director of Washington University’s sports business program, said the NBA’s public stance could impact smaller businesses. It’s similar to the NBA’s decision to suspend play when the pandemic hit in March 2020.

“I have to believe that there will be an influence,” Rishe said. “If the NBA is taking this stance, then there will probably be organizations and venues that may copy.”

Rishe used NBA superstar LeBron James as an example. On Tuesday, the Los Angeles Lakers forward told reporters he’s vaccinated, despite early skepticism. “I felt like it was best suited for not only me but for my family and my friends,” James said via the Associated Press.

Said Rishe: “Who knows how many people that is going to inspire to say, ‘You know what, if he’s doing it, I can do it.’ If you follow his history, he’s a guy that wants to do good socially, and this may be a form of that.”

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