Tag Archives: Jordan Poole

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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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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Golden State Warriors’ Jordan Poole, Boston Celtics’ Al Horford, Grant Williams in COVID-19 protocols

BOSTON — Ahead of Friday night’s game here at TD Garden between the Boston Celtics and Golden State Warriors, a total of six players — five Celtics and Warriors guard Jordan Poole — entered the NBA’s health and safety protocols, as a renewed surge of COVID-19 continues to barrel through the league.

In the 24 hours leading up to the game, five players — forwards Jabari Parker, Juancho Hernangomez, Grant Williams and Sam Hauser and center Al Horford — all went into the protocols, while guard Dennis Schroder was set to miss Friday’s game with a non-COVID-19 illness.

“I wouldn’t say it’s frustrating. It’s something everybody is playing through,” Celtics coach Ime Udoka said. “You’ve seen Chicago and Brooklyn and other teams hit with it.

“It’s something we’ve been trying to avoid, but it seems inevitable at times for everybody. You have to tinker with the lineups at times, but we have other guys who are able, and we’ll increase those minutes. Nothing else you can do. We have 11 healthy bodies.”

Romeo Langford went into the starting lineup for Boston in Horford’s place, while rookie Moses Moody started for Golden State in place of Poole.

Udoka and Warriors coach Steve Kerr said they didn’t anticipate any additional absences before the start of the game.

Both teams canceled shootaround Friday morning ahead of the game, as they — like the rest of the NBA — continue to grapple with the recent surge in positive cases. Shortly thereafter, both announced their newest entries into the protocols: Poole for Golden State, and Horford and Williams for Boston.

Parker went into them Thursday night, while Hauser and Hernangomez did Friday night. Udoka said the Celtics have cleared their pregame testing window, meaning he expected no more additions to the protocols before Boston took on Golden State in an attempt to carry some momentum over from Monday’s victory here over the defending champion Milwaukee Bucks.

“Just being more diligent,” Udoka said, when asked how Boston was trying to cope. “Our surroundings and the mask wearing is a big thing, who you’re with outside of the building off the court, and that’s pretty much it. We’re trying to follow the protocols of the league and be more strict with what we’re doing. We’re impacted. It’s hit us like the rest of the league — something we’ve all had to adapt to and adjust to. It is what it is. We have healthy bodies and other guys get opportunities.”

Udoka also said Boston isn’t considering adding players via the hardship waiver, as others across the league — including the Brooklyn Nets and Orlando Magic — have in recent days.

“It all just happened today,” Udoka said. “We still have 11 able bodies, and I think some of the teams that are going through that have lost more people. … We have five out as of now and obviously hope to get Dennis back with a non-COVID illness. [But] we haven’t discussed that.”

Poole, 22, is having a breakout season for the league-leading Warriors, averaging a career-high 17.9 points per game while starting all 28 games Golden State has played this season as the Warriors await Klay Thompson’s return from injury.

Horford — who tested positive for COVID-19 in October — is averaging 12.2 points and 7.8 rebounds this season for Boston, which acquired him from the Oklahoma City Thunder this summer in exchange for Kemba Walker and the 16th pick in July’s NBA draft. It’s Horford’s second stint with Boston; he signed with the Celtics as a free agent in 2016 before leaving for the Philadelphia 76ers in 2019.

Williams has developed into a steady member of Boston’s rotation this season, averaging career highs of 7.5 points and 45.3% shooting from 3-point range on over three attempts per game.

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