Archive for the ‘Latest News’ Category

Jun
12

Ekpe Udoh Night

The weather was bleak, a greying sky that bore no contrast to Oracle’s concrete corrosion.  Inside the stadium, far too many fans bubbled with far too much enthusiasm.  After eons of Cohanese water torture, legions of Warriors supporters persevere like three-eyed fish near a nuclear plant. They simply won’t die, no matter the circumstances. Many have said that sports mean more on the East Coast. That’s a lot of crap.

Two swift stabs killed the collective excitement. First to the stomach–Cousins went to the Kings. Not everybody was sold on DeMarcus, but drafts are about dreaming. We envision the best-case scenario and Boogie can be great. When DC got King’d, some Oracle faithful unleashed pained yelps. Continue Reading…

Jun
0

Eve Of Draft Rumors

From Jonathan Givony (DX) Twitter:

NBA source: There’s a firesale in Golden State & everyone’s available except Curry. Owner trying to make team more attractive for new buyer.
about 7 hours ago via UberTwitter

Hearing more and more that Ekpe Udoh is going 6th to GS. No final decision there but they seem to be leaning that way. Screws everything up
about 4 hours ago via UberTwitter

Also heard that GS has a trade offer on the table to move Gadzuric and Biedrins to Denver for Kenyon Martin. Can’t be done till August 22nd.
about 2 hours ago via UberTwitter

From Marc Spears (Yahoo!) Twitter:

Baylor F-C Ekpe Udoh is now frontrunner for the Warriors 6th pick, NBA source tells Y! Sports. Monroe and Aminu still getting consideration.
about 5 hours ago via TweetDeck

GS impressed w/Udoh’s defense, mid-range j, athleticism, work ethic. Somewhat undersized, but had great workout for GS and arrived in suit.
about 5 hours ago via TweetDeck

From Tim Kawakami Twitter:

Backing the report by @SpearsNBAYahoo, a source w-knowledge of W’s board just confirmed that W’s have Ekpe Udoh rated ahead of Monroe.
about 1 hour ago via web

Multiple sources also confirm reports that W’s have tons of calls out on every player but Curry. My take: Mostly testing water, unless…
40 minutes ago via web

Nov
1

Jackson just the first domino to fall in Golden State

At long last, the Warriors have finally traded for a starter from Mike D’Antoni’s old “seven seconds or less” Suns team.

Unfortunately, Amare Stoudemire is still in Phoenix, averaging 19 points and 8 rebounds per game for the 9-2 Suns.

Instead, Raja Bell is on his way to Oakland, for the low, low price of the Warriors’ best player.

Stephen Jackson was banished to Charlotte this week, just as Jason Richardson was before him, the latest conquest in Rod Higgins’ attempt to demoralize Otis Smith by collecting the most Warrior expats.

By sending Jackson to the Bobcats, the Warriors have effectively erased his relevance as an NBA player. Charlotte may turn around and eventually deal him to contender, but for the time being, Jackson is stuck in basketball purgatory.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THE STORY

Nov
0

Unhappy Jackson a familiar sight in Indiana

As Stephen Jackson attempts to escape the confines of his $13 million-a-year prison, it’s fitting that the Warriors arrive in Indiana to play the Pacers tonight.

While Inmate Number One does everything short of challenging Keith Smart to games of three bullet mow mow, there is no team more familiar with this side of Jackson than Indiana.

After all, the Pacers saw far too much of this from Jackson three seasons ago, which is why they couldn’t wait to ship him to Oakland.

The Warriors knew the deal with Jackson coming in; his attitude was the reason he was available in the first place. Outside of Robert Rowell, everyone seemed to know that this was a fling, not a marriage.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THE STORY

Oct
5

Q&A With Ric Bucher of ESPN

Ric Bucher recently spent some time with WarriorsWorld.net sharing his thoughts and opinions on everything going on in Warriors land.  Bucher discusses the state of the franchise, the hot topics of today and the outlook on the future.

WarriorsWorld.net:  The Warriors front office seems to be a hot topic of discussion among many people nowadays.  Some people support the decisions made by management while others have grown frustrated with the lack of success.  What is the general perception of the Warriors front office around the league?

What front office? The general consensus is that Larry Riley is a nice guy who works hard, but there’s no way of knowing if he’s any good at the job because he has no authority. That said, I know several GMs or assistant GMs who would love to have this job because they see the market and the young talent and believe it’s all being wasted. Of course, most of them are only looking to take over if the team is under new ownership. In the short term, most teams see the Warriors as a pigeon they hope to fleece in the midst of their leadership crisis.
Oh, there’s one exception: Ron Artest told me the other day this team is right on the cusp of being right back where it was two years ago. Also said Jack is a great leader for this team. This was *after* the game at the Forum. So for those who are convinced the Warriors are still headed in the right direction, you’re as lucid as RonRon. Congratulations.

WarriorsWorld.net: After what transpired during his first go round with the Warriors, how surprised were you to see Nellie come back to coach the Warriors?

I’ve learned to never say never in the NBA, but, no, I couldn’t imagine Nelson coming back to the Warriors after the first go-round. That said, when someone in the organization asked me what I thought before they officially hired him, I said he was the one guy available who could get the Warriors to the playoffs. (The caveat being that there eventually would be a lot of dead bodies lying around, including that of the guy who hired him.) That’s what is so sad about Nelson — he has a tremendous basketball mind. I love his innovativeness and his ability to pick out mismatches and the way he makes the game fun for his players. He understands players pretty damn well, which is why when things go sour, as they always do, I can’t help but think it’s willful. There are few better in-game coaches at making adjustments. I even admire his ruthlessness, in that he will take someone down or throw someone overboard no matter how close they are to him, if they stand between him and something he wants. But he also has this self-destructive element about him, this build-up-tear-down mechanism that is as predictable as the seagulls poaching tailgate remnants in the arena parking lot. And if he merely built up and tore down himself, that would be one thing. But he takes people, and franchises, down with him. Good people. Good franchises. For every player that says he loves playing for Nelly, there’s one who couldn’t wait to get away from him. There are always going to be malcontents, but batting .500 is not a good percentage. Besides, I’ve yet to see what is gained in alienating players. He didn’t make Al Harrington or Jamal Crawford or Chris Webber better players; he just killed their trade value. When all is said and done, he’s not about the slow, patient, arduous process of building a proud, winning organization. It seems to be about winning just enough to get his.

WarriorsWorld.net: Chris Cohan tends to keep to himself and stay out of the spotlight unlike other owners in the NBA.  Cohan has a staff in place, headed by Robert Rowell which he entrusts to make the decisions for the betterment of the franchise.  Cohan has garnered a lot of the negative reaction from fans through the years as there is a track record of failure during his tenure as owner.  If Cohan gave in to his detractors and decided to sell the team, would that be the change the team needs or do the issues with the team run much deeper?

I’ve been told that when Cohan bought the team, he looked at it as a family heirloom, something he hoped to keep in the family forever, passing it down to his kids, a la the Rooney family in football. I don’t know if that has changed. I do know a lot of people are interested in buying the team from him and have made formal or informal inquiries. The problem is, for anyone hoping Cohan will sell, that this is his primary business now, his nest egg. If he’s going to walk away from it, he’s going to want to make a killing and the current economy doesn’t bode well for someone over-paying for anything.

Cohan selling would provide the opportunity for improvement but no guarantee. Part of the problem, quite honestly, is that the Warriors’ fan base has demonstrated a willingness to accept an inferior product or at least a shiny-trinket one. That’s what makes it attractive for a prospective owner because it almost equates to a license to print money without having to put the time and effort into truly building a long-term sustainable winner.

Look at what GM Sam Presti is doing in OKC. He’s taking a slow-growth approach, building on solid people and solid principles, and if you ask people around the league, they like their prospects for future success even more than they like the Blazers’. But the Thunder are probably going to be a team that wins or loses 87-84 for a couple of years. Would Bay Area fans take to that? They didn’t under Rick Adelman. By and large, they ran a really good coach out of town because his style was supposedly boring and his personality was painfully flat, not taking into account that it was the only style that would work with the talent he had. If an exciting, high-wire, volatile team is your cup of tea; you have to accept some pretty wild ups and downs because those kinds of teams need constant re-building. I really wonder if a program like the Spurs would work in the Bay Area if they were doing anything short of winning championships. Most teams see the Warriors as the waste of a great location.

WarriorsWorld.net: As with any franchise there are certain moments which stand out more so than others.  The “We Believe” playoff team and what they accomplished was the highpoint during Cohan’s tenure as owner.  What would you consider some of the moments that were challenging and difficult?

The first has to be the All-Star Game in Oakland, when Cohan walked to center court with his kids and was booed. Can’t blame anyone for booing him, and I would’ve thought he would’ve given up that family-legacy idea right there, but I don’t recall anything that comes close to that. I’m probably forgetting some choice moments.

I’ll say No. 2 was when Chris Webber returned to the Bay Area and the crowd cheered when he dislocated his shoulder. I don’t care what you think about Webber and his part in the Warriors’ last immolation or that you felt deserted, that’s beneath any fan base, particularly one as supposedly intelligent as the Warriors’.

No. 3 is a toss-up of about a hundred incidents — Dave Twardzik liking Todd Fuller more than Kobe, Cohan literally running away from reporters in the midst of the Nelson-Webber blow-up, Latrell Sprewell going after Jerome Kersey with a 2-by-4, Nelson reportedly drinking water glasses of booze during an interview — but I’d include this latest one with Stephen Jackson at the Forum.

That was nothing short of an intentional attempt to get him to go off his rocker. Here they are, preparing for a season, a squad full of young, talented but impressionable players and you antagonize a guy who already doesn’t want to be on your team? Anyone who knows Jack knows if you let him get punked by Kobe and a bunch of replacement refs, make no attempt to argue any of the calls with the refs or call a timeout to settle him down or sub him out to cool off, he’s going to explode. Five fouls and a technical later, he erupts on the bench and we’re surprised? Don’t like the way he’s playing Kobe? OK, pull him before something bad happens. I challenge anyone to give me an example of a coach allowing his team leader to pick up five fouls and a T in the first quarter without moving a muscle. This wasn’t Hack-a-whatever with a scrub. *Any* veteran player would’ve been upset under those circumstances. They might not have gone berserk, but they would’ve felt abandoned, for sure. Nelson isn’t that stupid; quite the contrary, as I said earlier, he has a great grasp on how players think. It’s appalling to me that anyone — I mean, anyone — would suggest that Nelson wasn’t anything short of willfully negligent in allowing that whole episode to happen. Hey, blame Jackson if you’d like, but it’s like whacking a pit bull on the nose and being shocked he bit you. Or blame Rowell for signing him to an extension, which gives Jack a freedom to act out he might not otherwise have. But Jackson’s temperament and his contract are two things that aren’t going to change. Not rattling his cage to get him to blow up and make it even harder to move him, that is something you can avoid. And that’s what makes the whole episode so embarrassing.

WarriorsWorld.net: Stephen Jackson made it known he would like to be traded to a team that has a chance of contending for a championship.  The trade request comes a year after the Warriors signed Jackson to a three year contract extension worth an estimated $27 million dollars while he still had two years left on his current deal.  The situation puts everyone involved in a tough spot as there seems to be no resolution other than Jackson being traded, what teams have expressed a desire to acquire Jackson?

A couple of teams have expressed interest, Dallas and Cleveland being the primary ones. There’s no doubt he could help a contending team. But thanks to how this has been handled, the Warriors have absolutely no leverage. Can they do it without taking back a bad contract? They’d be fortunate to take back a bad contract and a young player with potential. No one feels compelled to pick up Jackson, not right now, anyway. Both Dallas and Cleveland could find themselves in December or January realizing they’re not as good as they think they are; Jack would solve problems for both of them and they have owners who don’t seem to be fazed by spending money right now. But I don’t know of anyone looking to make a deal before the season starts. Also know this – Jack can still help a quality team. He defends, he’s smart and he’s fearless in taking big shots. If Cleveland had him last spring to defend Turkoglu, the Cavs would’ve been in the Finals.

WarriorsWorld.net: Monta Ellis had a season to forget about last season due to an off-season accident that required surgery on his ankle.  As a result, there was some lingering tension between Ellis and the organization which led to GM Larry Riley and Coach Don Nelson making a trip to see Ellis this off-season in hopes of smoothing over residual tension.  There’s been rumors about Ellis possibly being traded since Nelson returned to coach the team, is Ellis possibly on the move?

Ellis certainly has value for an up-tempo team, but, again, the Warriors have no leverage to make a good deal. Nelson assured that by making it known that he believes Ellis is a product of his system and that Acie Law can be just as effective. (He said this before acquiring Law, by the way.) In short, teams like Ellis’ talent and some, like Dallas, would take on his contract. But they only want to do so if they’re getting rid of some salary as well.

WarriorsWorld.net: Nellie loves to wheel and deal in hopes of re-shaping the roster to fit his coaching style.  Does Nellie need someone to keep him in order to maintain the good of the franchise?

That strikes me as a rhetorical question. Anybody who knows the Warriors’ history – or the Mavs and Knicks’ histories when he was with them – knows the answer to that. Nelson has been willing to move almost every player he’s ever had, particularly those with the potential to overshadow him. The one time I’ve seen him truly co-opt his authority was with Baron Davis, and at first it puzzled me why. For a minute, I thought maybe Nelson had evolved in his older age, or through the benefit of working with Chris Mullin. I have no doubt he knew that the way to get the best out of Baron was to give him clear guidelines and then make it very well known publicly that Baron was in charge. But when all was said and done, it turned out it was only because Nelson had to re-establish that he actually could win and he wasn’t going to do that with this Warriors’ team without Baron’s support. As soon as Nelson was back in the driver’s seat, multiple sources say he told Rowell to call Davis’ bluff and not offer an extension. Whether it’s because he truly believed Baron wouldn’t opt out or because he did know and wanted him gone doesn’t matter. Ultimately, he convinced Rowell to risk losing Baron. Fact is, Nelson wanted to move Dirk Nowitzki his rookie year. He tried to trade Steve Nash as well. He’s not alone in being that way – Larry Brown and a few other coaches are quick to turn over their rosters if they have the authority.

Nelson’s best years have been with an owner or GM who kept him from his worst impulses. In this case, he wasn’t allowed to trade Anthony Randolph. The idea that everything has been smoothed over is fanciful thinking. “Buried” or “paved over” would be more accurate. Randolph realizes he has nothing to gain by fighting Nelson, publicly or privately. I’m all for players earning their minutes and not giving a player more freedom than he can handle. But that only works for a coach who is consistent, who applies that to all his players; Gregg Popovich is an example of one who does. Even the most diehard Nelson supporter would have to admit he has double standards galore. Always has.

WarriorsWorld.net: The Warriors have something they haven’t had in a while, a legitimate big man prospect.  Anthony Randolph is a star in the making as he as continued to develop after experiencing some struggles early on in his rookie season.  How good of a player can Randolph become as he continues to develop and mature?

I’m on record as saying Randolph has the talent to be one of the 10 best players in the league. He’s Lamar Odom with ferocity and a killer instinct. But every day that goes by with him being part of a screwed-up franchise is one more day spent going in the wrong direction, no matter how much he works on his own game. The difference between being great and being marginal is very fine. Doc Rivers said to me the other day, “Good is the enemy of great.” He was talking about Rondo, but it applies to Randolph. To be one of the true greats, every day has to be pointed in the right direction. Every instinct has to be honed for winning and making winning decisions. Meanwhile, Randolph is surrounded by crazy stuff like the Jackson incident and being told he doesn’t fit in and Al Harrington going off on Nelly. And Randolph is a little off the chain all on his own, so that’s not a good combination.

All those things are counter-productive. All those things make a young player unsure about exactly what it takes to be a success, what a winning program looks like. And that uncertainty tears at their commitment to the right things, because they’re not sure what the right things are. Truth is, Randolph doesn’t look to me like a player getting a whole lot of coaching. Nelson wasn’t allowed to trade him, so now he appears to be washing his hands of him; I don’t know this, I’m only going by their level of interaction during games, and has been widely reported, Nelson isn’t doing a whole lot of coaching in practice. Of course, the Nelson apologists will say, “Well, it’s the kid’s fault; he should be listening to Nelly. Or he should be going to Nelly asking for direction.” First of all, it doesn’t work that way; head coaches don’t make time for individual players, they decide who they’re going to invest their time in. Popovich, when he saw the star potential of Tim Duncan, made a point of building a relationship with him, taking that extra time. That, I would hope, is what the Warriors’ coach would do with Randolph and Ellis if they truly are your building blocks for the future, instead of making it known you’d trade them in a heartbeat. Besides, as a young kid, would you listen to a boss who let your leading veteran co-worker pour gasoline over himself and light a match? Or might you be thinking, what happens when I have the tank of gas and the match?

WarriorsWorld.net: Stephen Curry has had a decent beginning to his NBA career although he’s struggled mightily with his shot.  What can Warrior fans expect out of their high profile rookie?

What hurts me the most about what is going on with the Warriors right now is that this is Curry’s introduction to the NBA. It’s fortunate he has an NBA father who can tell him it’s not this way with every team, but the bottom line is that his growth is being stunted as you read this. I admire everything about the kid and I have no problem saying he’s better than I thought he would be right off the bat. He’s a skinny Brandon Roy, as a 2 with point-guard skills who is going to need defensive cover. The problem is, he has to be way more efficient because he’s not going to get the minutes or unlimited touches that he got in college. The Warriors are not the best place to learn efficiency. What’s going to potentially hurt him down the line is thinking that the Warriors’ free-wheeling offense is the way the game is played, or that effort on defense is optional. I know, I know, the Warriors have been focusing on defense in training camp. The hard truth is that unless a player’s minutes depend on his consistent defensive effort – not ability, just effort – all the drills in the world are going to have minimal impact. For Curry, after being in a college program where no shot he took was a bad shot and he didn’t have to guard anybody, and now playing in this system, it’s hard to see how he’s going to refine his decision-making and learn how to channel his energy. Bad habits creep in easily and, like a golf swing, once they’re ingrained, it’s hard to get rid of them.

WarriorsWorld.net: Do you visit Warriorsworld.net?

I do from time to time. I’m always interested in what fans are thinking and saying and living in the Bay Area and having covered the Warriors as a beat writer, I have as much of a soft spot for this franchise as I do for any in the league.  It gets hard sometimes reading the same arguments or defenses over and over again when someone is “strong and wrong,” as NBA coaches like to say, in that they have their view and they’ll be damned if anybody is going to change their minds, particularly when they’re spouting nothing more than opinion without having shared a single private word with Nelson, Randolph, Ellis or any of the people they’re convinced they know so well. As if being intractable is something to be proud of. That, to me, is the height of arrogance and stupidity, particularly when someone doesn’t have any direct knowledge. Let me put a plug in here for the Mercury News guys who cover the team, Tim Kawakami and Marcus Thompson. They’re good. They work hard, they know the team, they understand its dynamics and they try to be fair, which is all you can ask of a beat writer or columnist. They also care, which is why I have to laugh when anybody suggests either of them has a personal agenda. Their agenda is that you, the public, know how your team is being cared for and the fact is, the stewardship of the Warriors has not been very good. (This is no knock on Rusty Simmons of the SF Chronicle – I just don’t know him and he’s new to the beat.) None of us get any satisfaction in covering a screwed-up team or organization; it takes infinitely more work and is far less enjoyable to be around a toxic atmosphere. We all got into this business because we love sports and appreciate what can be accomplished by people working together for a greater, common goal. Shedding light on how that’s done — or not done — is really the heart of what we do.

Oct
1

WarriorsWorld TV – Fan Feedback on Stephen Jackson and Stephen Curry

WarriorsWorld TV was at the Warriors-Clippers pre-season game to get feedback from Warrior fans on Stephen Jackson’s trade request and the arrival of Stephen Curry.

Oct
0

Q&A With Warriors Beat Writer Rusty Simmons

Warriorsworld.net hooked up with Rusty Simmons of the San Francisco Chronicle to get his thoughts on Warriors training camp, the upcoming season and some of the interesting situations going on in Warriors land.


Who have been the best performers in camp thus far? Who needs to step it up?

 

rusty simmons If you listen to coach Don Nelson tell it, Brandan Wright was “the best player in camp.” Though Wright had clearly made tremendous strides before being lost for at least four months to shoulder surgery, he, equally as clearly, was not the best player in camp.

 

That award would go to Anthony Morrow, or, surprisingly, Corey Maggette.

 

Morrow is pretty obvious. He’s averaging 22.6 points a game on 55.9 percent field-goal shooting and 51.4 percent three-point shooting. He also has 1.4 steals a game. All four totals would have placed him among the league’s top 25 last season.  Maggette is a little trickier. He turns 30 next month, so the Warriors have been slow to include him as part of their youth movement. However, he’s averaging 15 points and three rebounds a game, appears completely recovered from offseason surgery and hasn’t mouthed off about possibly playing a reserve role. It might simply be impossible not to give him more minutes.

maggette

 

This is conjecture, but I think Nelson’s hyperbole regarding Wright was directed at Anthony Randolph. After dominating weak competition in Las Vegas, Randolph was absent early in camp and quiet in the preseason opener. He bounced back with 18 and 12, 18-8 and 15-13 games, so maybe Nelson got his guy to step up.

 

Other than Randolph, who has unfair expectations from outsiders this season, Stephen Jackson has been the biggest disappointment. OK, the off-the-court stuff might be part of “the business,” but stop telling the fans that you’re going to be professional and perform on the court if you’re going to average 7.3 points, 3.3 assists and one rebound a game.


Monta said him and Curry can’t play together, Nellie just said Curry will be a part-time starter, what’s your take on the situation? Can it work?

 

Because I know what has typically made championship teams, I get caught up on the defensive end. No matter how much time the Warriors devote to defense during the preseason and no matter how smart their coaches are in scheming defensive sets, you can’t overcome two shortish, spindly guys alongside each other.

 

I suppose that, for stretches, and, even games at a time, it will work, but not for the long haul. Nelson rightly points out that opponents also have to match up with the Ellis-and-Curry-quickness factor on the other end, but I don’t see the “we’ll-outscore-you” mentality ever translating into a consistent playoff team.

Brandan Wright is out for most of the year, how significant of a loss is it?

 

rusty simmons A week ago, I was convinced that losing Wright was huge for the Warriors, but Mikki Moore has been getting more run at power forward. Moore might be the most vocal, most energetic, smartest guy on the team. In fact, during Monday’s game against the Clippers, Moore stopped the officials from allowing Maggette and Al Thornton do a jump ball from the incorrect positions. … In other words, he might be the smartest guy on the floor at all times. … The Warriors, with a tendency to play small, will probably use Maggette as the backup power forward, but, if they wanted to win, Moore would be the answer.

mikki

 

As for Wright, I’m not sure there will be any impact. It sounds like the Warriors will still pick up his fourth-year option. Though, he can’t seem to catch a break, I don’t see any reason why Wright can’t make the same strides he apparently made this season and come into next year as a guy who challenges Randolph for a starting job or gives the Warriors a great piece to trade.

 

Biedrins is considered to be an underrated and overlooked player on the team, where do you see him in regards to other centers in the league? Does he have a shot at being an all-star this season?

 

rusty simmons I like Biedrins’ game. Considering what he is asked to do, I think he’s great, but I also think he’s hamstrung but he’s asked not to do.

 

I guess he always has a chance to be an all-star, but I hope that’s not how he’s judged. Remember that Erick Dampier was third in voting among centers two years ago, and Yao Ming might be the top vote-getter this year without playing a game.

The Warriors acquired many veteran players to fill out their roster which has created a battle for minutes at some key spots.  How do you see Nellie filling out his rotation?  How would you fill out the rotation?

 

rusty simmons Warriors rotation

PG       Ellis                 Curry

SG       Azubuike         Morrow

SF        Jackson            George

PF        Randolph        Maggette

C         Biedrins           Turiaf

 

Rusty rotation

PG       Ellis                 Curry

SG       Morrow           Law or Watson (unless a Jackson trade brings a serviceable 2)

SF        Azubuike         Maggette

PF        Randolph        Moore

C         Biedrins           Turiaf

Although they didn’t make a big splash or bring in a big name player, the Warriors made some interesting moves this off-season.  What would you consider the best off-season move to be?

 

rusty simmons I’m nearly convinced that Stephen Curry is going to be special, I think sending the Anthonys to the summer league paid huge dividends, and I’m sure Moore is going to make an impact somehow. The best move was probably picking Curry, the decision to make Randolph play summer ball when many as highly-drafted as him didn’t will have the biggest long-term effect, and the Moore signing will have the most immediate impact. How’s that for side-stepping a question?

stephenc

With Nellie showing a commitment to the youth on the roster; which players do you see having a breakout season?

 

rusty simmons Morrow, given a chance – which has been promised – will be the Warriors’ second-most productive player. … Ellis has the chance to make people forget about the alleged moped accident. … As an aside, I think Acie Law is approaching this season the correct way, saying “it’s do-or-die, make-or-break.” I don’t think he’ll get enough minutes to “do” or “make,” but, if he did, I wouldn’t count him out from making a colossal breakout.

morrow2


Chris Cohan gives you control of the team today and you could make two moves to improve the team, what would they be?

 

rusty simmons First, I would waive Jackson, pay him the guaranteed part of his contract and match that number with free tickets to a fan base that has been way too patient. Second, I’d equally shop Ellis and Curry. Depending on their outside values and what matches up cap-wise, I’d get rid of one or the other (because I don’t think they can play alongside each other) and find someone who I know can take and make the last shot in meaningful games.

 

Though I know an Ellis or a Curry trade might not go over well with the readers right now, just think about who you want to take that shot. Ellis and Curry might be able to create it, but will they make it? Morrow might make it, but can he create it? I think Ellis or Curry might have enough value to bring back a player or a pick who can be the unquestioned guy to take and make the shot when this team eventually has significant games.

What are realistic expectations for the team this season?

 

rusty simmons In part, I understand the Warriors’ optimism with a healthy Ellis, a rookie Curry and an improved Morrow and Randolph. In part, I find it delusional because they basically have the same team as last year and have Jackson, who appears ready to taint the entire season. My best bet is that they’ll win 35-38 games. They could finish .500 and finish 10th in a very tough Western Conference.

robert_rowell_feature

With the rise in popularity, usage, access, etc. in blogs and other online formats, are you going to be regularly blogging on SFgate.com this season?  Your thoughts on the whole blogging phenomenon in general?

 

rusty simmons Since training camp started, I’ve tried to post at least one blog a day, I played around with blogging once a quarter and I plan on finding some consistency in between. I have to admit that I’m still trying to figure it out (how much to put online when I’ve got a print story coming out the next day, how conversational to be with the language, how much to play into the rumormill, etc.). … I don’t have all (or, maybe, any) of the answers, and I’ve tried to respond to readers’ e-mails in a manner that asks for and responds to constructive criticism.

 

I know print-editorial media is going to have to accept the new frontier. I actually find it fascinating, but it’s not what I’ve been trained to do. That’s why I want feedback and want to be able to strike a balance between what I’ve been taught and the post-first-regardless-of-whether-it’s-right path we seem to be entering.

What are some Web sites you visit everyday that help you do a good job as a beat writer?

 

rusty simmons I read just about anything I can get my hands or eyes on. Of course, my daily habits are to read The Chronicle’s columnists, our competitors’ stuff, the local blogs/fan chats, a handful of national NBA writers I’ve grown to respect and HoopsHype. This might be a little unusual, but I also try to read at least one piece of poetry each day to keep my literary juices flowing aside from sports and business.

 

Thoughts on Warriorsworld.net?

 

rusty simmons There are a number of fan sites that are just that, but I think WarriorsWorld does a nice job of mixing news with a forum for fans. It’s one of my daily, if not hourly, reads.

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Oct
0

Warriors Pre-Season Drama Continues

Overshadowing a nice Warriors outing against Phoenix on Saturday was the news that the Warriors have suspended Stephen Jackson for 2 games for ‘Conduct detrimental to the team.” This coming on the heals of his $25,000 fine from the league for making a trade request.

Considering Jackson’s play in the previous pre-season games, it really isn’t a loss. In his mind, Jackson is the #1 option all the time, and he has been playing like it. Ball movement comes to a halt, numerous drives into the teeth of the defense, then a turnover. Erratic, frustrated, emotional, sloppy play that reeks of a ‘me first’ attitude.

Combine Jackson’s selfish play with Corey Maggette then you have 2 black holes on the team, each creating their own unique gravitational pull of suck. The young W’s squad needs to get minutes for Morrow, Curry, Ellis, Randolph. This doesn’t leave starting minutes for Maggette and Jackson. One needs to go, and Jackson called ‘shotgun’ on the first seat out the door.

Warriors media roundup

Adam’s Blog “Conduct detrimental”

Essentially a no-win situation, for the Warriors to get any trade value out of Jackson, he needs to come back and play well, big minutes, limit turnovers and be a team player. If he does it will take minutes away from the younger players, and he will dominate the ball and the team. The alternative is for the Warriors to sit him down until he can be traded, but that depresses his value. Best option, try to get him on board, have him play well and within his limits, distribute the ball, and then at the trading deadline he has the max value.

Tim Kawakami “Warriors are the talk of the league”

Warriors for sale, potentially moving to SF, which would be awesome, I had heard that there was talk of building a stadium next to ATT Park in SOMA. Cohan has the team for sale, but no one has met his price yet. As the pain of the current downturn in the economy, and attendance play out this year, we will see what pressure that puts on him to lower his price.

Wojnarowski “For Warriors, turmoil starts with the boss”

Bad ownership ruining good markets. Can’t argue that the Warriors are ruining the perception of the NBA among bay area residents. As a long time Warriors fan, when I mention my allegiance, normally the response is laughter. I don’t go as overboard as Wojnarowski in blaming Cohan for the mess. My impression of Cohan is that he is a non-resident owner, not too involved, and outsourced his management of the team to others. His biggest crime is bad hiring decisions.

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WarriorsWorld TV Theme Song Preview

Check out the theme song to WarriorsWorld TV, debut episode coming soon!

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Aug
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Warriors Sign Mikki Moore

In a move that sent shockwaves through the entire NBA, the Warriors signed Mikki Moore per Marc Stein of Espn.com. The deal is believed to be for the veteran’s minimum, $1.3 million. Moore played for the Sacramento Kings and Boston Celtics last season but failed to receive any substantial minutes with either team. With the signing of Moore, the rumors of a potential Andris Biedrins deal may start to heat up once more.