NBA

LGW: Preview: San Antonio Spurs (20-5) at Golden State Warriors (14-12)

Source: Stephen Dunn/Getty Images North America

Source: Stephen Dunn/Getty Images North America

The Golden State Warriors will face the San Antonio Spurs in Oakland for the first time since their epic playoff series in the 2013 Western Conference Semifinals. As usual, the Spurs are having a fantastic season and currently have the third best record in the ultra-competitive Western Conference. Although the Warriors have been struggling recently, they started to play their true brand of basketball in Tuesday’s game against the New Orleans Pelicans. A big reason for this re-emergence into relevance is because of the return of Andre Iguodala.

Iguodala surprised many Warriors fans by returning to the court on Tuesday after missing 12 games with a strained hamstring. He only had two points and two assists in 17 minutes, but his presence completely changed how the Warriors’ played.

Iguodala provides the Warriors with another ball handler who can run the offense, which allows Stephen Curry to play off the ball. His defense also greatly impacts the Warriors’ defense as a team, and he pushes the Warriors to play at a faster tempo, which leads to better basketball.

Read the rest of the article on Let’s Go Warriors.

LGW: Preview: New Orleans Pelicans (11-11) at Golden State Warriors (13-12)

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The Golden State Warriors return home tonight and will face the New Orleans Pelicans. This is the Warriors’ second out of three games against the Pelicans this season. In the first game, the Warriors squeaked out a 102-101 win in New Orleans last month.

On Sunday, the Warriors lost to the Phoenix Suns in Phoenix by a score of 106-102. The Warriors are the best three-point shooting team in the league, as they shoot 41.6 percent from three as a team. However, the Suns looked like the best three-point shooting team on Sunday night. They shot an impressive 13-for-27 from three-point range and hit a few timely three-point shots that sealed their win.

The Warriors are stuck in a bit of a rut recently. They’re losing games they should be winning, and they’re failing to play their brand of basketball. The absence of Andre Iguodala partially explains their poor defensive play recently, but the Warriors need to find a way to win without him. They know how competitive the Western Conference is, and they know it’s still early in the season. It’s time for the Warriors to step up and face the adversity fearlessly. Stephen Curry shared his thoughts on the Warriors’ recent slump.

Read the rest of the article on Let’s Go Warriors.

LGW: Preview: Houston Rockets (15-8) at Golden State Warriors (13-10) Klay Thompson vs. James Harden and Other Intriguing Matchups

Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Photo

Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Photo

The Golden State Warriors take on the Houston Rockets tonight at Oracle Arena. These two teams played each other just a week ago in Houston. In this game, the Warriors were blown out and ultimately lost the game 105-83. Like many other games this season, they got off to a slow start and couldn’t recover.

On Wednesday, the Warriors had the same problem against the Dallas Mavericks. They struggled with their offense early on in the game, and they got down by as many as 18 points. However, the Warriors showed their resiliency and mounted another incredible comeback. Draymond Green contributed in so many ways, and Stephen Curry caught fire at the right time. The Warriors won the game off of Curry’s first game-winner in the NBA.

When the Warriors face off against the Rockets today, they need to play quality basketball for all 48 minutes. They’ve already proven that they can come back from a deficit, no matter how big it is. However, they can make it a lot easier on themselves if they play with energy and execute their game plan from the start of the game.

Read the rest of the article on Let’s Go Warriors.

LGW: Andre Iguodala: The Selfless Sidekick

(USATSI)

(USATSI)

Andre Iguodala might wear the number nine on the back of his Golden State Warriors jersey, but he’s used to being number two. Throughout his basketball career, Iguodala has always been “the sidekick” to a bigger, brighter star. When he attended Lanphier High School in Springfield, Illinois, Iguodala was “in the shadow” of Richard McBride. When he attended the University of Arizona, Iguodala deferred to Hassan Adams and Luke Walton. Lastly, when the Philadelphia 76ers selected Iguodala with the ninth pick in the 2004 NBA Draft, he immediately became the sidekick to the 76ers’ face of the franchise at the time, Allen Iverson.

For many up-and-coming basketball players, being a sidekick wouldn’t necessarily be the dream job. However, for a player like Iguodala, the role suits him. He’s always been a selfless player who makes the people around him better. He does this by contributing to a team in many different ways. He can pass, he can rebound, he can score when needed, and he can defend. He doesn’t need to be the star of a team. That’s always been his style, and that’s not going to change, no matter who he plays for or with.

Read the rest of the article on Let’s Go Warriors.

LGW: Preview: Dallas Mavericks (13-9) at Golden State Warriors (12-10) Monta Ellis Makes His Return to Oracle as a Maverick

(Photo by Danny Bollinger/NBAE via Getty Images)

(Photo by Danny Bollinger/NBAE via Getty Images)

On March 13, 2012, the Golden State Warriors forever changed their franchise. They traded Monta Ellis, Ekpe Udoh, and Kwame Brown to the Milwaukee Bucks for Andrew Bogut and Stephen Jackson. This monumental trade made a statement to the rest of the NBA that the Warriors were committed to winning and committed to Stephen Curry being the face of the franchise.

At the time, many Warriors fans were shocked and angry that Ellis, a fan favorite, was traded. Even Ellis seemed shocked when the trade was first announced. Now, not just Warriors fans, but also Ellis, can see why this trade was so important for the evolution of this team and why it was ultimately the right decision.

Read the rest of the article on Let’s Go Warriors.

Jermaine O’Neal: A Hunter Pence-Type Leader for the Golden State Warriors

This article was originally published on Golden Gate Sports.

All San Francisco Giants fans remember the speech. Hunter Pence gathered his teammates around him in the dugout before Game 3 of the Giants’ 2012 NLDS series against the Cincinnati Reds. The Giants were down 0-2 to the Reds and were facing the first of many potential elimination games to come. He told his teammates that he wanted one more day with them. He told them to never give up, to play for each other, to win each moment. He spoke with intensity and fierce passion.

Oct 11, 2012; Cincinnati, OH, USA; San Francisco Giants right fielder Hunter Pence (center) huddles with his team prior to the game five of the 2012 NLDS against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Frank Victores-USA TODAY Sports

Reverend Pence motivated his team and led them to victory in Game 3 and eventually to their second World Series title in three seasons. This speech was a defining moment for the Giants in 2012. He motivated his teammates to play with that “never say die” attitude that made them even closer as a team and made them even more powerful.

Jermaine O’Neal has shown this same passion and intensity on this Golden State Warriors team. Every time he steps on the court, he plays tough, he fights, and he pumps up his teammates. The Warriors certainly needed his passion in Tuesday’s game.

On Tuesday, the Warriors took on the Toronto Raptors and got seriously out-played in the first half of the game. They were down by 17 at the half and were down by as many as 27 points during the third quarter. At halftime, O’Neal delivered a Pence-esque speech to get his teammates fired up.

“Jermaine O’Neal gave one of the realest halftime speeches I have ever heard,” Klay Thompson said. “He said we’ll see what we’re made of in the second half.”

O’Neal explained to the team that if they wanted to show that they’re an elite team, they had to play like one. O’Neal told his teammates what they had to do to prove that they are a championship-calibur team.

“I told the team at the half, we’re going to see what we’re made of these next 24 minutes… if we’re talking about doing something special–if we’re talking about being a playoff team, being eighth, seventh, sixthseed, then whatever that was, that’s good enough…

“But if we’re talking about winning a championship, then we need to bring it every single night, dispose of the teams we’re supposed to dispose of and then grind like hell against the teams that are top-echelon-type teams.”

Nov 27, 2013; Dallas, TX, USA; Golden State Warriors center Jermaine O

O’Neal’s speech might end up having the same effect on the Warriors that Pence’s speech had on the Giants. The Warriors could look back on O’Neal’s speech as the defining moment for when they went from hoping to be a great team to understanding the responsibility it takes to be a great team.

It seems like O’Neal delivered the speech with the same passion that Pence had when he gave his speech. O’Neal stood up and confronted his teammates when it mattered. He reminded them what kind of team they are. The Warriors are fighters, and they have that same “never say die” attitude that the Giants had. The Warriors are building this “never give up” identity by winning a game like the Raptors game.

The Raptors game clearly didn’t have the same stakes that the Giants’ NLDS game against the Reds had, but it could prove to be a pivotal moment for the Warriors this season. The stakes might not have been as high, but according to Mark Jackson, this game against the Raptors was the biggest game of his coaching tenure so far. He said it was a big statement win because they easily could’ve given up and moved onto the next game.

This type of win will do a lot for the Warriors’ team chemistry, and it builds character. O’Neal is showing this Warriors team how to be tough and resilient. He’s showing them that not every game is going to be won easily and how they need to grind out wins sometimes. As O’Neal said, great teams find ways to win games where they’re getting blown out or they’re undermanned. If the Warriors continue to play this style, they will become a legitimate title contender.

Both Pence and O’Neal are so valuable to their respective teams for reasons much more than their contributions on the field or on the court. They are the ultimate motivators and preachers. They lead their teams with their dedication, passion, and toughness. Pence inspired his team when they needed him the most, and O’Neal is doing the same thing by being just the motivational leader that the Warriors need.