Showing posts with label Jason Richardson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason Richardson. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 December 2015

Warriors Win In Boston Double Overtime


The Golden State Warriors needed two overtimes to remain perfect on a very imperfect night from the NBA’s reigning MVP.

Steph Curry scored 38 points despite his worst shooting performance of the season, adding 11 rebounds and eight assists on Friday night as the Warriors improved to 24-0 by outlasting the Boston Celtics 124-119 in double overtime.

“Exhausting, but it was fun,” Curry said. “Obviously, it was nice to get the win. But we had to claw our way to it.”

Counting the wins in their final four games last season, the defending NBA champions have taken 28 regular-season games in a row. That broke a tie with the 2012-13 Miami Heat for the second-longest winning streak in league history, and now trails only the 33 straight by the Los Angeles Lakers in 1971-72.

The Warriors play the Milwaukee Bucks on Saturday night to complete a seven-game road trip. No NBA team has ever gone 7-0 on a single road trip.

“We will definitely cherish this, because it doesn’t happen often,” center Andrew Bogut said. “The record, the history, the team it doesn’t happen often so we will cherish it. Who knows? Next year you could be on a different team and nobody’s talking about you.”

Not just anyone could lead the Warriors to 20-0. Luke Walton was made for coaching

Curry made only nine of 27 shots from the field, a .333 shooting percentage that was his worst since Game 2 of the NBA finals against Cleveland. But he was 6 for 13 from 3-point range and a perfect 14 of 14 from the free throw line.

“He can score in so many different ways,” interim coach Luke Walton said. “They did a phenomenal job on him and he scored 38. But that’s how superstars are in this league.”

The Celtics had two chances to win it at the end of regulation, tied 103-all, but Shaun Livingston blocked Isaiah Thomas’ attempt. After Golden State’s try at an alley-oop off the inbounds pass failed, Boston had the ball with 0.7 seconds left, but Kelly Olynyk’s off-balance jumper was wide.

Curry sank a pair of foul shots his only points of the second overtime with 13.4 seconds left to give the Warriors a three-point lead. Jae Crowder then missed a 3-pointer to tie it, and Andre Iguodala got the rebound and drew the foul.

That sent the Boston fans to the exits, but the Golden State crowd remained to see Iguodala sink both free throws and keep the winning streak alive.

They’re the champs. They did what they’re supposed to do,” said Celtics swingman Evan Turner. “Curry, you know, he still made it work.”

Olynyk scored 28 points for Boston, and Avery Bradley had 19 while guarding Curry much of the night. Thomas had 18 points and 10 assists, and Jared Sullinger had 13 rebounds for Boston, which had won two in a row and six of its previous eight games.

Celtics coach Brad Stevens was asked if there was such a thing as a “great loss.”

“No,” he said. “Not even a good one.”

Draymond Green scored 24 points with 11 rebounds, eight assists and five blocked shots. Iguodala scored 13 with 10 boards and Festus Ezeli had 12 and 12 for Golden State, which was playing without injured Klay Thompson and Harrison Barnes.

The game brought a playoff mood and a sold-out crowd to the new Boston Garden, but this time the loyalties were more divided than usual. Although the Celtics’ green still dominated, there was plenty of Golden State blue as well.

Fans crowded around the Golden State end of the court during warmups to watch the defending NBA champions and their star. During introductions, the Celtics rooters struggled to drown out the cheers for Curry.

“That’s every night for us,” Bogut said. “It’s always a playoff atmosphere because they all want to beat us.”

After the game, Golden State fans remained long after the final buzzer, cheering Curry when he went to the locker room after his postgame, on-court TV interview.

“Now I can admit I’m tired,” Curry said. “We’ll dig deep for tomorrow.”


Saturday, 28 November 2015

76ers Set NBA Record


It is not a record they will thank anyone for mentioning but American basketball team the Philadelphia 76ers have entered the history books with their 116-114 loss to the Houston Rockets on Friday.

That defeat - their 27th successive loss across two seasons - means they are now on the longest losing streak in NBA history.

Not only that, it is the longest run of defeats across all the country's major professional sports, from major league baseball to American football, from ice hockey's NHL to soccer's MLS.

And more records may yet fall. While the 27-game run includes the tail end of last season, their 0-17 record this time round is now just one short of the worst start to an NBA season.

The 76ers looked like they might end the sequence when they recovered from an 11-point deficit in the fourth quarter to lead by five points approaching the half-way point of that final quarter but then, in a dramatic finish, threw it away.

They have now overtaken their own joint record losing run from two seasons ago, which they held with the NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers and NFL's Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Writing rather happier history are Golden State Warriors, who extended their record for the longest unbeaten start to an NBA season with victory over the Phoenix Suns.

Their 135-116 win on Friday took their perfect start to 17 straight wins


Monday, 12 October 2015

Kerr Explains Warriors Absence

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The Golden State Warriors coach, Steve Kerr, has clarified the reasons behind his leave of absence, explaining he stepped away from his duties due to complications from back surgery.

Kerr, who coached the Warriors to the championship last season, had an operation on his back in July. “I had a spinal fluid leak during the first surgery,” he told reporters on Sunday. “It’s very rare, it does happen occasionally, but it happens when there’s an accidental nick of the dura that surrounds the spinal cord. But I lost spinal fluid, took about a month to figure out what was going on, a lot of headaches, some other symptoms.”

Kerr had further surgery to address the problem at the start of September, which has caused his absence from the team. Kerr would not say when he would return to his duties on a full-time basis. “It’s a matter of your body sort of recalibrating,” he said. “Unfortunately, it’s not like a sprained ankle, one to two weeks. There’s no telling. It’s a little bit open-ended, but everyone’s confident I’m going to be fine. That’s where I am. I’m not going to be put a timetable on when I’m going to come back.”

The announcement appears to be an effort to explain to fans why Kerr has not been coaching the Warriors in the lead-up to the new season, which starts later this month. “I wanted to just tell you guys what I’m going through, what’s happened. Because I think there’s kind of a grey area, people wondering what’s going on,” he said.