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Oct29
Game 1, (What Was Once) Live: Rockets 108, Warriors 107
Filed under: Commentary; Tagged as: Aaron Brooks, Andris Biedrins, Anthony Morrow, Anthony Randolph, Carl Landry, Chase Budinger, Chuck Hayes, Corey Maggette, Devean George, Don Nelson, Kelenna Azubuike, Kyle Lowry, Luis Scola, Marco Belinelli, Monta Ellis, Ronny Turiaf, Shane Battier, Stephen Curry, Stephen Jackson, Trevor ArizaNo Comments[Ed. note: As you might have seen in the post below, some technical difficulties knocked 48minutes.net off the air for a long while Wednesday. So here is the collection of Tweets that substituted for our typical live in-game entry. Start from the bottom if you want to read in chronological order.]
POSTGAME
** INSTA-STAT OF THE NIGHT: GSW assists in the second half? A whopping seven. That’s not an offense. That’s complete stagnation.
FOURTH QUARTER
** FINAL HOU 108, GSW 107. Morrow with a tough miss over 2 Rockets at the top of the key for the tie. Curry with the meaningless putback.
** Morrow in. Azubuike out, so it’s Morrow, Jackson or maybe Curry.
** 4Q, 6.6 seconds. HOU 108, GSW 105. Brooks’ travel gives W’s a final chance. I assume they have to bring in Morrow. Maybe Azubuike?
** It’s a comedy of errors: Scola bricks two FTs, Ariza ORebs but loses handle, Curry tries oop to Biedrins that falls 3 feet short.
** Of course, HOU goes right back to Scola, who drives and draws FTs on Turiaf.
** Curry with a second straight pullup J after good D forces ball out of Scola’s hands, cuts lead to 5.
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Dec13
Thoughts on Game No. 23: Rockets 119, Warriors 108
Filed under: News; Tagged as: Anthony Morrow, Anthony Randolph, Brandan Wright, C.J. Watson, Carl Landry, Corey Maggette, Damien Wilkins, Jamal Crawford, Kelenna Azubuike, Luis Scola, Luther Head, Marco Belinelli, Ronny Turiaf, Stephen Jackson, Tracy McGrady, Von Wafer, Yao Ming3 CommentsBy Geoff Lepper
48minutes.netTurns out that changing course with an NBA team in the middle of a season is not all that simple.
After the Warriors’ 119-108 defeat to the Houston Rockets on Friday — a game in which Golden State shot just 37.2 percent through three quarters, 40.2 overall — it’s easy for fans to say, “Look, the ball movement experiment failed.”
But in addition to just plain bad luck — such as Stephen Jackson’s missed dunk attempt — there were plenty of instances of Warriors pulling up for jumpers that clanged off the iron without the benefit of a pass to set up the shooter.
In the first 8 1/2 minutes alone, Jackson, C.J. Watson, Kelenna Azubuike (twice) and Jamal Crawford (twice) were all guilty of such infractions. Five of those six shots were misses; the only make was when Azubuike ducked behind a ball screen from Andris Biedrins and knocked down a fading 17-footer.
There were some positives: Several Warriors were aggressively using up-fakes to get past their man at the 3-point line — a place the Warriors, the NBA’s next-to-worst 3-point shooting team (30.3 percent), shouldn’t be firing from — and then stepping in for open 15- to 18-footers.
And kick-out passes made a reappearance, including a couple from Azubuike, who tied his season-high with four assists (a level he hadn’t reached in more than a month).
** The absences of Brandan Wright, Ronny Turiaf and Corey Maggette forced Jackson into spending 31 minutes at power forward, which was doubly damaging to the Warriors: Their best individual defender was relatively wasted shadowing Luis Scola while a rookie (Anthony Morrow) was tasked with shutting down Tracy McGrady. When you include the fact that Jackson is possibly the worst rebounding 4 in NBA history, you can see why it’s a problem.
** I will say this for Jackson at 4: He made some superb rotations defensively, including the first-quarter play to draw a charge on Yao Ming. The rest of the team was nowhere near as successful. Even when one player would make the right move — such as when Marco Belinelli came across the lane to shut down a drive by Luther Head, who had gotten past Jackson on a screen-roll play — a teammate would fail to make the next necessary rotation — i.e., Crawford not sliding down to the baseline to cover Shane Battier, who drained an open 12-footer.
** Crawford still needs to…
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Dec6
Thoughts on Game No. 19: Rockets 131, Warriors 112
Filed under: News; Tagged as: Andris Biedrins, Anthony Randolph, Brandan Wright, Carl Landry, Corey Maggette, Don Nelson, Jamal Crawford, Keith Smart, Luis Scola, Marco Belinelli, Monta Ellis, Rafer Alston, Richard Hendrix, Ronny Turiaf, Stephen Jackson, Von Wafer, Yao Ming12 CommentsBy Geoff Lepper
48minutes.netThere’s been a fair amount of statistical data collected that shows the Warriors have fared better in the short stints where they’ve played their two centers, Andris Biedrins and Ronny Turiaf, together on the floor.
That’s why, in Golden State’s 131-112 loss to Houston on Friday, Rockets center Yao Ming tried to break that pair up as quickly as possible. Unfortunately, Turiaf helped Yao push him to the six-foul limit.
Turiaf lasted only 22 minutes, and Biedrins 32, before they both fouled out. In the 17 minutes and 35 seconds Biedrins and Turiaf were able to team up, the Warriors outscored the Rockets, 39-34. In the remaining 30:25, Houston topped Golden State, 97-73.
Warriors coach Don Nelson made clear earlier in the week that he wanted to use Biedrins (who is not very effective when giving up a large weight difference) on Yao only as a last resort. So it was no shock that Turiaf earned his second start of the season and drew the unenviable duty of serving as Yao’s speed bump.
But the fact that Turiaf had five fouls in the first half — and was done for the night with 21:30 still to play — was not entirely attributable to the bulk of Yao. Some of it was Turiaf — who averages 5.7 fouls per 36 minutes over the course of his NBA career — not being able to contain himself.
Here’s a breakdown of Turiaf’s six infractions:
First quarter, 6:08 remaining: Turiaf defending on the right block behind Yao, who takes an entry pass from Rafer Alston. Corey Maggette and Stephen Jackson both come on a double/triple, but Turiaf it whistled for bodying up too hard.
First, 1:49: Alston loops around the backside of an inattentive Jamal Crawford to steal the ball, setting off a 3-on-2 break with Crawford and Turiaf as the defenders. Turiaf fouls Carl Landry on the trial layup try.
Second, 7:54: Von Wafer rebounds Crawford’s missed 3 from the left corner and dribbles into the frontcourt. With Crawford (who toppled backwards into the Warriors bench after the miss) late getting into the play, no one steps up to stop the ball and Wafer slices straight down the middle of the lane. Turiaf eaches in with a no-hope swipe at the ball and gets caught. Turiaf was pulled at that point, but came back in after a rest of only 2:15.
Second, 3:00: This was probably the one foul Turiaf could most legitimately complain…
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