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sport / alt.sports.basketball.nba.gs-warriors / NBCSBA: Klay, Poole's shot badly needed with Warriors in 3-1 hole

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o NBCSBA: Klay, Poole's shot badly needed with Warriors in 3-1 holeRobin Miller

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NBCSBA: Klay, Poole's shot badly needed with Warriors in 3-1 hole

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From: robin.mi...@invalid.invalid (Robin Miller)
Newsgroups: alt.sports.basketball.nba.gs-warriors
Subject: NBCSBA: Klay, Poole's shot badly needed with Warriors in 3-1 hole
Date: Tue, 9 May 2023 15:47:35 -0400
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 by: Robin Miller - Tue, 9 May 2023 19:47 UTC

https://www.nbcsports.com/bayarea/warriors/klay-thompson-jordan-pooles-shot-badly-needed-3-1-hole-lakers

Klay, Poole's shot badly needed with Warriors in 3-1 hole

2H ago
by Dalton Johnson

Klay Thompson and Jordan Poole combined to score 29 points in the
Warriors' Game 3 and Game 4 losses to the Los Angeles Lakers in the
Western Conference semifinals.

Lonnie Walker IV scored 27 points by himself over the last two games for
the Lakers off the bench. More than anything, that tells the story of
the series with the Warriors now in a three-games-to-one hole.

Steph Curry, who had a 31-point, 14-assist, 10-rebound triple-double in
the loss, can carry the Warriors in Game 5. Maybe even in a possible
Game 6. Who knows what can happen in a Game 7.

Help is needed, though, now as much as ever following the Warriors'
104-101 Game 4 loss.

Coming into this star-studded series, there were two mindsets with
Thompson: He's either going to go off or be way off. There wasn't going
to be an in between.

An LA native and son of a Showtime Laker, Thompson immediately after
beating the Sacramento Kings in the first round proclaimed he has been
waiting 12 years (his whole career) to face his childhood team in the
playoffs. He has countless memories at what now is called Crypto.com
Arena. He idolized Kobe Bryant. For Thompson, that either meant an
explosion or forcing one to come and impatiently waiting for it to never
fully materialize.

His first game of the series, a five-point loss at Chase Center,
Thompson scored 25 points and made six 3-pointers but shot a lowly 36
percent (9 of 25) from the field. Game 2 was much more of what the
Warriors need from the second half of the Splash Brothers. He put up an
efficient 30 points on 61.1-percent shooting (11 of 18) and a
72.7-percent clip (8 of 11) from 3-point range.
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But over the last two games, both Warriors losses in LA, Thompson has
averaged 12 points on 33.3-percent shooting (8 of 25) and 32 percent (6
of 18) behind the 3-point line. He was held to nine points Monday night,
going 3 of 11 from the field and 3 of 9 from three. His final two shots
were inexcusable for a player who one day will be in the Hall of Fame.

First, with the Warriors up by one point and two-plus minutes remaining
in regulation, Thompson only had five seconds left on the shot clock but
the whole right side of the court unguarded. Instead, he opted to let it
fly from 28 feet and watched his shot clank off the back of the rim.

"That one with five seconds on the shot clock, wish I could have that
back, gotten a better look," Thompson said to reporters in the Warriors
locker room after the loss, per the Mercury News' Shayna Rubin.

A mere 34 seconds later, Thompson produced some frustrated Warriors
reactions on another bad decision from deep. This time, the Warriors
trailed by one and Thompson still had 14 seconds left on the shot clock.
He wasn't on a hot streak, this wasn't a heat check.

It was an untimely attempt of Thompson trying to do it himself, at the
worst moment possible.

"That one on the left wing, I feel like I rushed it," Thompson said, per
Rubin. "I should have taken my time."

Warriors coach Steve Kerr leans back, grabs his head and can't believe
what he just watched. He has been coaching Thompson for nearly a decade
and has lived with plenty of wild shots. Thompson's two late heaves
simply were unjustifiable.

Draymond Green, palms up, puts his arms out and stares at Thompson. Even
without sound, one can easily imagine him thinking "WHY?!?!?!" Jonathan
Kuminga, the Warriors' 20-year-old super-athlete who has been relegated
to the bench, literally gets up and walks away.

"I trust Klay," Kerr said. "I think of everything he's done for this
team. Part of who he is, he's going to fire away. There were a couple
late that he probably would like to have back. That's part of who we are
as a team. We're going to fire.

"If Steph or Klay gets an opening, they're going to let it go. They've
had a ton of success over the years, obviously."

Game 1 of the conference semifinals, even in a loss, looked like the
blueprint for Jordan Poole. The electric and mesmerizing guard, for
reasons far and wide, scored 21 points on 15 shots and didn't turn the
ball over once. He was 7-of-15 shooting, went 6 of 11 on 3-point
attempts and also had six assists. Poole's plus-7 plus/minus led the
Warriors.

Everything has gone downhill since.

In the last three games, Poole totaled 11 points. He scored six points
in the Warriors' Game 2 win and was a plus-8, the second-best of the
Warriors' bench players. Between the Warriors' two straight losses,
Poole had five points and six turnovers.

He went 2 of 13 from the field and missed all six of his 3-pointers in
those two games. Already in a 2-1 series deficit, Poole put up blanks
Monday night. The 23-year-old was held scoreless on four shot attempts,
two 3-pointers, and had the same amount of assists (2) as turnovers.

Poole played a little over eight minutes in the first half and was taken
out shortly after a live-ball turnover in the third quarter. He played
slightly over two minutes in the third quarter and watched the entire
fourth quarter from the bench, while Moses Moody played nearly 10 minutes.

"Nothing changes, just work," Poole told reporters in the locker room.
"It's bigger than the moment right now. In the long run, want to be the
best player you can be. Work ethic doesn't change, routine doesn't change.

"Maybe opportunity changes, but you can only control what you can control."

From an offseason that included a four-year contract extension worth up
to $140 million that kicks in next season to the infamous training camp
punch, the spotlight has been bright for Poole. Sometimes fairly,
sometimes unfairly. The numbers are there, though, and they haven't been
very pretty this postseason.

Against the Sacramento Kings in the first round, Poole averaged 12
points on 33.8-percent shooting and 25.7 percent as a 3-point shooter.
Malik Monk averaged 19 points off the bench for the Kings on
40.9-percent shooting and 33.3 percent shooting threes. Those shooting
averages aren't great, but Monk did score more than 20 points three
times and put a scare into the Warriors' defense.

Now, as the conference semifinals shift back to San Francisco, Poole is
averaging 8.0 points on 35.3-percent shooting and 31.6 percent beyond
the arc. Walker, who was a DNP (Did Not Play) in Game 1, is averaging
12.0 points for the series on 60.9-percent shooting and 36.4 percent
from long distance. Last year in the playoffs, Poole averaged 17.0
points on 11.5 shots per game, shooting 50.8 percent from the field and
39.1 percent as a 3-point threat.

Curry, as he often does, came to Poole's defense Monday night.

"We get questions about him a lot, and our whole team we're all together
in the sense of trying to figure out how to win playoff games," Curry
said. "We all have to make adjustments, we all have to play better,
considering we're in a 3-1 hole.

"There's no sense in isolating him in this situation. It's all about
collectively what can we all do to be better. ... If we're going to get
out of this hole, we all have to play better."

For how much Curry's leadership matches his greatness on the court, his
secondary scorers are hurting him mightily. Andrew Wiggins as a two-way
player that contributes in major ways defensively should ideally be the
Warriors' fourth scoring option behind Thompson and Poole.

The main responsibility for those two is counting buckets and watching
the scoreboard churn in the Warriors' favor. The Warriors, of course,
have to be better collectively as Curry suggested. If Thompson and Poole
can't find their shot in front of their home fans come Wednesday night,
though, the Warriors are in for an avalanche of questions come this
offseason.


sport / alt.sports.basketball.nba.gs-warriors / NBCSBA: Klay, Poole's shot badly needed with Warriors in 3-1 hole

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