Golden State Warriors

2010-11 Golden State Warriors Preview: It's Not So Hard To Say Goodbye

Editor's note: Tanner actually submitted this before the Warriors started the season 2-0, somehow the stupid editor just took forever to post it. In my defense there was a Jean Claude Van Damme marathon I was partaking in on my couch, so it's not like there was really a choice in the matter.

With the 1-6 49ers well on their way to nailing my 9-7, division-winning season prediction, I thought I’d stop by and crack another egg of knowledge on your head, this time previewing one of the proudest franchises in all of sports, The Golden State Warriors.

You can’t talk about the NBA offseason without mentioning the one thing that was on everybody’s mind---would Chris Cohan finally die and rot in hell, oops, I mean, would he finally sell the Warriors. Dreams do come true, apparently, b/c he not only sold the team he sold it to a pretty awesome duo: one guy who’s from the Bay Area and has been a minority owner of the Celtics and one guy who produced Tango and Cash. The only way the offseason could have been better was if SHA member in good standing Red didn’t renege on his promise to host a champagne party if Cohan ever sold.

The team also made some fairly substantial moves on the court, starting with trading for David Lee, fresh off an allstar season with the Knicks. The price was reasonably high, both in dollars, as they had to sign him to an $80 million contract, and in talent, as they had to include everybody’s favorite prospect, Anthony Randolph in the deal. That said, Lee should be a good fit. He‘s a good character guy, he’s an efficient scorer, he rebounds and he and franchise player Steph Curry should play well off each other. Next they essentially traded Anthony Morrow for Dorell Wight, trying to get a more well rounded player on the wing. They signed Louis Amundson to be a backup big. They signed Rodney Carney to give them some depth on the wing. Reggie Williams should give them one of the better scoring 6th men in the association. Brandan Wight theoretically still has some potential. The hope is that these players combined with a bounceback season from Andris Biedrins, a more consistent season from Monta Ellis and continued development from Curry will get them back on the road to respectability. At the very least, they are starting a legitimate NBA player at every position on the floor and they are going to have some legitimate NBA size in the frontcourt for the first time in a while.

Championship parades through the beautiful streets of Oakland shouldn’t be planned just yet, but things are definitely looking up. With Cohan finally out, with a fairly decent young core on the roster and with about $15 million in expiring contracts the Warriors are in a place where a competent organization could make something happen. Your move, Lacob.

Nellie Gets His Man!

One can only imagine the amount of slobbery old man drool that has fallen out of Don Nelson's arrogant mouth over the past decade lusting over newly acquired Serbian PF Vladimir Radmanovic .  A tall guy that loves to shoot 3s and doesn't like defense is to Nelson what hard work is to the Amish.  Nellie apparently wanted Radman (that's his awesomely lazy nickname) so bad he was able to take on some Nelsonyte in the form of "defensive stopper" Raja Bell, but Bell will offer both an expiring contract and the skillset to be a sought after player at the trade deadline.

The real story here for the Warriors is shipping out douchebag extraordinaire Stephen Jackson.  His petulant attitude and total lack of anything resembling intelligence or tact needed to go, and thankfully for Warriors fans he is gone.  Acie Law was included as well for the math to work.  Now if they can just get rid of that coach.......

The Bobcats will be better.  Jackson will be on his version of good behavior for a while and will put up some pretty big numbers in the process, and a lineup of Felton, Jackson, Wallace, Diaw, Chandler sounds feisty on paper.   Granted those guys won't play more than 10 games together as they are all made up of peanut brittle, true story.

Overall I like both sides of the trade, which is quite a rarity.  The Bobcats got better at basketball and they have no leaders anyway so Jackson probably won't even hurt the locker room.  Dare I even broach the idea that he may in some demented way help it?  The Warriors got rid of a late stage incurable cancer and shed some money in the process.  A good start to a slew of moves that need to be made in the Bay Area.

You can read Marc Stein's take over at ESPN.  More importantly, what are your thoughts on the trade?  

The Warriors are 3 Point Underdogs to the Thunder

In honor of the warriors being 3 point underdogs to the team named after their mascot, I thought I would post a memorable video of Warrior domination. In this case Game 3 of the first round of the 94 playoffs. To say Sir Charles was offended by Chris Gatling defending him is an understatement. He is so sweet.

Warriors Add Much-Needed Guard

The Warriors made the first big trade of the 2008/’09 NBA season this week, sending forward Al Harrington to the New York Knicks for guard Jamal Crawford. The trade makes sense for both teams: the Knicks shed salary in anticipation of the monster free agent class of 2010 and the Warriors move head coach Don Nelson one step closer to fulfilling his dream of a starting lineup consisting of 5 shooting guards.

In his 2 years with the Warriors, Harrington was consistent only in his inconsistency. When his jumpshot was on he was a valuable member of the small lineups Nellie prefers. When it wasn’t his relative weakness in defense and rebounding become that much more apparent, and he often became a net minus on the floor for the Warriors.

Harrington clearly had to go: like many of Nellie’s players before him, he grew tired of playing out of position and banging with bigger guys every night (that’s what she said) and wanted a change of scenery. To make this happen, he faked an injury with such enthusiasm that Vince Carter sent him a text congratulating him on his fine work.

So, given that the Warriors weren’t exactly dealing from a position of strength with their player refusing to play and demanding a trade, and that Harrington doesn’t have a ton of value around the league even in normal circumstances, did they make the best trade they could?

Reports out of Chicago say that the Warriors and Bulls were set to finalize a deal exchanging Harrington for Kirk Hinrich before Hinrich tore a tendon in his thumb and went on the shelf for at least 3 months. Hinrich would have been a good fit in some ways: the Warriors don’t have a traditional point guard on the roster and anything that takes the ball out of Stephen Jackson’s hands on occasion and prevents him from making horrific decisions is a good thing. On the other hand, Hinrich has a big contract and a Hinrich/ Monta Ellis backcourt is similar enough to the failed Hinrich/ Gordon Bulls backcourt that essentially recreating it would have been questionable.