Lodi News-Sentinel

The Warriors have found their best closing five and that could change everything

- Dieter Kurtenbach

The Warriors have found their best closing five, and it’s a lineup that absolutely no one would have predicted even a few weeks ago.

Golden State’s win over the Suns Tuesday night might have been the team’s best victory of the season, with the Warriors going on a 12-3 run in the final 150 seconds of the contest.

The Warriors’ run almost perfectly coincided with coach Steve Kerr putting forward Juan Toscano-Anderson into the game, and it was highlighte­d by an open Jordan Poole 3-pointer with 1:41 to play that gave the Warriors their first lead since the first quarter.

Golden State has been clunky in crunch time all season. The Warriors have gone 14-16 in games decided by five points or less, with a minus-8.2 net rating in the final five minutes of such tight games.

There are many reasons for those struggles: Stephen Curry can’t simply shoot over the taller wing players who defend him late in games, Andrew Wiggins (save for last night) doesn’t play with enough force to be an alpha wing, and opposing teams don’t even guard Draymond Green.

But those three have far more positives than those listed negatives. Adding two sophomore wings — Toscano-Anderson and Poole — looked like it unlocked a few things for the Dubs.

If that is indeed the case, the Warriors could have a formidable and much-needed final punch for the playoffs. It’s a shame we might have just one game, Sunday’s matchup with the Grizzlies, to verify the hypothesis.

But here’s why I think Poole and JTA work with the core three Dubs:

One is on the court for offense, one is on the court for defense, but both have significan­tly improved their lesser side of the ball this season, and that makes them weapons.

Toscano-Anderson might not have a ton of NBA experience, but he’s 28 years old and has unmistakab­le savvy on the court. He’s the kind of player who positively affects winning whenever he’s on the court. There’s some Draymond in him — yes, he’s defense-first with tremendous communicat­ion and the ability to guard five positions, but he’s also an excellent screener, sharp cutter, and smart passer.

He’s received extended play, nearly 30 minutes per game, over the last 11 contests, and he’s shooting 37 percent from beyond the arc (2.5 attempts per game) and dishing out 4.5 assists.

A defensive ace who allows the Warriors to switch everything, cuts down the amount of space Green has to cover, can also knock down a 3-pointer or two and play point forward in a pinch?

How was this guy on a two-way contract until last week?

Then there’s Poole, who is the Warriors’ second- or third-best 3point shooter, depending on Wiggins’ performanc­e that day.

Poole has the ball-handling skills to create his own shot as well as the range, the stroke, and the confidence to seriously space the floor for the Warriors — something that is desperatel­y needed at all junctures of the game for the Dubs, but is seriously handy in late-game situations, when Curry faces double- and tripleteam­s but the Warriors have Green, a non-shooter, on the floor.

Poole’s issues have mostly been on the defense side, but he’s shown improvemen­t on that end of the court, and amid four good defenders and in slower game situations, the brain farts that often highlight his second-quarter minutes don’t seem to show up in the fourth.

It’s ironic, but Poole has proven himself to be more trustworth­y in late-game situations than veteran Kent Bazemore, who has seen a lot of late-game action this season.

The basketball IQ and improving shot of JTA paired with the confidence and improved defense of Poole have only played alongside Curry, Green, and Wiggins for 16 minutes this season but in that time, they have posted a net rating (differenti­al in points per 100 possession­s) of 23.7 while assisting on 87 percent of field goals and registerin­g an effective field-goal percentage of 72.

That might be small sample size noise, but the closing minutes of the Suns game make me think this group has staying power.

At one point late in Tuesday’s game, Phoenix quadruple-teamed Curry. It was by accident, but it perfectly encapsulat­ed how much defensive attention Curry receives late in games.

So often when Curry is seeing multiple defenders, he passes the ball to Green, who executes a 4-on-3.

But with Green being, for the most part, an unwilling shooter this season, opponents have time to rotate once Curry no longer has the ball. It’s still a good play for the Warriors, but they have to be decisive.

By playing Toscano-Anderson and Poole, the Warriors now have another sharp decision-maker and another shot-taker on each side of the floor.

Instead of a 4-on-3, if Curry just goes up the middle of the floor, he can create a 2-on-1 when the doubleteam comes, with either Green or JTA as the outlet man and Wiggins and Poole as the shooting threats off them.

Simplicity is excellence in lategame scenarios. Without Kevin Durant — someone who can rise and fire over anyone — the Warriors have struggled in the moments when their intricate offense can’t quite expose all of its layers.

Add in the excellent crunch-time defense the trifecta of Green, JTA, and Wiggins provide — they have a defensive rating of 90 in their last 32 fourth-quarter minutes — and the Warriors have might just have something cooking with this fiveman unit late.

And if the Warriors really have figured out their late-game woes, then the entire calculus around this team changes heading into the postseason.

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