Santa Cruz Sentinel

Poole’s emergence the biggest win so far

Breakthrou­gh from Golden State guard has been ‘spectacula­r’

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Whatever the Warriors did to boost Jordan Poole’s confidence, they need to keep doing it, because this guy is exactly what this team needs right now and in the future.

Since returning from the G League season in Florida, Poole is averaging 21 points per game with a blistering effective field goal percentage of 66.

He’s been spectacula­r. He’s been necessary. He won’t stay this hot forever, but he’s affirmed that he’s an NBA player.

“He’s been fantastic every single game since he’s come back from Orlando,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said.

Poole is the kind of win that the Warriors desperatel­y needed.

The second half of the Warriors season has seen a shift. At the beginning of the 2021 season, there was an equilibriu­m between a deep playoff push and developing young players for the future — there is no longer that balance. Much like last season, the Warriors are focusing more on the next campaign than the current one.

The issue was that, until

Poole went on his heater, there wasn’t enough developmen­t to make such a shift seem worthwhile.

But now that Poole has broken through, it lends some confidence to the Warriors’ vision.

It’s important to remember that when the Warriors drafted Poole — and later the same night, Alen Smailagi — they were coming off an NBA Finals loss and they still believed that Kevin Durant was returning to the team, despite his pending free agency. Whether the Warriors were deluded or not is a conversati­on for another day, but at the moment Poole was

selected No. 28 overall, no one in Oakland was expecting a rebuild or the Warriors finishing the upcoming season with the worst record in the NBA.

They thought they had some time to work with the youngsters on the side.

The context is important because it highlights how much things have changed for the Dubs in a short period of time.

The Warriors had a grand plan and it was shot in a matter of months, if not weeks.

Kerr wasn’t hired to be a player-developmen­t coach — this guy led the team to a title in his first year as a coach. He was there to make good great and he did that. The organizati­on, in turn, created their G League affiliate in Santa Cruz for the purpose of giving young players serious run and developmen­t and coaching amid the big-league club’s success, which makes it difficult to find opportunit­ies for younger players.

But Durant, obviously, left, then Steph Curry broke his hand, and suddenly the Warriors were in a new arena with a bunch of kids, a D’Angelo Russell who never fit in, a worn-down Draymond Green, and an exhausted coaching staff.

The kids never stood muchofacha­ncelast season.

Poole was 20 years old and had averaged 13 points per game his sophomore season at Michigan. He could shoot — that’s why the Warriors surprised many draft pundits by taking him — but immediatel­y tossing him into the fire against NBA foes was a surefire way to undercut his confidence.

Poole says that he never lost that all-important confidence — that he just needed reps — but the time he did spend the G League runs counter to that claim.

In the first 14 games of his NBA career, Poole averaged 27 minutes per game and had a shooting percentage of 26 percent, the worst mark in the NBA. He was pressing, and while things did improve in time, he fell out of the rotation in December, leading to a G League stint.

Poole played well in the minor league, rediscover­ed his aggressive­ness, and had a strong and encouragin­g final stretch of the season.

This season, sliding in and out of the rotation brought about a similar story. A pressing player, a confidence-boosting trip to the G League, and an encouragin­g return.

But this time around, Poole’s a significan­tly better player.

The game is clearly moving slower for him, and defensivel­y, he’s providing some positive things. He’s clearly part of the rotation moving forward and is likely a closer on this team, creating necessary spacing and shot-making alongside Curry in the backcourt in late-game situations.

The Warriors expected Poole to be a Jordan Clarkson type. A noconsciou­s shooter who can provide offense off the bench and spot start. He’s only at Nick Young level right now, but there should be optimism that he can continue to build on this success, though hopefully without another return to the G League.

If this Poole progressio­n has staying power, he’ll be the first viable NBA rotation player the Warriors have developed since Kevon Looney.

Of course, drafting late in the first round annually means that no one should expect a high hitrate, but the Warriors’ hit-rate was too low — Poole’s-shooting-percentage-at-the-beginning-ofhis-career low.

No, developing players at the NBA level wasn’t a priority back when the Warriors were winning titles. But it is a priority now. They need to build as many viable NBA players in-house as possible. A few more Poole-like success stories and the Dubshaveac­hanceof making something special happening next year without adding another superstar-caliber player.

It’s going to take some self-reflection and serious reverse engineerin­g, but the Warriors must find a way to heed the lessons from Poole’s journey and apply them to the developmen­t processes of Eric Paschall, Smailagi, James Wiseman, and whomever the Warriors take with the Minnesota draft pick.

There’s a lot riding on the Dubs doing that. But Poole’s success provides a reason for optimism.

 ?? Dieter Kurtenbach ??
Dieter Kurtenbach
 ?? (KARL MONDON/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP) ?? The Warriors’ Jordan Poole celebrates a three-point shot against the Indiana Pacers in January of 2020.
(KARL MONDON/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP) The Warriors’ Jordan Poole celebrates a three-point shot against the Indiana Pacers in January of 2020.

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