The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Warriors are rolling with strong defense

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By Janie Mccauley OAKLAND » Defense has been the theme from Day 1 for the Golden State Warriors, determined to do all the little things even better on both ends of the floor on the heels of their second NBA championsh­ip in three years.

They’re blocking shots. Jumping into the passing lanes for timely steals. Getting hands in the faces of shooters.

It wasn’t this way out of the gates this season, and coach Steve Kerr had some moments of frustratio­n.

Lately, he’s pleased with the progress and consistenc­y.

“Defensivel­y we’ve just had longer stretches of high intensity and high level of focus,” Stephen Curry said. “That’s allowed us to control the momentum of games and the flow of games.”

The Warriors outscored Minnesota 44-26 in the third quarter of Wednesday night’s 125-101 win — and dominated without NBA Finals MVP Kevin Durant, who sat with a bruised left thigh but was expected to be fine by Saturday’s home game against the 76ers.

“I know if we focus on taking care of the basketball and playing solid defense, and focusing on that, and really, hopefully, regardless of how our offense is, we’ll be in a good position to win games,” Curry said.

Golden State limited the Timberwolv­es to 41.3 percent from the floor and a dismal 5 of 24 on 3-pointers on the way to winning its fifth straight.

“You saw how beautiful that was in the second half with 37 assists overall. It’s all about taking care of the ball and defending,” Kerr said. “The defense part I’m really pleased with. I think this is about our fifth straight really good defensive effort we have had so that’s a great sign.”

He gave his team a day off Thursday before getting back to work Friday in preparatio­n for Philadelph­ia.

Other teams and opposing players notice the Warriors’ attention to detail on the defensive end, even if their highflying offensive show is typically the focus of scouting reports and film sessions.

“You can’t win without that,” Memphis center Marc Gasol said. “Even if you look at teams like Golden State, you see a team that obviously has a lot of firepower, their defense is really outstandin­g, how they all move together at the same time, how they all shift as a unit from one side to the other ... Then they give you 125 points, too. But they really do play a lot of great defense.”

Against the T-Wolves, Golden State blocked nine shots — its 11th time in 12 games with at least seven swats — three by reserve Omri Casspi and another two from Draymond Green, and didn’t allow a 20-point performanc­e by Minnesota. Nick Young came off the bench to make a careerhigh four steals in 20-plus minutes.

“It’s finally coming along. We’re starting to put it together,” Green said. “We’re taking more ownership in one-on-one defense. We’ve just locked in more on oneon-one defense and taking on the challenge.”

Part of that, according to player developmen­t coach Chris DeMarco, is “being the aggressors, being active defensivel­y and trusting that the guys around us will help if we get beat.”

While a handful of turnovers led to easy baskets by Minnesota, for the most part the Warriors were discipline­d in their defensive assignment­s. It has been that way for a stretch of games now.

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