East Bay Times

Warriors blasted in Brooklyn.

Warriors open the regular season by being outplayed by Durant, Nets

- Ky Wes holdberg wgoldberg@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Despite the challengin­g schedule, head coach Steve Kerr had looked forward to Tuesday night’s season opener in Brooklyn as a chance to measure how the Warriors stack up to the league’s elite. In their 125-99 loss to the Nets, it was made clear that they have a ways to go.

Missed shots, f limsy defense and a lack of playmaking helped the Warriors dig themselves into an early hole. Brooklyn dominated from start to finish, as forward Kevin Durant — who made his Nets debut after sitting out last season with an Achilles tear he suffered in the 2019 Finals in his last season with the Warriors — powered the Nets to a 40-25 lead after the first quarter.

Durant (22 points on 7- of-16 shooting, five rebounds and three assists in 25 minutes) and point

guard Kyrie Irving ( 26 points on 10- of-16 shooting, four rebounds and four assists in 25 minutes) reminded the Warriors that they no longer are the beneficiar­ies of elite talent.

“I just didn’t like our level of competitio­n. It just felt like we were out there,” Kerr said. “I actually thought that we would compete harder and play better defense, and we didn’t do that. We didn’t get into their airspace.”

While the Nets’ offense flowed freely, point guard Stephen Curry’s 20 points on 7-for-21 shooting (2-for10 from 3-point range) and 10 assists in 30 minutes was not enough to make up for the Warriors’ shortage of shot making.

Without Klay Thompson (Achilles, out for season) and Draymond Green (foot, day-to- day), the offense struggled. Curry was forced to create on his own shots, using screens to wiggle free for a moment before stepping back into a 3-pointer or attempting a layup over several Brooklyn limbs.

Golden State’s two scoring wings, Andrew Wiggins (13 points on 4-for-16 shooting, two rebounds, one assist, four turnovers) and Kelly Oubre Jr. (six points on 3-for-14 shooting, seven rebounds), struggled, and the Warriors as a team shot just 36.7% overall and 28.1% (10 of 33) from 3-point range.

Meanwhile the Nets poured it on, and shot 45.7% overall and 42.9% (15 of 35) from 3-point range. In the third quarter, Caris LeVert’s 3-pointer gave the Nets a 35-point lead. By the fourth quarter, Durant and Irving

had earned the rest of the night off.

“W hen we’re f ly ing around and we’re aggressive, using our length and speed and athleticis­m, we can turn that into easy on offense,” Curry said. “Tonight, that’s all they did.”

If there was a bright spot for the Warriors, it was the debut of rookie James Wiseman, who started at center despite having missed preseason and training camp because of a positive coronaviru­s test. In 24 minutes, Wiseman flashed some of the skills that led the Warriors to selecting him No. 2 overall in last month’s draft. He dunked, ran the floor well and confidentl­y attempted deep shots and jump hooks as he compiled 19 points, six rebounds and two steals.

“He looked great out

there,” Kerr said. “I would have preferred a game where we actually were in the game.”

Added Wiseman: “I think I did really well for not playing a year and due to the (coronaviru­s) protocols,” he said. “I just have to get my conditioni­ng back up.”

To compete with the Milwaukee Bucks on Christmas Day, the Warriors will need Wiseman to build on his performanc­e, and for Wiggins and Oubre to simply play better. Wiggins was aggressive but settled for turn-around jumpers, clanged 3-pointers and turned the ball over with the kind of laissez faire attitude that earned him his passionles­s reputation. Despite moments of excitement from Oubre — which occurred mostly above the rim with highlight-wor

thy dunks — he did little to limit Irving and missed every shot he took outside the restricted area.

Maybe this game indicates a fall from the NBA’s summit for the Warriors. What was a team onceflushe­d with talent — so much so that it at times

seemed unfair and could breeze through the regular season — now needs everyone to play to their fullest abilities in order to compete.

The Warriors didn’t do that Tuesday. In Milwaukee on Christmas, Kerr will get another chance to measure his team against an elite Eastern Conference opponent.

• Juan Toscano-Anderson, who was the Warriors’ final roster cut three days ago after being beaten out by Mychal Mulder, is returning to the team on a two-way contract. The Warriors were hoping they could keep the former Castro Valley High star, which they were able to do Tuesday after he cleared waivers.

Toscano-Anderson will join rookie point guard Nico Mannion to fill the Warriors’ two two- way player contract limit.

 ??  ??
 ?? KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Warrior Kevin Durant of the Nets drives to the basket past the Warriors’ Kelly Oubre Jr. during the first quarter Tuesday night.
KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Warrior Kevin Durant of the Nets drives to the basket past the Warriors’ Kelly Oubre Jr. during the first quarter Tuesday night.
 ?? KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nets guard Spencer Dinwiddie (26) watches as Nets center DeAndre Jordan defends the Warriors’ Stephen Curry.
KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Nets guard Spencer Dinwiddie (26) watches as Nets center DeAndre Jordan defends the Warriors’ Stephen Curry.

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