The Mercury News

Slow start, but there’s no panic

- By Mark Medina mmedina@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

A week ago, it seemed nothing could stop the Warriors. Their depth appeared so overwhelmi­ng that NBA teams pondered if any weaknesses existed. The Warriors’ discipline appeared so consistent it suggested they could run on autopilot.

Instead the Warriors have lost two of their first three games, matching their worst three-game start since 200910 under Don Nelson, the season they finished 26-56.

It’s absurd to think the Warriors could crash to those depths. They remain the heavy favorite to win their third NBA title in four years. There is no sign of panic.

“If you ask anybody in this locker room, nobody was expecting us to be playing at the level we left last year,” Warriors center Zaza Pachulia said after the 111-101 loss in Memphis on Saturday night. “That’s normal. Maybe it’s even good. That way we work harder and prepare ourselves for April, May and June.”

The Warriors have coughed up double-digit leads in losses to Houston and Memphis, and nearly squandered their cushion in their win over New Orleans. After vowing to finish in the top five in defensive efficiency for the fourth consecutiv­e season, the Warriors have allowed 117.7 points per game. Opponents are shooting 47.1 percent. And despite a training-camp emphasis on passing, the Warriors have made 52 turnovers in three games.

Defending NBA champions are vulnerable to complacenc­y. NBA coaches, Larry Bird once said, tend to lose their influence on players after three years. That led Warriors coach Steve Kerr to crack: “I’m in year four, aren’t I? I’m on the clock.”

Turning serious, Kerr said: “I was really lucky coming into this organizati­on at the right time when players were really entering their primes. The thing I try to do is keep it light and fresh and let the assistants do the talking, and hopefully my voice doesn’t get too old on them too quickly.”

The Warriors have suggested their problems lay elsewhere.

After having reduced practice time due to a compressed exhibition schedule and a week-long trip in China, the Warriors have admitted feeling behind both with their conditioni­ng and rhythm. The Warriors suggested those issues have contribute­d toward their struggles to defend without fouling.

Kerr called that a “major problem. … Our habits are really bad. A lot of reaches, a lot of silly ones late in the shot clock.”

Stephen Curry has been the biggest offender. He was called for four fouls in Houston and five in Memphis. That wreaked havoc on Kerr’s substituti­on rotation. Saturday night in Memphis, he kept Curry in the game after he was called for his third foul in the second quarter. Moments later, Curry picked up his fourth foul.

Curry knows what he must do.

“You can still play aggressive defense and not reach,” Curry said. “I’ve done it my entire career just being conscious of where my hands are and where my body is. You play physical, the tickytack stuff and you’re literally reaching in and trying to get a steal and overzealou­s. That’s the stuff that can get you come back and bite you.”

While Curry accepts responsibi­lity for the Warriors’ foul trouble, Durant takes the blame for the team’s turnover problem. Of the 52, Durant has 19.

“I’m just rushing,” Durant said. “I need to calm and settle down and I guess that will ignite the whole team. If I turn the ball over, it’s contagious.”

Still, a win Monday night at Dallas — the Mavericks are 0-3 — would give them a 2-1 trip.

“If we go 2-1, I’m happy with that,” Klay Thompson said. “2-1 on the road trip, that’s a good outcome.”

 ?? BRANDON DILL – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Warriors’ Stephen Curry, middle, who was ejected late in Saturday’s game against Memphis, has struggled to stay out of foul trouble early this season.
BRANDON DILL – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Warriors’ Stephen Curry, middle, who was ejected late in Saturday’s game against Memphis, has struggled to stay out of foul trouble early this season.

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