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Warriors blown out by Mavericks, blow a chance at earning No. 6 seed

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If the Warriors appreciated the playoff implications of Tuesday night’s game against the Dallas Mavericks, they didn’t play like it.

A win could have earned Golden State a tie-breaker and pulled them to within a game closer of the No. 6 seeded Mavericks. Instead, they came out flat, dug a 33-point hole before halftime and lost 133-103 in disappointing fashion at Chase Center.

The truth is, this game was over after the first quarter, when the Warriors trailed 36-12. The next 36 minutes were a formality.

“I’m the head coach and I did not have them ready to play,” Golden State coach Steve Kerr said. “Clearly the biggest game of the year and it was over before it started. So really disappointing.”

“This was our biggest game of the season,” said forward Juan Toscano-Anderson, who was part of a bench that got outscored 60-33. “It’s frustrating.”

Entering Tuesday, the 10th-place Warriors (31-31) trailed the sixth-place Mavericks (34-27) by 2.5 games in the standings. A win would have given the Warriors the season-series edge over Dallas, moved them into a tie for ninth place, and within striking distance of the No. 6 seed and the right to avoid the play-in tournament. Now the Warriors, with 10 games remaining, are a full game behind the surging Spurs.

Coaches and players knew what was at stake. Before the game, Kerr talked about how a win could set up his team for the stretch run, saying, “If we were to win tonight, I think we’d have a realistic shot at catching Dallas because we’d have the tie-breaker.”

However, the chances of catching Dallas this late in the season were already slim. Before the game, basketball-reference.com gave the Warriors roughly a 2% chance of ending up with the sixth seed. The bigger concern is the manner in which they lost.

Kerr’s team hasn’t practiced in a week because he believed his group, which had won seven of its last nine, had found a groove. But Tuesday’s effort was the team’s worst since April 2’s 53-point loss to the Toronto Raptors, and one of the worst of the Kerr era.

According to Elias Sports Bureau, the Mavericks’ 28-0 run that bridged the first and second quarter is tied for the second-longest scoring run by any team over the last 20 seasons, and the Warriors’ 29 points in the first half were their fewest in any half since Kerr took over as coach in 2014.

“It was a perfect storm of everything going wrong tonight,” Curry said.

The Warriors this season have followed dramatic blowout losses with more inspired performances. Just four days after the Raptor's loss, Golden State kicked off its best stretch of the season that cemented its status as a play-in team. A similar response would be enough to get the Warriors where they want to go.

The goal for these Warriors now is clear: Climb the standings enough to avoid the 9-10 game — which requires two wins to get into the playoffs — and be part of the 7-8 game, which would require only one win to earn the right to participate in a playoff series.

“It’s a matter of remembering who we are, remember our identity,” Curry said. “We have 10 games to sprint to the finish line. We still have a great opportunity in front of us to seize not only good momentum and good basketball down the stretch, but also get in the best position possible to be in that final eight no matter how we get there.”

Source:-https://www.mercurynews.com/2021/04/27/warriors-blown-out-by-mavericks-blow-chance-at-earning-no-6-seed/

Steven Madden

Steven Madden

Steven has covered a variety of industries during his media career including car care, pharmaceutical, and retail.