Streaking Warriors take charge against Raptors in second half
Sleep is overrated. The Warriors, on the other hand, are pretty good.
How else to explain a 117-105 road win over the Toronto Raptors Friday night which came after a nightmarish escape from New York which included a six-hour wait on an airport tarmac?
The win was the eighth in a row on the road for the Warriors – the longest for any team in the NBA this season — and 13th in the last 16 games as they improved to 32-27, with Toronto falling to 22-38.
Being sharp and crisp at the outset even after two wins was out of the question following a nightmarish six-hour wait to depart New York and get to Toronto for the Warriors second game in two nights and third on the road trip.
It didn’t stop the Warriors from picking up steam and pulling away in the second half, with Stephen Curry scoring 25 points and Jonathan Kuminga 25. Klay Thompson scored 14 points as a starter, all in the second half, with Moses Moody scoring 17 and Chris Paul 10.
R.J. Barrett had 23 points to lead Toronto, which was held to 42.3 percent shooting from the 3-point line.
A Warriors team source confirmed the club sat on the tarmac in Newark, N.J., for several hours after the conclusion of their 110-99 win over the Knicks, awaiting a new chartered flight because their original one had mechanical issues.
By the time the Warriors got their new plane and departed, it was after 5 a.m. They landed in Toronto approximately an hour later and didn’t get into their team hotel until 7:15 a.m.
“Oh yeah, feeling great,” Kerr told reporters before the game. “I think this might have been the worst one. You always have a few delays during the year, but those generally last a few hours and this was a tough night. Basically spent the night on the plane . . . so here we are, ready to go.”
Even with NBA charters having ample room for players to stretch out and get some shut-eye, it was far from an ideal scenario in terms of rest and recovery.
It didn’t help that one of their main suppliers of energy, rookie guard Brandin Podziemski, missed the game after injuring his right knee diving for a loose ball against the Knicks.
That meant Thompson, who had responded well in the previous six games as a reserve, was back in the starting lineup. Thompson was scoreless in 15 minutes in the first half, missing all three of his shots.
Kerr wasn’t sure when Podziemski would return.
“I think he had an MRI today and I have not heard any results of the MRI yet,” Kerr said. “We don’t think it’s serious and it probably will be day to day.”
Thompson had achieved a comfort level in six games as a reserve, averaging 19.2 points in 27.1 minutes per game, shooting 46.1 percent from the floor and 44.1 percent on 3-point attempts with 3.7 rebounds and 2.0 assists.
The Warriors outscored Toronto 32-19 in the third quarter to take a 93-83 lead into the fourth quarter. Thompson, who was scoreless at the half, had eight points and seven rebounds in the quarter. The Raptors were 0-for-9 on 3-point attempts in the quarter.
With Kuminga getting 13 points in the second quarter after going scoreless in the first, the Warriors went into halftime trailing 64-61. Moody led all scorers with 15 points and Curry had 14. Barrett, who had 37 points when the Raptors blew out the Warriors 133-118 at Chase Center on Jan. 7, had 14 for Toronto.
The Raptors lost leading scorer Scottie Barnes in the first half after hitting his hand on the rim after scoring 10 points.
Predictably, the Raptors got off to a quick start with a 14-7 lead, prompting a Steve Kerr time out where the head coach looked visibly distressed with the energy level.
Yet at the end of the quarter, the Warriors were within 31-28 despite hitting just 10 of their first 28 shots (35.7 percent) and turning the ball over five times. Curry had nine in the quarter, hitting three of four 3-point attempts. Moody, making his third straight start with Wiggins out, scored the Warriors’ first seven points.