On Steve Kerr’s 12-man rotation, Warriors’ season opener

The classic football axiom suggests that if you have two quarterbacks capable of starting a game, you actually don’t have a starting quarterback

Steve Kerr is trying to put a twist on that with the 2024-25 Warriors.

If you have a 12-man rotation, do you have a rotation at all?

Last week, the Warriors coach said that cutting down the Dubs’ rotation to 10 or 11 players was the most challenging part of his job. You could feel the anxiety the mere thought elicited in the Warriors’ coach.

So, ahead of Wednesday’s season opener, Kerr decided not to cut down his rotation at all. He rolled with 12.

After the blowout win in Portland, Kerr’s concern wasn’t the possibility of having too many cooks in the kitchen but rather that he was unable to expand the rotation to 13 players to give Lindy Waters a real run.

A 12-man rotation is, in a word, wild.

It can be seen as a positive — look at all the good players! — or a negative — this team is full of unremarkable options.

I imagine the opinion will vacillate by the game.

But it worked on Wednesday, as Kerr played full hockey shifts in a 139-104 win, and Steph Curry was able to skip the second half of the third quarter and the entire fourth quarter.

Here are 12 other thoughts on the game — one for each rotation spot.

• This 12-man rotation won’t last, but that’s because of inevitable injuries and rest, not play.

The presumed reason the Warriors went with 12 on Wednesday is because they were playing a tanking team and they could, in effect, extend the preseason.

But that would only be the case if it appeared the Warriors were playing for jobs. That’s not the sense I received from Wednesday’s contest. Kerr didn’t need more time to figure out who his best 10 players were; rather, he wants to experiment with how to use 12 players best. That’s a big difference and makes the start of this season all the more interesting.

• One such experiment is finding a way to play Jonathan Kuminga 25-plus minutes a night while also not putting him in lineups alongside Draymond Green at the 5. (This is for Green’s sake.) The compromise is a strange one — Green at the 4, Kuminga at the 3 (yikes), and Andrew Wiggins playing shooting guard.

Even for someone like me, who believes the concepts of positions are antiquated, this is a tough sell. Conceptually, the Warriors’ size with that lineup (Trayce Jackson-Davis and Steph Curry bookended it) should provide some defensive prowess, but it’s three slashers, a roller, and Curry. Is it any surprise the Dubs opened the game shooting 2-for-13?

I didn’t see any defensive upside with that lineup on Wednesday, but that was just one game.

• Ironically, the “big” lineup Kerr started was shorter at every single position compared to the Blazers’ starting five Wednesday.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Todays Chronic is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – todayschronic.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment