Warriors newcomer Chris Paul can win the room with 11-word declaration – NBC


The wisest and classiest move Chris Paul can make in the coming days is to extinguish the fire that started with his cryptic response in his first meeting with reporters assigned to the Warriors.

Sometime before next Monday, when Paul and his new teammates gather for media day at Chase Center, the veteran guard can issue 11 words that would silence the chatter regarding his role.

“I want to win. Everything else – including my role – is secondary.”

Such a selfless statement would be welcomed by coach Steve Kerr, by general manager Mike Dunleavy, by every player in the locker room. The discerning citizens of Dub Nation – many of whom sighed when Paul insinuated that he might be in the starting lineup – would let bygones be bygones and warm to his presence on their favorite team.

A sincere declaration by Paul would clarify the deliberately ambiguous statement Kerr made when he met with media on Monday.

“We basically have six starters,” he said. “… and only five can go each night.”

Kerr won’t address the starter-or-Sixth-Man issue because he’s being respectful to Paul, a future Hall of Famer whose pride is wide enough to block out the sun.

The matter of whether Paul, 38, would start or come off the bench has danced about the minds of Warriors executives, coaches, players and fans since July. Some of this can be attributed to the fact that he has been a starter since his NBA debut in 2005, five teams and 1,214 games ago.

Most of it, however, began with Paul’s cheeky reply to a question that presumed he was coming to the Warriors to lead the second unit.

“You coaching?” Paul responded when asked about his role. “I don’t know what the situation is going to be yet. That’ll be for us to figure out once we get going.”

Paul’s tone and impish grin implied he still considers himself a starter, no matter the roster. Indeed, the reply was enough to suggest Paul thinks enough of himself and his game, even now, that he could come to training camp and perform wonderfully enough to force Kerr to abandon the starting lineup that last season was the best in the league.

Golden State’s starting lineup – featuring Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson, Andrew Wiggins, Draymond Green and Kevon Looney – posted an NBA-best 21.9 net rating (128.0 on offense, 106.1 on defense). Nothing about the team’s exasperating 2022-23 season went as well as the work submitted by that quintet.

To put this into perspective, the league’s No. 2 starting lineup – Jamal Murray, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Michael Porter Jr., Aaron Gordon and Nikola Jokić of the Denver Nuggets – finished second with a 13.1 net rating. That was good enough to win the 2023 NBA Finals.

Kerr would need a very compelling reason to go away from a lineup that is highly effective despite operating with three shooters in a league where most contenders start least four. The Curry-Thompson-Wiggins-Green-Looney lineup succeeds mostly…

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Read More: Warriors newcomer Chris Paul can win the room with 11-word declaration – NBC 2023-09-26 15:58:59

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