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3 takeaways as Warriors rain 3s over Kings in preseason action

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — At the Golden 1 Center, where Golden State’s 2023-24 season ended unceremoniously last April, the Warriors brought a new starting five to their second preseason game.

Absent from it, of course, was Klay Thompson, who went scoreless in the play-in loss before departing for the Dallas Mavericks.

The Warriors want to play faster and shoot more 3-pointers, with more athleticism on the court and more defensive flexibility. They brought in three new veterans and want to play with more structure on offense. Many of the changes head coach Steve Kerr and the Warriors want to implement stem with how last season fizzled.

“I don’t know if it was just that game, I just think the feeling of losing in the play-in and not even making the playoffs is a pretty bitter one,” Kerr said pregame. “But I think we definitely recognized our flaws last year and they were exposed in that game.”

Although the Warriors looked more equipped to handle Sacramento’s fast-paced style in the first half — when all the regulars played — Golden State headed into the second half down 68-66. They hit 15 of their 27 3s, with Buddy Hield (4-for-4), De’Anthony Melton (3-for-6) and Steph Curry (3-for-6) leading the long-range charge, but the Kings’ offense matched them by creating points in the paint.

Golden State kept shooting, and draining, 3-pointers as the game progressed. They hit 28 3-pointers in all, exceeding the regular-season franchise record of 27. Eight Warriors hit at least two 3-pointers, leading to a scorching 53.8% clip from behind the arc in a 122-112 victory; in a statistical anomaly, Golden State shot better from 3 than it did from the floor.

Here are three takeaways from the Warriors’ first preseason game on the mainland, with four remaining before the regular season.

New starters

In the Warriors’ first preseason game, in Hawaii, they started Steph Curry, Draymond Green, De’Anthony Melton, Jonathan Kuminga and Trayce Jackson-Davis.

Looney replaced Jackson-Davis at center and Podziemski swapped in for Melton in the second one.

Melton played terrific next to Curry in the opener, but the offense seemed easier with Podziemski in the group Wednesday (maybe it was Sacramento’s defense, which is expected to be poor). Podziemski’s a more natural initiator and playmaker. On one play, Curry’s isolation went nowhere, but Podziemski ended up with the ball on the wing and fed Green inside for an easy bucket.

Podziemski also missed a pair of open 3-pointers that he’s going to need to hit to stay on the floor. With Green, Looney and Kuminga, spacing is at a premium.

Golden State subbed in Jackson-Davis for Looney after five minutes, but the main core of the starting unit tied the Kings, 18-18, in the first seven minutes of the game.

It’s a miniscule sample size, and a similar result to the preseason opener’s starting unit, but neither group has jumped off the page yet — merely held their own.

One note with starting Podziemski: without him coming off the bench, the second unit (Melton, Jackson-Davis, Buddy Hield, Kyle Anderson and Moses Moody) didn’t have a point guard. Staggering minutes in the regular season would fix that fairly easily, but the Warriors want to make sure both their first and second units are cohesive.

Podziemski (8 points, 8 assists in 23 minutes) left in the first half after getting hit in the face, but returned in the third quarter to lead the second unit as the point guard, driving and dishing while also running effective pick-and-rolls.

The preseason is all about experimenting with combinations, and Kerr’s next move just might be to slot Hield — who finished with a game-high 22 points on 8-for-9 shooting — in the back court with Curry. That would maximize their 3-point shooting threat, with as close of a movement-shooting facsimile to Thompson as there is.

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