3 reasons the Warriors’ season went up in flames

Warriors head coach Steve Kerr appeared on 95.7 The Game’s Willard and Dibs show the day after his Golden State Warriors were pummeled by the Sacramento Kings in an embarrassing season-ending beatdown in the play-in tournament, lamenting what could have and frankly, what should have been.

“This felt like a 50-win team to me. Feels to me like we should be down 1-0 in a series, not having the season finished,” he said.

Kerr is right, the Warriors were supposed to be in contention. They constructed, albeit awkwardly, a veteran-leaning roster expecting to compete. The shame of it all is the Warriors’ season didn’t have to end the way it did. They flamed out and now face a pivotal offseason. Here are three reasons why the Warriors’ season ended like it did.

Blown leads

Golden State lost 13 games while having a lead of 12 points or more heading into the fourth quarter. Losses against the Thunder (Nov. 18, Dec. 8), Kings (Nov. 28), Clippers (Dec. 2) and Nuggets (Jan. 4)were the most notable.

What stands out to me is that the Warriors had the firepower and the offense to build the lead. They were unable to close these games because of a combination of turnovers, defensive lapses and attrition down the stretch of games.

Since the Warriors’ motion offense is predicated on passes and cuts, a high turnover count is a byproduct. The defensive breakdowns were the biggest culprit to these blown leads. Opposing offenses tend to get good looks along the perimeter and heat up from three mainly because the Warriors’ defense has a tendency to overhelp, which leads to the next point.

Green’s suspension

Draymond Green was suspended for 16 games for hitting Phoenix Suns center Jusuf Nurkic. When Greens suspension began Dec. 13, the Warriors’ defensive rating was an alarming 123.3.

During this period and his return, the Warriors’ defense had a rating of 117.7.  Green’s presence on the floor during these games would have helped defensively in terms of roaming, helping and communication.

Offensively, his playmaking could have swung a few games the Warriors’ way not only through his facilitation but also through his auxiliary scoring. Green made an effort to make defenses pay this season. He shot 39.5 percent from 3 — his highest percentage since the 2015-16 season.

When Green was available, he has been a positive. His temper was the Warriors’ costliest turnover.

Lineup mismanagement

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