Niemi shutout Canadians

By: Phillip Torres

SAN JOSE-The San Jose Sharks (41-17-7) defeated the Montreal Canadians (35-24-7) 4-0 on Saturday night at the SAP Center in San Jose. Antti Niemi recorded his second shutout of the Canadians of the season with a spectacular performance, recording 27 saves on the evening. 

Tommy Wingels got the scoring started early at 2:26 with a slapshot. The assist was earned by Logan Couture. The goal was the loan goal in the opening period and it set the tone for what was coming from the Sharks for the rest of the night. 

The Sharks scored early in the second period as well to keep the pressure on Montreal. At 1:54 in the second period Wingels scored his second goal of the game and fourteenth on the season. Wingels tipped the the puck into the net to make it a 2-0 advantage early. Raffi Torres and Matt Irwin earned the two assists on the play. 

Less than six minutes later Matt Nieto made the score 3-0 with his eighth goal of the season. Nieto’s slapshot was assisted by Couture and Patrick Marleau earned the assists on the play. 

The last goal of the game was scored by Couture at 0:43 in the third and final period. Couture’s backhand shot found the net to extend the Shark’s lead to 4-0. Nieto earned the loan assist on the play. The final score of the game stood at 4-0

The Sharks will be back on the ice on Tuesday as they will host the Toronto Maple Leafs. The puck will drop at 7:30 PM. 

The Emotion Paradox: Can Torres Keep The Hits In Check?

By Mary Walsh

Hockey is a contact sport. That is an interesting euphemism for a sport that allows or encourages collisions and physical blows. There are rules, guidelines for this violence that require a degree of composure and calm that most people don’t associate with physical violence. Like in martial arts, precision is paramount and emotion is not precise.

Raffi Torres has received as much praise for hitting more and harder as for the three goals he earned before he started hitting again. He might even be getting more press for these hits, which presumably lifted his flagging team to the win over Pittsburgh on Thursday. Hits like Torres is making are credited with inspiring the team. The problem is, he probably should not indulge in that emotional hit himself while providing it for others. That takes a rare personality that he has not displayed to this point.

Two seasons ago, not too long before he was suspended for 25 games for a hit on Marian Hossa, he explained that he needed to keep emotion out of it:

My problem’s always been, I get a little too emotional out there. That’s when I get in trouble. But I’ve just taken a step back. -Yahoo! Sports

That is ironic, in view of the fact that these hits presumably energized his team on Thursday. How? Well he wasn’t hitting Sharks, except for Tommy Wingels. So he wasn’t physically shaking them awake. The hits energize the team by way of emotion. So Torres is supposed to stay cool-headed to get his team emotionally worked up. It is sort of unfair, and fairly risky.

Obviously a hit can be effective without being spectacular. Knocking someone off the puck can be doubly effective if the hitter is not taken out of the play along with the target. The less heavy the hit, the quicker the hitter can get back in play. Big hits can also interrupt the team’s momentum if a penalty is called, or if a fight results.

The first is never a good thing anywhere. The second is not a good thing, particularly in the offensive zone. If the team is buzzing around in the right place to get a scoring chance, stopping that for a fight is not helpful. Big hits, like fights, are of limited strategic value, no matter how much some spectators like to watch them.

Like the guy in charge of carrying the explosives, Torres can’t afford to get the jitters or get angry or have any other emotional response to the game. If that is too much for him to do (and it would be entirely understandable if it is, since it would seem the other Sharks need so much help maintaining the right emotional level), maybe he should stick to scoring or setting up goals. Those can help inspire a team too. Most players jump to their feet and look very excited when their team scores. Goals also win games, no matter how many hits either team throws.

Even if the safety of opponents is not a concern, the Sharks need to consider whether Torres is worth keeping around as an asset. As his hits build, so do the odds that the team will lose him to another suspension. The Sharks would do better to find an alternative emotional booster. If the Sharks can’t wake themselves up, maybe someone should just give them a nice, non-concussion inducing slap.

Cal’s improbable win over Colorado keeps NCAA hopes alive

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By Morris Phillips

After appearing languid in their loss to Utah on Wednesday, the Cal Bears—with everything to play for—expected to be much more in step against Colorado.

But for much of Saturday afternoon there wasn’t much difference.  The blown defensive assignments and poor shooting were still very apparent so much so that down the stretch of a close game, several Cal players could be seen passing up open, makeable shots.

It may be March, but after dropping 8 of their previous 12 games, the Bears and its skeptical Haas Pavilion crowd were operating several notches below madness.

So how did the Bears come from behind late, force overtime, and then pull out a heart stopping 66-65 victory?

“The guys were on the same page.  That made all the difference in the world,” Coach Mike Montgomery said.  “We made some bad plays and missed some shots.  I just told them going in, ‘team, team, team.’  Not everybody was perfect but they did a pretty good job.”

While the Bears (19-12, 10-8) won a game they had to have—securing the fourth-seed in the Pac-12 tournament with the win and a bye into the tourney’s quarterfinal round—they did little to impress the NCAA committee or probably even themselves.  Remarkably, the Bears missed their final 10 shots from the field—0 for 7 in overtime—but pulled it out because they managed to make nine of their final 11 free throws.  Justin Cobbs’ pair of makes with just 21 seconds remaining in the extra session gave the Bears a slim one-point lead that held up after Askia Booker and Xavier Talton both missed threes with less than 10 seconds remaining.

Despite shooting just 35 percent for the game and failing to hold a lead for nearly seven minutes after Richard Solomon scored the Bears’ final basket with 2:45 remaining in regulation, the Bears survived.  Far from an NCAA team at this juncture, the Bears maintained hope with the win.  A couple of more wins next week in Las Vegas—one of which would have to be over regular season-champ Arizona in the semis—and the Bears could still dance.

“You can’t look too forward to even the NCAAs or the Championships for the Pac-12,” Solomon admitted.  “That’s why we have to take it one game at a time and just focus on that and worry about getting a ‘W’ as they come.”

“It’s going to give us a little more confidence going in and a little feel good,” Montgomery said.  “We still have 19 wins and we’re still fourth in the league. Are we a top 10 team?  Probably not. But this is where we are.”

Had Colorado’s Xavier Johnson not cooled slightly, the Bears wouldn’t have forced overtime.  Johnson scored 21 of the Buffs’ first 42 points, as he deftly beat bigger Cal players with his quickness and smaller ones with his powerful frame.  But down the stretch, Johnson cooled and the Bears hung around.  But it wasn’t easy:  Cal was outrebounded by 10, allowed 14 offensive rebounds and saw its three perimeter starters—Cobbs, Ricky Kreklow and Tyrone Wallace—miss 30 of their combined 37 shot attempts.

Cobbs finished with 21 points, Solomon and David Kravish added 14 each.  Johnson led Colorado with 24 points aided by Askia Booker with 11 and Josh Scott with 10.

The Bears now await the winner of the Wednesday’s USC-Colorado opening round matchup with Cal’s opener scheduled for 2:30pm on Thursday.  The Bears finished in a five-way tie for third place at 10-8, but got the better of several tie-breakers that placed them behind third-seeded Arizona State, but ahead of fifth-seeded Colorado, sixth-seeded Stanford and seventh-seeded Oregon, which won its final seven conference games.

Stanford Snaps Losing Skid in Dramatic Fashion Over Utah, Ends Pac-12 Play on High Note

DSC_0004By Matthew Harrington

STANFORD, Calif. – With the overflowing talent on display on a nightly basis in the Pac-12, it’s only fitting that it took Stanford literally until the last tenths of a second of conference play to better understand its Pac-12 tournament placement. While the conference tourney picture got a little clearer, it’s still about as blurry as a Monet masterpiece from ten feet out. As for the Cardinal odds for making its first NCAA tournament appearance under coach Johnny Dawkins in six seasons, those are as crystal clear as the scrambled channels on the higher ends of your TV guide.

With a 61-60 win over visiting Utah (20-10, 9-9 Pac-12) Saturday afternoon at Maples Pavilion, the Stanford Cardinal broke a tie in the standings with their guests in a game with must-win implications. Also entering play with an identical 9-8 conference record were Oregon and Cal, a four-way tie for fifth in the Pac-12 standings. With Arizona State and Colorado boasting 10-7 entering Saturday, the Cardinal (19-11, 10-8 Pac-12) could secure a first-round bye in Las Vegas if Colorado, Oregon and Oregon State come away with wins in their regular-season finales. They could finish as high as tied for third, or as low as fifth depending on the rest of the weekend’s action.

“I know it’s important to finish at over .500 in conference,” said Dawkins after the game. “We’re in one of the best conferences in America. To finish over .500 should give you an opportunity to see what happens. That’s out of our hands. We just need to keep winning games.”

Stanford opened the morning with a heartfelt pregame ceremony honoring the senior stalwarts, players like all-time Cardinal blocks leader Josh Huestis and Dwight Powell, but after 40 minutes of basketball it was a junior, Chasson Randle, being lauded for his play while weathering the maelstrom of emotion.

“It’s a little emotional because of what the game meant and also because it’s Senior Day,” said Dawkins. “There’s a lot of family here. Senior Day is always interesting because of all the emotion. Our guys remained focus, stepped up and helped, the Chasson Randles, the Marcus Allens. I thought those guys really stepped up and helped the seniors.”

After an eye-popping 24-point night Wednesday in a loss to Colorado, Randle dropped 22 points over 39 minutes of play against the Utes, snapping Stanford’s season-high three-game losing streak to wrap up the last home game of the regular season.

“Chasson’s played terrific for us,” said Dawkins. “He’s doing everything for us. He scores. He makes guys better on our team based on how he goes out there and approaches it. I love coaching him. I’m proud of him because of the bounce back he had from last year. It says a lot about him, about his character, about who he is.

NBA draft hopeful Dwight Powell found himself in foul trouble for the second-straight game in a row, playing only 26 minutes Saturday after the forward saw action in only 24 Wednesday. He managed seven points on 3-of-8 shooting to accompany five rebounds. Stefan Nastic owned the paint in his absence, going 6-for-6 from the field to finish with 14 points. Guard Brandon Taylor led the Runnin’ Utes charge with 14 points, while fellow guard Delon Wright and center Dallin Bachynski notched 12 and 10 respectively.

Despite hitting over 55.6 percent of shots in the first half, Utah found itself trailing the Cardinal 33-25. Stanford made 14 shots on 31 attempts, only four fewer makes than Utah’s 18 attempts in the first. The Cardinal never trailed over the first 20 minutes of play, scoring on a Powell jumper 34 seconds in to take the 2-0 lead. Stanford outscored the Utes 27-16 over the first 14-plus minutes of play for the largest lead of the afternoon, but Utah finished the half with a 9-6 run to head into intermission trailing 33-25.

The Utes opened the second half with back-to-back field goals, including a Jordan Loveridge three, to cut the Cardinal lead to 33-30 just 1:05 in. It would be over ten minutes before either side made consecutive attempts from the floor after going nearly shot-for-shot when Nastic and Randle finally dropped consecutive jumpers to bolster Stanford’s edge 52-43. Nastic then took a Randle feed to the rim for a 11-point gap with 7:51 left in regulation.

“It was frustrating,” said Nastic. “We knew we had to come out with a higher energy level but for whatever reason, there were plays were weren’t making that the other team was making. It was very frustrating but we’ve been through a lot this season sticking together. We really tried to seize the opportunity at hand.”

Persistent Utah refused to yield with Wright and Taylor hitting shots from beyond the arc then Jeremy Olsen laid one up to cut the deficit to three points for the second time in the half. Randle made a pair from the stripe after Bachynski fouled the guard, but Olsen hit a jumper with 4:34 left in the half to make it 56-53. Nastic would hit one of two shots after Olsen fouled him on the floor with Stanford in the Bonus but Taylor ’s shot from downtown at the other end put Utah within one, the closest Utah disadvantage up to that point. Bachynski then hammered home the Utes first lead of the day, 58-56, with a heavy dunk after an offensive board 2:40 from a win.

Huestis responded at the other end with a three to put the Cardinal up by two with 180 seconds remaining before Bachynski hit a pair of free throws to knot the game at 60 just 55 seconds from the final buzzer. Powell drew a foul with 36 seconds remaining and hit one of two freebies, the eventual game-winner, for a 61-60 edge. In total, Stanford hit only four of ten free throws over the closing five minutes.

“Utah is a very good basketball team,” said Dawkins. “They’ve been on the road, they’ve won six out of their last eight games. We knew it was going to be a tough game, we knew it was going to come down to the wire. Defensively, we got the stops that we needed. It offset some of the free throws we missed. Our guys didn’t hang their heads.”

With the shot and game clock down to one second, Brandon Taylor turned the ball over on a traveling call, seemingly icing the game for Stanford. Powell couldn’t find a way to inbound the ball, turning it over with .8 seconds of play, breathing new life into the Utes comeback bid. They would fail to get the ball back in play for a desperation heave, firing the inbound pass into two Stanford players’ grasp as time expired.

Dawkins predicted this game would be close, but even he had no clue how slim the margin of victory would be when he gathered his team at center court Friday to address some of his players for the last time on Stanford’s home floor.

“We stood at center court yesterday with the seniors,” said Dawkins. “I said ‘You know what, the game is about finding a way, finding a way to win, whatever it takes. All through your lives, you guys have worked hard. You worked hard to get into Stanford academically. You worked hard to play at this level in the Pac-12. It feels good because you were able to do something hard. The things you appreciate most as a player, as a coach, as a human being are the things where you had to fight and to struggle to make something work.’ It’s only fitting to win that way tonight.”

For now, Stanford will be scoreboard-watching as it waits to see who will try their luck against in the Cardinal in Las Vegas this Wednesday, or potentially Thursday if the cards fall just right for a first-round Stanford bye. With eyes on an uncertain bid for March Madness, Dawkins’ squad will look to leave the desert the big winners in the bracketology jackpot. Count Coach among the rare few not looking at the big board with bated breath.

Quipped Dawkins, “I may be the only person in the world, but I promise you, I’m not paying attention to it”.

Michael Duca and Morris Phillips on Cal basketball: An end to a very disappointing inconsistent regular season for Bears

by Michael Duca and Morris Phillips

BERKELEY–The Cal Bears (18-12) finally put an end to a very disappointing season and one that is one of the most disappointing teams that head coach Mike Montgomery has had since being at Cal. To give you an idea how underachieving his team is three days ago the Brooklyn Nets signed former Cal star Jorge Gutierrez to a ten day contract and you can be assured that Gutierrez will end up sticking with that team.

Gutierrez was the first player that Montgomery ever recruited at Cal and he has turned out to be a quintessential Montgomery player who wakes up in the morning with rug burns on his elbows from nights where he has dived on the floor from many falls. For some reason you don’t see that from anyone on this Cal team this year. You don’t see the intensity from this team who ran a six game losing streak after beating Arizona at home and who started another losing streak at three games after beating USC in the last meeting of the season between the Trojans and Bears.

They let other teams take advantage of the Bears athletic ability on the floor and take away their skill sets play after play, game after game particularily after that Arizona win at home, the Bears have been simply very disappointing to watch. This is without question the most inconsistent and disappointing Cal team that has ever played under coach Montgomery.

They’ve got the ability that doesn’t materialize, that doesn’t show up, they had incredible intensity against Arizona at home and beat that perfect team by a Justin Cobbs buzzer beater, but doesn’t have anything against Arizona State and they lost to Utah. It’s no knock on Utah but Utah who has won only three road games in the conference in three years and while Cal was never more than six points behind them during that game.

The Bears never ever, ever had a defense and put on a little polish and took over the game, and they were out rebounded, they we’re out boarded, they were out played, all night long by the Sun Devils and at Haas Pavilion. That was embarrassing and that was really embarrassing at home and it’s super embarrassing on Senior day.

The Bears needed that win against Colorado on the last regular game of the season and you would think with two seniors graduating you would think they would want to come forward and make some kind of threat against Colorado of some kind. The Bears should have taken some kind of control against Utah and neither one of them did. It was just simply deplorable to watch.

The Golden Bears had some great moments earlier this season and it’s just a waste of talent to watch them finish up the season this way. You had Richard Solomon averaging a double double, and Solomon is one of six players in the country that is averaging a double double and if you got one of those players at the very minimum you should have been unbeatable at home.

If we’re not mistaken the Bears have lost three conference games at home and Cal never loses three conference games at home. Maybe they can make hay out of some of the tournament games.

Michael Duca and Morris Phillips cover Cal basketball for Sportstalk Radio

Warriors commentary: Taking a look at the bench behind Curry and Thompson

by David Zizmor

OAKLAND–Its not a coincidence that a lot of this improvement and of greater consistency came number one after Jermaine O’Neal really came back healthy and number two after the Warriors traded for Steve Blake. The Warriors had that great road trip in January where they went 6-1 and they won in all manner of ways.

The Warriors on that trip beat some good teams and they came back from that road trip just like they were right in the running not only for the division but for the championship. They were a team to contend with and then they laid an egg on that homestand in late January early February. It’s especially tough because the Warriors have a such a tough homecourt advantage.

The fans who support the Warriors are so fantastic that you wonder and start scratching your head whats going on with this team? Their good but their losing to bottom feeders and they was no rhyme or reason to it. If there was part of the reason was it was the help. They’ve been suffering through a series injuries, it wasn’t any big injuries but it was guys getting hurt.

Players were getting hurt, dinged up, banged up and missing games and missing a couple of weeks, so it was tough on the rotation set and number two they didn’t have a good rotation. You think back at the beginning of the season their back court was not what it was. I’m not talking about Stephen Curry and Clay Thompson because they’ve been here all season.

We’re talking about the back ups, the bench behind Curry and Thomposon the Warriors didn’t have anybody who could fill in for Curry or Thompson. They had Tony Douglas a player they thought would fill in at point guard for Curry when Curry needed a rest and Douglas just didn’t cut it and he got traded for Jordan Crawford from Boston whose really not a bad player but he’s not really a point guard.

If you watch Crawford play he’s a guy whose a gunner, whose best off the bench as a two guard, and the Warriors were running him out there as a one also. So expecting Crawford to come in and run the offense just wasn’t going to work because that’s not what he does. He’s just not very good at it.

When the Warriors traded for Blake a few weeks ago, what it did is completely set that second unit, Blake is a true point guard. He’s a guy who distributes, he has his spurts, he’s a guy who sets the offense he can score that’s for sure but he’s a true point guard. Crawford was never a point guard, he’s always been a two.

David Zizmor covers the NBA for Sportstalk Radio

Kings lose Landry for rest of the season

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By Charlie O. Mallonee

If it were not for bad luck, Carl Landry would not have had any luck at all in the 2013-14 NBA season. Landry began the season with an injured left hip flexor that kept him in rehabilitation mode until mid-season. His return to the lineup was seen as a major positive for the struggling Kings.

Now, Landry faces a season ending injury. A MRI has revealed that he has a tear of the medial meniscus in his right knee. Landry has been shut down for the rest of the season and faces a surgery in the very near future.

The forward is a six year veteran of the NBA and is in his second stint as a member of the Kings. Landry played last season with the Golden State Warriors and signed with Sacramento as a free agent in the off season. He averaged 4.2 points (.517 FG%, .824 FT%) and 3.2 rebounds in 12.9 minutes per game in his 18 appearances this season.

Kings sign Orlando Johnson to a second 10 day contract

The Kings have announced the signing of guard Orlando Johnson to a second 10 day contract. Sacramento signed him to the first 10 day commitment on February 26.

Johnson is averaging 1.8 points, 0.8 rebounds, 0.6 assists and 9.0 minutes of playing time in five games coming off the bench. He began the season with the Indiana Pacers and was waived on February 20.

Perspective: The 1989 Oakland A’s baseball season 25 years later

Amaury Pi-González

“That’s Amaury News and Commentary”

PHOENIX–One of the nice things about baseball, is that if you stay long enough, and the good Lord gives you a long life, you can have a lot of experiences, seen thousands of games, and talk to people who have not, and either were not born, or just in another line of work.

The 1989 baseball season for the A’s was a truly unforgettable season. Just to think that it culminated with an earthquake and against the Giants, is enough to make a movie, not like Money-ball, but a very interesting one nonetheless, and with a lot of real drama.

As I walk in the Athletics press box during the years, I find more and more people that were 2 years old, not born, or not following baseball in 1989 and that memorable year. But most people alive today, that were 8 years or so in 1989 here in the Bay Area, remember one thing; they remember what they were doing on October 17, 1989 around 5:05 PM.

Some of us where working the game at Candlestick Park, my young engineer was Erwin Higueros, now broadcasting Giants games, my broadcast partner was Evelio Areas Mendoza, he is living and retired in Nicaragua.

I remember just a year before 1989, Gene Hogan, General Manager of KNTA 1430AM radio in Santa Clara called me to his office, as I was doing Sports there and told me he wanted to introduced me to a young disc jockey who loved baseball, Erwin was working the midnight to 5 AM shift, playing music for lonely people.

Most people(not all) who listen to music on the radio those hours are lonely, suffer from insomnia, or simply have no life.

Evelio Mendoza,I knew from the early 1980’s when I was sports director of KIQI 1010 AM radio in San Francisco. In those years KIQI 1010AM featured live news,traffic,weather and sports for four hours each morning. I knew Evelio could do baseball, because I listened to his tapes of play by play from the Nicaraguan leagues, prior to arriving in the United States.

The three of us were installed almost with our heads touching the roof at Candlestick Park, a real auxiliary broadcast booth, just built for that World Series. Evelio suffered from high blood pressure and after the first shake, I looked at his face it was as red as a tomato, I thought he was having a heart attack. Erwin much younger, looked at me very scared and didn’t know what to do, we lost our broadcast line and we were “off the air”like most stations doing remote from Candlestick that afternoon.

After the game was stopped by the quake, we were informed by then Commissioner Fay Vincent that the Series will be “postponed” as it was for eleven days.

I had to drive from San Francisco to Fremont, where I had my house, there was my wife,and my two sons 10 and 9 years old. The Bay Bridge was closed, and it was complete mayhem, as I had to drive the 101 south all the way to the Dumbarton Bridge, with very very heavy traffic, to get home.

Just outside of Candlestick Park next to the freeway, there was A’s superstar José Canseco filling his car tank with gasoline, and he was wearing his uniform. I had to stop at my parents retirement home in the San Francisco Mission District first. They were very nervous but doing well, I then had to drive to Fremont. It took me all afternoon to get back home. I think I got home like at 10:30 maybe later.

This season the Oakland A’s will have a 1989 reunion on July 19, World Series Champion team. Yes, it has been almost 25 years since that memorable World Series, which the A’s took by sweeping the San Francisco Giants in four games.

The Oakland Athletics broadcast team that 1989 World Series: On the radio: Bill King who died in 2005, and Lon Simmons, retired and living in Maui, Hawaii. Monte Moore and Ray Fosse on television. Amaury Pi-González and Evelio Areas Mendoza on Spanish radio. Today some 25 years later, Ray Fosse and yours truly are currently, the only ones remaining on the Oakland Athletics broadcast.

Amaury Pi-González is Spanish play by play announcer for the Oakland Athletics,KIQI 1010AM radio and also travels to Anaheim were he is play by play in Spanish for Fox Sports West/Prime TIcket, Angels television.

Warriors Stiff Hawks Despite Thompson’s Early Exit With Back Stiffness

By Matthew Harrington

Golden State received a major scare on Friday night, but the visiting Atlanta Hawks weren’t the ones striking fear into the Warriors, nor scoreboard a factor as it was during the last engagement between the two teams. The Dubs skated to a 111-97 win at Oracle Arena this time out, outscoring the Hawks (26-34) in three of four quarters, a far departure from the 101-100 dramatic win in Atlanta in January. The drama from the evening, however, came six minutes into play when guard Klay Thompson shuffled off the court with a back injury, sitting out the rest of the evening.

The Warriors stated that Thompson, a talent on the cusp on super-stardom, was held out as a precautionary measure. His streak of 211 consecutive regular-season appearances, a franchise record, does not appear to be in jeopardy.  Despite only six minutes of playing time, Thompson still managed a point-per-minute output, going 2-for-5 from the field with a pair of free throws.

David Lee topped the Dubs with 18 points in 25 minutes while Andre Iguodala and Stephen Curry contributed 13 points apiece. Curry lead the Warriors with seven assists, while center Andrew Bogut had a team-high nine rebounds. Golden State (39-24) connected on over half of their bids from the floor, hitting 43-of-80 from the field for a 54.8 shooting percentage. They also out-rebounded the Hawks 44-36.

Forward Paul Millsap had 16 points and seven boards, both highs for the Hawks, after missing the previous five games with a knee injury. Fellow forward Mike Scott added 14 points. Scott also provided the comedy for the evening, losing his shoe put proceeding to make a three-pointer on the play.

The first quarter saw even play as the Warriors closed out the first 12 minutes with a single-point, 32-31 lead. It appeared to be more of the same for the 2nd quarter, with the Warriors grasping to a 48-46 lead five minutes from the half. Atlanta would be held to just six points over the closing 300 seconds to head to the half in a 66-52 hole.

The Hawks outscored the Warriors 25-19 in the third, the only instance of Atlanta outscoring its hosts in a quarter Friday night. The final frame of regulation opened on a down note for the visitors though as they failed to put a point on the board until Shelvin Mack hit a jumper with 5:07 left to play. By then the Warriors held a decisive 97-79 margin, allowing Golden State to withstand an 18-12 Atlanta run over the waning minutes of play to come out victorious.

Friday marked the first home game for the Warriors after their second-longest road trip of the season, a six-game swing that saw them go 4-2 against Eastern Conference foes. In a flip of scheduling, the Warriors will only play two of the remaining 10 games in March on the road. They continue the three-game home set with a tilt against Phoenix Sunday before the Dallas Mavericks come to Oakland Tuesday night. The Dubs, winners of eight of their last ten, currently sit in sixth place in the Western Conference standings and are four games back of the Los Angeles Clippers for the Pacific Division lead.

Kings Fall Hard In Toronto 99-87

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Photo credit: NBAE/Getty Images

By Charlie O. Mallonee

The Kings committed 17 turnovers and recorded 14 assists versus the Raptors on Friday night. A NBA team cannot win a game posting those types of numbers. The Kings did not win. Toronto downed Sacramento 99-87.

Kings Head Coach Michael Malone said after the game, “I thought we were awful tonight.”

The Kings were in Toronto to play the second game of seven game road trip. The game marked Rudy Gay’s first return to Toronto since being traded by the Raptors to Sacramento. Most fans expected a big game from Gay.

Gay did not have a spectacular game. He scored 15 points but it took 13 shots to score those points. Gay had five rebounds, 1 assist, three steals and two turnovers for the game. It was a subpar performance for the former Raptor.

The Kings did not have a good night shooting. They shot 41.7% (30/72) overall and just 26.3% (5/19) from beyond the three point arc. Sacramento could not help themselves from the free throw line as they shot a dismal 59.5% (22/37) from the stripe.

The Kings’ bench was not a big help as they were outscored 31-18 by the Raptors.

DeMarcus Cousins led all scorers in the game with 24 points on just 12 shots. He recorded seven rebounds, two assists, one steal and five turnovers.

Isaiah Thomas and Ben McLemore scored 14 points each, but both guards shot under 40% for the game. Ray McCallum scored eight points in 24 minutes of playing time.

Terrance Ross led the scoring for the Raptors with 18 points. DeMar DeRozan and Patrick Patterson scored 15 points apiece. Jonas Valanciunas added 14 points for Toronto.

There was not a double-double recorded by either team in the game.

The Kings’ season record fell to 22-40 with the loss. The playoff bound Raptors improved to 34-26 with the win.

The Kings move on to Brooklyn where they will play the Nets on Sunday afternoon. The game is scheduled to get underway at 3:00 PM Pacific Daylight Time.