Hield, Moody lead Warriors with 22 points each in 132-106 blowout over Kings
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — — Buddy Hield and Moses Moody had 22 points each and the Golden State Warriors beat the Sacramento Kings 132-106 on Friday night.
Brandin Podziemski added 21 points, and Stephen Curry had 20 points as role players stepped up for the Warriors.
DeMar DeRozan led the Kings with 34 points and Domantas Sabonis finished one assist shy of a triple double with 14 points, 14 rebounds and nine assists.
The Warriors got off to a hot start in the second quarter and led by 20. They were 11 of 23 from deep in the first half to take a 68-53 lead at halftime. Golden State maintained a 100-83 lead heading into the fourth.
Markelle Fultz, the No. 1 overall pick in 2017, scored eight points in his debut with the Kings after signing with them last week.
Takeaways
Warriors: The new-look Warriors continue to impress since acquiring Jimmy Butler, improving to 4-1 with him in the lineup. They are two games over .500 for the first time since December.
Kings: The Kings dropped to 3-4 since trading De’Aaron Fox. They have allowed over 110 points in each of their last five games, as the Warriors shot 54%.
Key moment
The Kings cut a 20-point lead to nine midway through the third quarter, but the Warriors responded with an 11-0 run — capped off by five straight points by Curry — to push the lead back to 20.
Key stat
The Warriors took much better care of the basketball than in their two prior games against the Kings this season. They turned the ball over just 12 times, after having 19 and 22 turnovers in the earlier losses.
Up next
The Warriors host the Mavericks on Sunday, while the Kings host the Hornets on Monday night. ——
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba
Golden State Warriors
Sacramento Kings
Miami takes on Milwaukee after overtime win
Washington takes on Orlando, looks to stop 5-game skid
Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder visit conference foe Minnesota
Regular Season Series
Game Information
2024-25 Pacific Standings
NBA News
SAC leads 2-1
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | T | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
GS | 31 | 37 | 32 | 32 | 132 |
SAC | 28 | 25 | 30 | 25 | 108 |
Team | W | L | PCT | GB | STRK |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
LA Lakers | 33 | 21 | .611 | – | W1 |
LA Clippers | 31 | 24 | .564 | 2.5 | L1 |
Golden State | 29 | 27 | .518 | 5 | W2 |
Sacramento | 28 | 28 | .500 | 6 | L2 |
Phoenix | 26 | 29 | .473 | 7.5 | L4 |
Warriors role players lead the way in dominant road win over Kings
FILED UNDER:
A great way to start the second half.
The Golden State Warriors have looked like an entirely different team since acquiring Jimmy Butler III in a deadline deal with the Miami Heat. But while they went 3-1 in Butler’s four games before the All-Star break, there was one giant negative caveat: their lone loss in that span came against the one team they faced that they were competing with in the standings.
So Friday night’s start to the second half of the season was both pressure-packed and a litmus test. The Dubs were finishing off a stretch of seven consecutive road games, and were facing the team directly ahead of them in the standings, the Sacramento Kings. Lose, and the Warriors would sink further into the 10th spot; win, and they’d leapfrog the Kings in the standings.
You don’t get extra points in the win column for impressive victories or blowouts. But you do get to make a statement to yourself, your opponent, and the rest of the conference.
Statement made.
Golden State went into a lively Golden1 Center and thoroughly dominated a motivated and energetic Kings team, and left the court with a 132-108 win.
Unlike in many of their other recent wins, the Warriors didn’t fall behind early, though it still took them a while to fully find their rhythm. A little electricity from Steph Curry early on gave the Dubs a 10-6 lead and forced a Kings timeout, but Sacramento responded with back-to-back threes that sparked a 10-2 run. Behind a spirited effort from DeMar DeRozan, the Kings were playing fast, playing hard, and playing physically. But the Warriors kept having responses, and brought plenty of energy of their own. Buddy Hield in particular brought a huge first-quarter spark with 10 points in the frame, including a three on the front end of a two-for one. The Warriors followed it up with a steal, and Butler found Brandin Podziemski in transition for a layup to make it a 31-28 lead after the first quarter. Golden State missed a lot of layups and easy shots, but had outscored Sacramento 10-0 in points off turnovers.
The second quarter was when the big lead was built. It started with Moses Moody who, after a strong first quarter, scored the first five points of the second frame for the Dubs. Quinten Post gave Golden State a fascinating look in the quarter, providing some size (they started with a small-ball lineup) and also some shooting. A pair of threes by Post (who had three of them in the quarter) helped push the lead to double digits and, less than halfway through the frame, a Podziemski three punctuated a 24-6 run that had spanned both quarters. With just under four minutes left, Hield scored on one end, the Warriors stole the ball on the other, and Curry found a streaking Gary Payton II with a full-court pass to push the lead to 20 points.
Yuki Kawamura is 5’8″. Zach Edey is 7’4″. They are teammates on the Memphis Grizzlies, which means that technically speaking, their job descriptions are identical. Let’s celebrate that, and let’s talk about which sports do and do not permit for such wonderful disparity in size and shape.
All was well until the very end of the quarter, when the Warriors botched a two-for-one. They went empty on both of their possessions, with Hield fouling DeRozan on a three-point attempt in between. It was still a 68-53 lead at the break, but it felt like the Warriors should be up by more … and like Sacramento had started to shift the moment.
That momentum shift carried over into the third quarter. Sacramento quickly made it an 11-point game, prompting a very early timeout from Steve Kerr. The Kings added a three out of the berak, making it an eight-point game and signaling that they weren’t going anywhere.
Golden State didn’t seem to care though. They bit down on their mouthpiece and came roaring back, with a run led by Moody’s offense and Draymond Green’s defense. They built the lead back to 15 points, prompting a Sacramento timeout. After the action resumed, the Warriors rattled off five straight points, prompting another Sacramento timeout. You could tell the Kings knew their chances were fading. Still, they kept punching, but the Warriors punched back, with Butler once again putting the team on his back late in the third quarter.
It was a fully in-control, 100-83 lead going into the fourth quarter. But we’ve seen the Warriors squander those before; this is a team that has not afforded us the luxury of putting our feet up when there’s a late lead.
Perhaps that will change going forward. Hield drained a three on the first possession to push the lead back to 20 points. Led by fantastic rebounding, the Warriors controlled not just the score but the energy and flow of the game. A few minutes into the quarter and it was a 24-point lead. A fading three in the corner by Curry made it 117-90 as we neared the halfway mark, and signaled that the only thing left to be determined was the final score.
A few minutes after that, both teams turned things over to the back of the bench. And a few minutes after that, the buzzer rang, marking an emphatic and impressive 24-point victory.
While Curry, Butler, and Green were the backbone of the success, it was the role players who showed up and showed out. The three leading scorers were Moody (22 points), Hield (22), and Podziemski (21). Moody was wildly efficient (8-for-11 shooting, 5-for-8 threes, 1-for-1 free throws) and played exceptional defense while drawing an opening assignment on Zach LaVine. Hield was equally efficient (quite literally: he had the exact same shooting line), and brought tremendous energy all night long, with tons of little hustle plays that set the tone. Podziemski struggled a little with efficiency (9-for-20 shooting, 2-for-9 threes, 1-for-1 free throws), but his playmaking, defense, and the timeliness of his buckets more than made up for it.
Curry finished with 20 points and six assists on 7-for-13 shooting, while Butler had 17 points and seven assists on 5-for-10 shooting, once again living at the line (he went 7-for-7). Green had six points, eight rebounds, and nine assists, and finished with a game-high plus/minus of +23.
But nothing showed how much the team has changed quite like the points off turnovers. Turnovers killed the Warriors early in the season, as did their inability to capitalize on other team’s mistakes, or minimize damage from their own turnovers. That seems to have changed with Butler’s arrival, and Friday was a shining example, with the Warriors ending the game with an eye-opening 38-5 advantage in points off turnovers.
The Dubs are now 4-1 since Butler debuted and, despite all five of those games being on the road, they’ve outscored their opponents by 62 points during that span. They’ve moved up to the ninth seed in the West, and will get a chance to exact some revenge from last week’s frustrating loss to the Dallas Mavericks, as they host Dallas on Sunday at 12:30 p.m. PT on ABC.
Here they come, folks.
Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537). Hope is here. GamblingHelpLineMA.org or call (800) 327-5050 for 24/7 support (MA). Visit www.mdgamblinghelp.org (MD). Call 877-8HOPE-NY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY). 21+ (18+ D.C.) and present in select states (for KS, in affiliation with Kansas Star Casino). Call 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT) or visit FanDuel.com/RG.
Follow Golden State Of Mind online:
Site search
Golden State Of Mind main menu
Share this story
Why NBA job requirements are different from other team sports
MORE FROM GOLDEN STATE OF MIND
Sign up for the newsletter
Sign up for the Golden State of Mind Daily Roundup newsletter!
MOST READ
Play today’s SB Nation in-5 Daily Trivia Game!
Loading comments…
What we learned as Warriors’ balanced attack fuels rout over Kings
BOX SCORE
The Warriors and Kings have a rivalry again.
After absorbing five consecutive defeats – including a Play-In Tournament blowout – from Sacramento, the Warriors on Friday night rolled into Golden1 Center and laid a 132-108 smackdown on the Kings.
The win moves the Warriors (29-27) into the Western Conference’s No. 9 seed, one full game ahead of the Kings (28-28).
Five Warriors scored in double figures, led by Moses Moody and Buddy Hield, each of whom totaled 22. Brandin Podziemski had 21, Stephen Curry 20 and Jimmy Butler 17.
The Warriors piled up 40 assists, with only 12 turnovers, while scoring 38 points off 24 Sacramento giveaways.
Here are three observations from a victory that lifts Golden State to 4-1 since Butler arrived via trade with the Miami Heat:
It’s not often that the Warriors separate from a quality opponent with Curry on the bench, but that’s exactly what happened in the second quarter.
It started with defense, as Sacramento’s first possession ended with a shot-clock violation, the first of three giveaways in the first three minutes of the quarter. That set the Warriors on a 19-6 run that pushed their three-point first-quarter lead to 16 (50-34) with 7:33 left in the half – all without Curry.
Golden State’s defense forced four turnovers in the quarter and exploited them for 10 points. Butler, Green and Moody were particularly active on that end.
The defense served as launchpad for the offense. The Warriors recorded 11 assists, four by Green and three by Curry, whose passing burned the Kings’ double-teaming. Eight different players scored, with Quinten Post the loudest by draining three triples in three tries.
The Warriors went into the locker room with a 68-53 lead and, moreover, a layer of swagger they were able to maintain throughout.
Five days after making the vow heard ‘round the world, Draymond Green took the floor on a mission, bringing a level of energy that carried throughout the game and clearly provided a boost for his teammates.
Green’s statistics – six points, nine assists, eight rebounds, two blocks – indicate his comprehensive impact but tell only part of the story.
He was the primary defender on Kings big man Domantas Sabonis, who totaled 14 points and committed four turnovers. Green was the primary playmaker in an offense that on this night showcased spectacular ball movement.
Green played 28 minutes and finished a team-best plus-23. If he brings this degree of determination and proficiency over the final 26 games, he’ll do his part to live up his declaration that the Warriors would win the championship.
When Hield scored at least 20 points in six of Golden State’s first seven games, it announced him as the kind of offensive igniter the team needed off the bench.
He spent most of the next 48 games mired in a slump, with only one 20-point game during that stretch.
The sun appeared on this night, as Hield showed the strongest sign yet that his prolonged shooting woes may be a thing of the past. His 22 points were his highest total in more than two months and came on 8-of-11 shooting, including 5-of-8 beyond the arc. He was plus-8 over 26 minutes off the bench.
A rejuvenated, efficient Hield scoring off the bench would be a godsend for a team that at times has struggle to generate offense. Like everyone else on the roster, Buddy benefits from Butler’s presence.
It’s only one game, but it’s the best and most confident Hield has looked since early this season.
Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast
Never miss a moment. Sign up to get the latest news, stats & giveaways from NBC Sports Bay Area.
Sign up to get the latest news, stats & giveaways from NBC Sports Bay Area