Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr made a Brandin Podziemski announcement before they play the Detroit Pistons.
"Everyone is seeing it. So we are clearly not teaching, as a league, our officials to look at the feet," Kerr said Monday.
Warriors coach Steve Kerr wants the NBA to look into the lack of travel calls during games.
Steve Kerr broke into the NBA as a player in 1988 and has seen the league evolve in ways good and bad over nearly four decades. On Monday night it appears that he hit a breaking point when it comes to all of the obvious uncalled travels that have become a routine part of the experience.
Steve Kerr has visibly aged in his time as an NBA coach, which makes sense given that (a) he will turn 60 during his next training camp, and (b) Thursday’s game in Brooklyn will be his 1,000th between regular and postseason,
Well, that is, unless you ask a reporter who implied that the Warriors are apparently still capable of such a lofty goal after Golden State's loss to the Philadelphia 76ers on Saturday night. After a game where some of the Warriors' bench players excelled in the absence of Jimmy Butler and Jonathan Kuminga,
The entire game is based on footwork,” Kerr said. “We need enforce traveling violations and we are not doing it and I don't understand why. ... These (officials) are awesom
The entire game is based on footwork,” Kerr said. “We need enforce traveling violations and we are not doing it and I don't understand why. ... These (officials) are awesom
But before the win over the Pistons, the first game of a seven-game homestand following a successful 4-1 road trip, coach Steve Kerr assessed Kuminga's status. From the podium, he announced, again, that Kuminga is on his way back into the fold.
Steve Kerr joked that his tenure in NY would have been short-lived if he had chosen the Knicks over the Warriors for the head coaching job.
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