A teammate of Stephen Curry on the Golden State Warriors revealed what happened with Jordan Poole during the game against the Washington Wizards, reuniting with his former teammates.
Stephen Curry injured his left ankle in the final minutes of the Golden State Warriors victory over Washington and is considered day to day.
On top of their difficulties with finding scoring help, the Warriors' paint defense crumbled in the second half without Draymond Green in the lineup, conceding endless trips to the free-throw line for the Kings' most aggressive rim-runners.
Draymond Green has added yet more mystery to the supposed bad blood between himself and former Golden State Warriors player Jordan Poole. Poole used to be a teammate of Green's but
Stephen Curry exited Saturday's contest between the Golden State Warriors and the Washington Wizards at Chase Center due to a left ankle injury. Curry's history with ankle injuries had Warriors fans worried,
Over the past 18 months, the Warriors have been in sharp decline. Their roster has become imbalanced, with Stephen Curry and Draymond Green leading a group of talented but raw players. Unless the front office makes some significant moves ahead of the Feb. 6 trade deadline, Golden State will struggle to be a serious threat this season.
The Knicks and Nuggets are surging, while the Warriors watch their window close. Meanwhile, the Cavs and Thunder have their business on lock.
From Celtics vs. Lakers to Thunder vs. Mavericks, tonight’s 9-game NBA slate promises action-packed matchups with playoff implications.
With only two commitments so far, the 2025 NBA Dunk Contest faces uncertainty. Can names like Bronny James, Mac McClung, or Jalen Lecque revive the iconic All-Star
Jordan P said, ‘I love those guys over there. I love most of those guys over there.’ And then you responded with a tweet that says, ‘I really am sorry. I really am sorry.’
And don’t forget, this past offseason, the Warriors lost a $30 million chunk of salary when they jettisoned Chris Paul strictly for luxury tax avoidance. The NBA owners wanted a system that brought big-market, big-spending teams like the Warriors to heel, and they received it.