DeMar DeRozan had a typical fourth quarter performance Sunday night in Chicago, but this time he beat the Bulls instead of helping them win, writes Darnell Mayberry of The Athletic. Playing at the United Center for the first time since being traded to the Kings in July, he scored nine of his 21 points in the final 12 minutes as Sacramento pulled out a five-point victory.
DeRozan punctuated his final three made shots with a stare and a few comments directed at the Bulls’ bench, but he said there are no hard feelings and he enjoyed the three years he spent with the team.
“The first moment I came here, I tried to give my all to this organization, to this city. And I think it showed,” he said. “You can’t fake it when you’re genuinely putting everything into representing the Bulls. I embodied the culture of Chicago, everything. I think when people see that, you get the genuine reaction in return.”
DeRozan received a warm reception from the Chicago crowd, which cheered him in pre-game introductions and again when a tribute video was played during a first quarter time out. After the game, Bulls players spoke about the difference DeRozan made for the franchise.
“A guy like that always leaves a big impact, more so for the kind of guy he is, how he carries himself,” Nikola Vucevic said. “You always respect people like that. It was great for everyone to have him here for all these years, but especially for the young guys, they were able to learn a lot from him about the game, how to carry yourself on and off the court, what to do and how to prepare, the mental aspect, a lot of things that we can all learn from him and carry on throughout the rest of our careers.”
There’s m0re from the Pacific Division:
- The Kings picked up their seventh straight win on Sunday as they continue to benefit from the simplified offense Doug Christie installed when he replaced Mike Brown as head coach, observes Chris Biderman of The Sacramento Bee. Sacramento had just seven turnovers and allowed three points off of them. “(Christie is) calling basically three or four plays,” Domantas Sabonis explained. “One for DeMar, one for Foxy (De’Aaron Fox) and one for me. He’s trusting his main guys to create the advantage and then everyone plays off that.”
- The counseling that Draymond Green received during last season’s indefinite suspension has helped him learn how to control his anger, according to Ohm Youngmisuk of ESPN. Green also confirms that he contemplated retirement last season, but that’s no longer in his plans. “He’s always been so passionate,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “And when he goes wrong and his passion gets away from him, it turns into anger. … He’s in a good place family-wise; he’s a great dad. He loves his kids. He recognized last year how much his actions impacted his young kids. He doesn’t want his kids seeing him in that light. And it’s easy for everybody on the outside to say, well then don’t do that stuff. But he is a force of nature and as competitive as any person I’ve ever seen. His game lives on the edge of passion and rage, and he has to find that balance. And he’s found it this year.”
- The Clippers have to put aside a major distraction to concentrate on tonight’s game with Miami, per Broderick Turner of the Los Angeles Times. Many of the players and coaches were directly affected by the massive wildfires that hit Los Angeles and the surrounding area last week. “At the end, we’re pros,” Nicolas Batum said Sunday. “We have a game to play. We have to win so we have to get back to it. We had two great practices the last two days. Basketball-side, we lost four of the last five so we need a win tomorrow. We got a stretch at home that we need to take care of so it’s going to be a big one against Miami tomorrow so we got to focus on that and try to win the game.”
If Draymond’s “balance” means GSW is a .500 team, then maybe that’s not the problem
I can’t even imagine what kind of mental toughness (or even gymnastics) would be necessary to put “you’ve lost much/everything in a raging fire” out of my head long enough to play basketball efficiently…
Doing something that feels normal can be hugely therapeutic when going through difficult times. I have definitely used work as that place when going through personal struggles.
Like most warrior fans you are sometimes shouting into the TV please Green just shut up and calm down. I know Refs give him many Ts that 90% of other NBA players do not get. Green just needs to understand he has a bullseye on his back and it does no good for him to argue anything. Kerr is guilty of not pull him out of a game once he starts to complain. Send him to the bench to cool down.
Draymond symbolizes the Dubs’ current predicament.
Once, consistently great.
These days? Sometimes good and sometimes not.
Next season? We don’t talk about next season.
Same thing I seen from Green. Very inconsistent on defense this year.
I find it rather ironic that Davey J is commenting on someone else’s mental health. Of course, it is backhanded slap at Steve Kerr. I don’t understand his hatred of Kerr. He Obviously didn’t watch a Warriors game before May of 2015. The Warriors were a complete mess, even with Curry. Now he calls Kerr a nepobaby? What? How can an individual be so cruel? If Kerr is so bad, why hasn’t Curry said anything? You know Draymond would. I guess Davey is working out his own mental health issues.
Davey J is like Grant Cohn’s burner account for the 49ers lol. Maybe Davey J wanted Kerr’s autograph and got snubbed.
Giants74, forget 2015, the empty seats are more this past month since 2012. Oracle was packed under Mark Jackson in the 2 years before Kerr arrived.
Anyway, many lifetime Dubs fans feel this about Kerr:
1. Deserves to go the HoF for 2015-22. Love him for it.
2. Has done a bad job since then.
Kerr signed on last summer with the stated goal of staying the course to its conclusion. It’s now clear to everyone: that course is already over. The Warriors front-office is not in denial about that.
If Steph does indeed have 2.5 good years left, radical changes in personnel and playing style are needed ASAP to leverage him. Kerr is officially retired in 15 months. Lame duck leaders aren’t suited to reinvent any organization. Ticket demand has dramatically declined, and, without dramatic change, next season will be worse.
I’m sure you don’t agree, but I don’t believe Kerr is back next year.
Context is important
You have the highest price for seat in the league, pretty much tied with the Knicks , that works when a top team not whatever this version of the warriors is
Their ticket was ranked 21st in 2012
. People don’t pay for mediocrity
@Rain Delay I’d take it a step further. Oracle/Oakland is in the East Bay. You have a lot more long term residents. San Francisco is in the West Bay. Very few natives or long-term residents. People in the East Bay have stronger ties the team. San Francisco has been a ghost town the past 3 weeks because they are all from somewhere else. The traffic to SFO was maddening.
Besides, championship cores of teams/”dynasties” last 5-7 years. It has been a decade. The NBA’s salary cap makes it next to impossible. The Warriors downfall was signing Kevin Durant. It led to a lot of problems.
Giants74 , the empty seats have nothing to do with where people live.
Any season ticket holder that can’t attend a game sells those tickets (along with their parking) for that game electronically. It takes 60 seconds.
The seats are empty because there is no demand for them online. I know first-hand because I tried to sell mine online for the Heat and Pacers games, and, for the first time in 13 years found no takers.
It’s untrue that MOST of the Oracle fans in 2019 were from the East Bay. Nor are most the Chase fans from San Francisco. San Francisco has population of 800K, less than 10% of the Greater Bay Area.
All Warriors fans are feeling the same way.
Why do you always turn what I say into something completely different? I don’t understand it. Of course you had trouble selling your tickets. All the tech-bros were out of town for the past 3 weeks. It is harder for East Bay people to afford Chase Center tickets. People in the East Bay have more loyalty to the Warriors because the grew up here. Most of the tech-bros are from somewhere else.
Rain Delay, mediocrity (competitiveness of the team) ranks as the 3rd most important factor.
There are 2 factors that are more important:
– affluence of the available market
– the arena
The market. In 2012, the Warriors not only sucked, but played in Oakland. The locals were awesome fans, but businesses and individuals were less than affluent. Oracle Arena was difficult to get to for those not from Oakland.
San Francisco and the parts of the Bay Area that now can easily get to the games represent the most affluent market in the country, even more than Manhattan. 6 trillion dollars (literally) of market capitalization from high tech companies has been injected into the economy flover the last 15 years. San Francisco businesses but large blocks of season tickets as a business expense
Arena. Oracle Arena was one of the 3/4 worst in the NBA. Old, little luxury box seating, poor dining. Chase Center, built in 2019, is one of the top 2-3 entertainment centers. That’s why fans spend 5 times as much going to a game at Chase in 2025 as Oracle in 2104. While a lot of those tickets are going unused, they’re still paid for
Losing doesn’t help pro sport franchises, but as ownership of Lakers, Knicks, and Cowboys know, in a great market with a great venue, it’s not more than a 15% drop from revenues in a winning season.
Seriously?? You think Chase Center is easier to get to than Oracle? Have you ever been? There is practically no place to park. Oracle has parking and much easier access via public transportation. There really isn’t much difference coming from the South Bay.
Giants74 , it’s not what I think. It’s a well-known fact for 75% of the Bay Area.
Surely you know that the poor accessibility of Oracle to most of the Bay Area was a primary reason for the Warriors leaving, just as it was for the A’s and Raiders?
You ask if I’ve been to these arenas. In fact, I’m a 31 year season ticket holder. I’ve driven to both Oracle and Chase Center every game I’ve attended, mostly from Palo Alto, but often from San Jose. That’s about 1500 games.
For Saturday and Sunday games, it’s the same for both stadiums: 35 minutes. For weekdays, it takes at least 40 minutes longer to get to Oracle than Chase because 880 and 580 are so congested at rush hour.
There is no public rail transportation to the Coliseum from San Jose or the Peninsula. For Chase Center, Caltrain and shuttles get you to your seat in 1-1.25 hours. (BART is an option from the East Bay.)
Oracle/Coliseum parking is a nightmare. Outdoors, unpaved, unsafe, and with lengthy waits for ingress/egress. To park at Chase, use the app! there are 3,000 indoor spaces within 3 city blocks, 8,000 parking spaces within a 3/8 of a mile, 17,000 within 5/8 of a mile. After 6:30 pm, 90% of these are vacant. Plentiful off-hours vacant parking is a primary reason for downtown parking.
Mark Davis left because Fisher blocked any redevelopment of the Coliseum site. He is on record as saying that. John Fisher, as with most A’s owners, have treated the team as an AAA(A) franchise. How do you think the SF Giants home got built?
3,000 indoor parking spaces within in 3 city blocks of Chase Center? You mean the UCSF/Kaiser parking lots?
Not true whatsoever Aristotle, you could get tickets for 30$ before Lbj turned the team around in La 10 mins before tip
They are 5-10x now that we are better
It’s basic supply and demand , there. Was no demand to see. The swaggy P lakers so they dropped the price
Now same equation times 5 more x with dodger tickets
Rain Delay, the data required to settle this argument has been published in the business press and publicly available academic studies, and it shows you are incorrect.
The Lakers (as with almost every other NBA franchise) have seen annual revenues rise steadily over the last 25 years, irrespective of winning or losing. I’ve used the annual Forbes Magazine figures to show that:
| Year | Revenue |
|—|—|
| 2003 | $127 |
| 2004 | $133 |
| 2005 | $144 |
| 2006 | $153 |
| 2007 | $170 |
| 2008 | $187 |
| 2009 | $203 |
| 2010 | $214 |
| 2011 | $208 |
| 2012 | $213 |
| 2013 | $214 |
| 2014 | $223 |
| 2015 | $290 |
| 2016 | $333 |
| 2017 | $348 |
| 2018 | $367 |
| 2019 | $395 |
| 2020 | $400 |
| 2021 | $442 |
| 2022 | $516 |
| 2023 | $522 |
These are total revenues, of which ticket gate are a part. I looked at Forbes’ estimated gate revenues, which disagreed with your account. The year-over-year percentage changes are not negative. I did, however, see much more variation in “after market” ticket pricing for those years. Perhaps that’s what you were thinking of?
Nope I was thinking of the days we could go see “ other teams “ we liked for 30$ on a whim when we were terrible – Nothing to do with total revenue which has many many many different variables involved
Reason why -Swaggy P , you NEVER saw those prices w Kobe Shaq or once Lbj hit town
You think if Steph was traded just as msny people would show up and pay full till just bc you sell a nice Ny steak inside ? Cmon
@ The Human Rain Delay It is funny you should say that “if Steph was traded”. The Warriors tried to trade Curry in the Andrew Bogut trade. But, the doctors said, because of his ankles, he wasn’t worth it…Actually, Kerr wanted to draft Curry when he was running the Suns…Imagine that. The biggest face of the Warriors 80 year history wasn’t considered worth it. There is a trade lesson to be learned there.
As usual, you cherry pick data. Your data doesn’t settle much. You left out a lot of important information. Your numbers show negative growth in revenue. You are not showing what was the overall growth in league wide revenue. You are not showing the Lakers record in that period. You are also not showing revenue from tv contracts. Hell, the iPhone was still 4 years away. Media consumption and revenue have drastically changed. Jeez…Dude, come into the modern world.
Get a room fellas
Sixers would have been better off signing DeRozan. smh
I think their floor w DeMar would’ve certainly been higher due to his consistency and availability, but their ceiling for true contention is higher w George.
Of course, what we’ve seen from Embiid makes the debate pointless bc he clearly can’t be the number one guy on a title team regardless.
George looks more like Tobias than Tobias this season.
At this point idk y they aren’t tanking to keep their pick. The season is over.