MEMPHIS, Tennessee – The Golden State Warriors haven’t started a season this well in 55 years. So far back, the franchise was in Philadelphia.
Stephen Curry scored 28 points and Andre Iguodala added 20 as the Warriors matched the 9-0 start of the 1960-61 Warriors with a 100-84 victory over the Memphis Grizzlies on Wednesday night.
“It’s great, because it means you’re winning, which is the most important thing,” forward Draymond Green said, adding that the Warriors don’t concentrate much on such records.
Harrison Barnes added 19 points for Golden State. Curry was 9 of 21 from the field, but only 3 of 10 from outside the arc. The Warriors finished shooting 41 percent from 3-point range, 11 of 27.
“We’ve got different guys every night to step up,” said Warriors guard Klay Thompson, who had eight points. “It’s not only Steph. But tonight it was Andre and Harrison. Tomorrow night, it could be someone else.”
At least this time, for the Grizzlies’ sake, the loss wasn’t by 50 points.
In the first game between the teams this season, Golden State defeated Memphis 119-69 on Nov. 2, the worst loss in franchise history
Despite a much better effort, it was still the fourth straight defeat for the reeling Grizzlies.
“I thought we played really, really hard,” Memphis coach Dave Joerger said. “I thought we battled. I thought we believed we could win. I still believe we can win, and we will down the line if we keep playing this hard.”
In other results, Charlotte nipped New York, 95-93; the Orlando Magic edged the Los Angeles Lakers, 101-99; Toronto rebounded from a pair of setbacks with a 119-103 rout of Philadelphia; Indiana toppled Boston, 102-91; Atlanta downed New Orleans, 106-98; Denver outlasted Milwaukee, 103-102; and Sacramento beat Detroit, 101-92.
Back in Memphis, Marc Gasol had 26 points, Zach Randolph added 19 and Tony Allen finished with 15 for the Grizzlies.
Memphis trailed by as many as 15 points in the first half, but fought its way back into the game by reverting to its offensive strength, going inside. Randolph scored 12 points in the third quarter, and Memphis got within 57-56.
But Curry, who connected on a 62-footer at the end of the third quarter in the deciding Game 6 of the conference semifinals between the teams last season, made a 40-footer as the horn sounded at the end of the third Wednesday night. That gave him 17 points in the period and the Warriors a 74-63 lead.
Memphis tried to stay close in the fourth, but consecutive 3-pointers from Thompson and Green stretched the Golden State lead back to 86-71 with 6:29 left.
That was the last gasp for Memphis, which lost to the Warriors for the sixth time in the last seven regular season games.
“We’re having a great year, and we don’t want to lose any time soon,” Thompson said.