(Written For Blue Man Hoop)
With the Golden State Warriors ready to enter a potentially formative off-season, here is a chronological reflection on the Warriors’ recent free agent successes.
Speedy Claxton: 2003
Claxton played 46 games for the Warriors in the 2004-05 season before being traded along with Dale Davis to the New Orleans Hornets for Baron Davis. Claxton played 32.6 minutes per game, averaging 13.1 points and 6.2 assists per game. He was not a very efficient scorer, with an adjusted field goal percentage of 44.1 percent, but managed to attempt 5.1 free throw attempts per 36 minutes. While his production was decent, Claxton is significant as a key piece to Baron Davis trade.
Brian Cardinal: 2004
After being waived by the Washington Wizards the previous season, Cardinal signed a one year deal with the Warriors. In 76 games played, he average 21.5 minutes and 9.6 points per game. In his lone year with Golden State, The Custodian sure cleaned up. Cardinal lead the league in true shooting percentage at 62.6 percent, had a plus-20 rating differential, and recorded .212 win shares per 48 minutes, clearly indicative of the elite player we all know Cardinal was, not an insignificant role player.
Kelenna Azubuike: 2007
On January 2nd, 2007, the Warriors signed Azubuike, then playing for the Fort-Worth Developmental League team to his first professional contract. Azubuike went on to play 205 games over four seasons with the Warriors before being sent to New York in a trade for David Lee. Though his career was derailed by injuries, Azuibike gave the Warriors consistent defensive effort and perimeter athleticism, and embodied the reckless mentality that carried (or maybe complimented, you know, tangible things like matchups and defense) the Warriors to their upset of Dallas in the 2007 playoffs.
Corey Maggette: 2008
During the 2008 off-season, the Warriors blew up the “We Believe” core, letting Baron Davis sign with the Los Angeles Clippers, and signed Corey Maggette to a then-and-now ridiculous five year, 48 million dollar contract. He scored relatively efficiently in his two years with the Warriors but struggled with health issues. Maggette, often an example of the foolish contracts NBA teams “used to” give, was vilified for his poor effort and has become associated with many of the Warriors’ recent failures.
Dorell Wright: 2008
The summer before the 2010-11 season, Wright signed a 3 year, 10 million dollar contract with the Warriors. A decent defender and three point shooter, he played 38.4 minutes his first year as a Warrior, but fell out of favor with Mark Jackson towards the end of his second. More importantly, Wright was sent to the Philadelphia 76ers as part of the three-team trade through which the Warriors acquired Jarrett Jack.
Carl Landry: 2012
Before this season, Landry signed a two year, 8 million dollar contract with the Warriors. The second year is a player option Landry is expected to drop, allowing the reserve power forward to enter free agency. Landry served as an efficient scoring big man (True Shooting Percentage of 60.5 percent), was a decent rebounder, and was not fatally flawed defensively. Though he will likely depart this offseason, Landry was a key to the Warriors’ success.
Kent Bazemore: 2012
The Warriors signed Bazemore after he went undrafted in prior to the season. While Stephen Curry, David Lee, and others dominated on the court, Bazemore made his presence known from the bench. With Jarrett Jack’s returning next season in doubt and the Warriors flexibility limited, Bazemore may play a vital role on the team sooner than expected.