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Warriors Coach Don Nelson said he is approaching tonight's game against Lietuvos Rytas at Oracle Arena like a dress rehearsal for the season opener Oct. 29. Then, reluctantly, he named his lineup for tonight, the final exhibition.
Stephen Jackson will start at shooting guard, Corey Maggette at small forward, Al Harrington at power forward and Andris Biedrins at center.
And, at point guard, DeMarcus Nelson.
Not Marcus Williams, the former understudy of NBA star Jason Kidd. Not C.J. Watson, the returning backup who knows, and fits, the system best. If the season started today, Don Nelson said he would go with the undrafted rookie, the training-camp invitee who wasn't even the point guard at Duke.
"That says a lot about DeMarcus," Jackson said after Monday's practice. "That says a lot about his work ethic and not about how Williams has been playing. Coach knows exactly what he wants and what he needs for this team while Monta (Ellis) is out. Right now, it looks like DeMarcus is what he's looking for."
But, Don Nelson said, it does say something about Williams. It perhaps also illustrates the team's uncertainty at the position since losing Baron Davis via free agency.
The Warriors signed Williams in July to back up Ellis, who was anointed Davis' successor. When Ellis was knocked out of action by an ankle injury, Williams was expected to step in as the starter. Having been a star at Connecticut and a first-round draft pick by the New Jersey Nets in 2006, he had the most credentials of any point guard on the roster.
But just over a week before the season opener, he hasn't impressed Nelson enough to win the job.
"I expected more," Nelson said. "We haven't seen it yet. It's getting late."
Williams said he has been hesitant and the offense was "a lot more complicated" than he expected. Now that he's gaining comfort with the offense, Williams has been more vocal and aggressive. Nelson said Monday's practice — in which Williams flashed his passing ability, created his own shot, even posted up — was his best yet.
"I think I definitely can be doing better," said Williams, who in four exhibitions has made just 4 of 14 shots. "I'm trying to find my way more so, and it's taking longer than I would've expected. If I'm not (the starter), that would be my fault."
Watson figured to be the starter if Williams didn't claim the job. He said he likes the progress he has made. He gained experience in Nelson's system last season, and he's the quickest of the three point guards. But Watson acknowledged committing too many turnovers. Also, his shot hasn't been falling (he's 1 for 6 from three-point range).
Plus, there's that other obstacle Watson has to overcome, being 6-foot-2, 175 pounds. Nelson likes big point guards.
"I'm trying to be aggressive at all times," Watson said. "Trying to get to the paint and make something happen for teammates."
The shortcomings of Williams and Watson have created an opening for DeMarcus Nelson, and he has capitalized.
By most accounts, his point-guard skills aren't as good as Williams', and he isn't an up-tempo scoring point guard like Watson. But, at 6-foot-4, 200 pounds, he is physically superior. Most important, he is a stout defender, as one might expect from the 2008 Atlantic Coast Conference defensive player of the year.
"It's been a dream come true, me getting the opportunity to play here," Nelson said. "There's no pressure on me. I'm a rookie coming in. I have a lot of scorers. My job is to get the ball to those guys in scoring situations and then do the rest of the things on the court I do playing defense, rebounding and making the hustle plays."