Game Recap: It wasn’t the final score that lingered. It was the sideline clip.
The Golden State Warriors coughed it up nine times in the second quarter against the New York Knicks, a sloppy stretch that flipped the night. Dead balls. Bad reads. One possession in particular an errant outlet from Brandin Podziemski that skipped past rookie Will Richard set off Steve Kerr on the sideline.
He lit into the kid. Cameras caught it. Loop, replay, debate.
But the tape told a different story later. And Kerr, 600 wins deep into this thing, circled back.
Fast.
The Sideline Moment That Blew Up
Why did Kerr snap?
Because it looked ugly. And it was.
Turnovers piling up. Rhythm gone. Bench quiet. You could feel the air leave the Warriors’ offense. Kerr saw Richard near the play, saw the ball sail, and that was enough in real time.
“I’m pissed,” Kerr said later. “We had nine turnovers in that quarter.”
He didn’t hide from it either. Said it straight rookies catch more heat. That’s the league. That’s the job.
And yeah, he barked.
The Film Didn’t Lie
Kerr had the wrong guy
Here’s the part that matters.
Richard wasn’t freelancing. He wasn’t trying to get cute with a behind-the-back. He was scrambling, trying to save a bad pass from going out. The mistake? Podziemski’s throw. Not the rookie’s hands.
Kerr saw it that night.
“Immediately embarrassed,” he said.
That’s not coach-speak. That’s a guy watching the clip back and realizing he cooked the wrong player on national TV.
Accountability, Warriors Style
So what did Kerr do about it?
He didn’t pull Richard aside quietly and move on. Didn’t bury it.
He brought it to the room.
Rolled the film. Let it play. Let the guys see it.
Then came the line.
“What kind of idiot coach would blame that guy for that turnover?”
Room cracked up. Even Stephen Curry probably had a grin. Draymond Green too you know he loves that stuff.
Kerr owned it, out loud, in front of everybody.
“My fault,” he said. “That was not Will’s fault.”
And just like that, it’s over.
Why This Stuff Matters
Can a moment like this ripple through the locker room?
Yeah. Or it can fester if you handle it wrong.
This is a veteran locker room. Rings on rings. Golden State Warriors don’t survive a decade run by ducking stuff like that.
Kerr’s whole deal since 2014, no prior coaching gigs, just walked in and started stacking banners has been relationships. Not just X’s and O’s. Not just split actions and motion offense.
Trust.
From Curry to the last guy on a two-way, everybody’s got to feel it’s real.
And look, yelling at a rookie? That happens every night across the league. But walking it back, publicly, flipping yourself into the punchline? That’s different.
That lands.
The Rookie Angle
How does Will Richard respond?
Probably the best-case scenario.
He gets coached hard welcome to the NBA. Then the coach stands up for him the next day, in front of vets, film room, whole operation.
That’s how you keep a young guard from getting in his own head. That’s how you build a guy who’ll make the next play instead of flinching.
And on a team trying to squeeze another run out of this core, they need those margins. Young legs. Clean possessions. Fewer second-quarter meltdowns like that Knicks game.
Big Picture
Kerr hit 600 wins. Four titles. Dynasty stuff.
But this? This is the grind part. The human part.
Mess up. Own it. Keep it moving.
Even if it means calling yourself an idiot in front of the whole room.