Golden State Warriors Redux
Having abandoned the Griffin Lives! Dynasty, I wanted to start again with something fresh. My first attempt to start fresh ended when the program would crash after five seasons. With that in mind, I took out all of the patches that had been keeping my rosters up to date and was left with the 2006-2007 Warriors, pre-Monta's ascent. What I was left with was the Murphleavy era. For those of you unfamiliar with the Warriors suffering, the Warriors grossly overpaid two serviceable forwards, thus vilifying them and leading the team into a financial swamp. Though the content may be slow to get here, my basic premise is that the "We Believe" season never happened, and the Warriors are still on the outside of the playoffs, looking in. Until rookies start coming along, I will only play games against the Dallas Mavericks (a team Warriors fans love to hate, as much as Dirk seems like a great guy) or games in the playoffs.
Game: NBA Live 07 (PC)
Difficulty Superstar
Sim Quarters 12 minutes
Player Controlled Quarters 12 minutes
Input : Custom keyboard settings.
That being said, enter Murphleavy Redux!

The Starters
Adonal Foyle - C - Canouan, St. Vincent 6-10 265NBA Experience: Golden State Warriors (9 years)
Pre-NBA Experience: Colgate University
Troy Murphy - PF/C - Morristown, New Jersey 6-11 245NBA Experience: Golden State Warriors (5 years)
Pre-NBA Experience: Notre Dame University
Michael “Mike” Dunleavy, Jr. -SF- Fort Worth, Texas 6-9 230NBA Experience: Golden State Warriors (4 years)
Pre-NBA Experience: Duke University
Jason Richardson -SG- Flint, Michigan 6-5 210NBA Experience: Golden State Warriors (5 years)
Pre-NBA Experience: Michigan State University
Baron Davis - PG- Los Angeles, California 6-3 215NBA Experience: Charlotte / New Orleans Hornets (6 seasons), Golden State Warriors (1 season)
Pre-NBA Experience: University of California at Los Angeles
The Bench
Andris Biedrins - PF/C - Riga, Latvia 6-11 240NBA Experience: Golden State Warriors (2 years)
Pre-NBA Experience: BK Skonto Riga (Latvia)
Patrick O’Bryant - C - Oskaloosa, Iowa 7-0 250NBA Experience: Rookie year
Pre-NBA Experience: Bradley University
Zarko Cabarkapa - SF/PF - Zrenjanin, Serbia 6-11 235NBA Experience: Golden State Warriors (1 year); Phoenix Suns (2 years)
Pre-NBA Experience: Beopetrol Belgrade (3 years); Budo_nost Podgorica (2 years)
Ikechukwu “Ike” Diogu - PF- Buffalo, New York 6-9 250NBA Experience: Golden State Warriors (1 year)
Pre-NBA Experience: Arizona State University
NBA Experience: Golden State Warriors (1 year)
Pre-NBA Experience: University of Pittsburgh
Mickaël Piétrus -SG/SF- Les Abymes, Guadaloupe 6-6 215NBA Experience: Golden State Warriors (3 years)
Pre-NBA Experience: Élan Béarnais Pau-Orthez (4 years)
Devin Brown -SG/SF- Salt Lake City, Utah 6-5 210NBA Experience: San Antonio Spurs (3 years), Fayetteville Patriots (D-League, 1 year), Denver Nuggets (1 year), Utah Jazz (1 year)
Pre-NBA Experience: University of Texas – San Antonio; Kansas City Cagerz (USBL, 1 year)
Andre Owens -PG/SG- Indianapolis, Indiana 6-4 NBA Experience: Utah Jazz (1 year)
Pre-NBA Experience: Indiana University; University of Houston
Monta Ellis -PG/SG- Jackson, Mississippi 6-3 180NBA Experience: Golden State Warriors (1 year)
Pre-NBA Experience: Lanier High School (Jackson, Mississippi)
Keith McLeod - PG/SG - Canton, Ohio 6-2 188NBA Experience: Minnesota Timberwolves (1 year), Utah Jazz (2 years)
Pre-NBA Experience: Saint Joseph Express (USBL, 1 year), Basket Livorno (Italian Lega A, 1 year), Yakima Sun Kings (CBA, 1 year), Lottomatica Virtus Roma (1 year)
The Coach
Don Nelson, 1st year in his second stint with the Warriors.


“Of course we’ll give Kleiza a look,” Nelson said, “We wouldn’t have taken him if we didn’t want him, you dumb bastard. We know he can shoot, so we’ll have to figure out what else he can do for us.”

Nikoloz Tskitishvili -SF/PF- Tbilisi, Georgia 7-0 245










Amare Stoudemire 27.2 points, 10.1 rebounds, 2.45 blocks, 1.57 steals
Chris Bosh, 27.4 points, 12.4 rebounds, 2.00 blocks, 1.40 steals
Rashad McCants 20.0 points, 3.4 rebounds, 3.3 assists, .10 blocks, 1.22 steals
Adam Morrison 17.3 points, 3.6 rebounds, 2.1 assists, .43 blocks, .85 steals
Dirk Nowitzki 26.8 points, 9.7 rebounds
Dwayne Wade 26 points, 5.6 assists
Allen Iverson 25 points, 6.8 assists (tied for second in the league)
New Orleans 89, Golden State 86
Boston 84, Golden State 83
Sacramento 108, Golden State 105
Brandon Roy 17.7 points, 4.4 rebounds, 3.7 assists, .30 blocks, 1.04 steals


“For the next few games,” Nelson said. “We’re going to have Murphy start at the five, and platoon Nene in with Biedrins to give us a different look. Nene can be our rebounder, while Biedrins works the high post and the point center. It’ll help for Nene to get a couple different looks, and Horse (Murphy) and Beans (Biedrins) are the best we’ve got at that role.
“Fitting in with a team is a lot like breaking in a new car. It takes a while to know how you’ll both perform,” the big Brazilian said.
New Orleans 100, Golden State 93
NEW ORLEANS – Frustration and drama started the New Year, and ended another road game for the Warriors. Peja Stojakovic scored twenty-seven, and the Warriors shot merely 0-for-13 from the three point line as the Hornets downed the Warriors With new designated “Point Center” Troy Murphy on the bench, nursing an injured arm, the Warriors saw big minutes and big numbers from Andris Biedrins, whose fourteen rebounds and four blocked shots led both teams in both categories.
MEMPHIS—The Warriors added one in the win column and one in the loss column, as Warriors season leading scorer, Baron Davis, went down to injury late in the third quarter. Davis, who tacked on eighteen before going down with a leg injury, helped the Warriors win only the third of the past ten games, as the Warriors squeaked past Memphis, 104-to-100.
Jason Richardson had 27 for the Warriors. Mike Miller had 33 and Pau Gasol had 23 for the Grizzlies.
OAKLAND—Seattle is rarely the salve that heals all wounds, and this game was no exception. With Baron Davis sidelined for the next three weeks, Andre Owens got the start in his place. Owens was merely a side-note, as the real game was between forwards Mike Dunleavy (GSW, 28 points) and Rashard Lewis (SEA, 31 points).
PHOENIX – The tandem of Steve Nash and Amare Stoudemire could have been playing with three players cut from O’Dowd’s JV team and still have come out on top. Nash had 34, Stoudemire had 27, and the Warriors defense looked overwhelmed as the Suns downed the Warriors, 107-to-98. Jason Richardson had 30 in defeat.
Miami 98, Golden State 90
Golden State 102, Los Angeles Clippers 87
LOS ANGELES – Same two teams, different arena, same result. Dunleavy’s 27 led the Warriors, Brand’s 33 led the Clippers. Brand also had five blocks in defeat.
Golden State 90, Cleveland 87
OAKLAND – King James and the Cavaliers came to town. With big man Zydrunas Ilgauskas missing in action, the Warriors tandem of Troy Murphy and Nene scored eighteen points apiece to lead Golden State past Cleveland. Mickael Pietrus, getting the nod over Dunleavy for the start, could not hold LeBron James in check, as LeBron’s 34 doubled his season average!
Los Angeles Lakers 114, Golden State 104.
LOS ANGELES – The Lakers put a stop to the Warriors three-game winning streak, and the supporting cast catapulted Kobe Bryant and his team past the Warriors at Staples Center. Lamar Odom had 30, Kwame Brown had 20, and Derek Fisher had 17 to lead the way for the Lakers. Kobe’s 14 and 8 assists were also worth mention. The Warriors leading scorer, Mike Dunleavy, had 28.
Golden State 103, New Jersey 100
OAKLAND – Vince Carter had 22, and Jason Kidd was one assist shy of a triple double, but the Warriors six scorers in double figures helped perplex the Nets. The Warriors have won four-of-five to move to 17-and-26.
Golden State 115, Charlotte 87
Atlanta 92, Golden State 86
ATLANTA – A narrow loss at Atlanta closes out the month with the harbinger of good news on the horizon. Joe Johnson and Josh Childress each scored 23 to counter the Murphleavy duo (Murphy 19, Dunleavy 17) as the Hawks scraped past the Warriors.
At the end of the game, it was announced that Baron Davis would be joining the Warriors for their next game, on the road at Philadelphia.
Golden State 103, Indiana 87
Golden State 100, Minnesota 90
Chicago 104, Golden State 101
Golden State 113, Denver 110 {OT}
The game also saw Carmelo Anthony score 49 points in defeat. The big win for the Warriors comes in a timely fashion, as the Warriors seek to become relevant in the playoff picture.
Golden State 110, New York 103
Andrew Bogut – In his second year, Bogut is averaging a respectable 12 points and 8 rebounds per game. The Bucks have recently acquired Ray Allen, so he’s the starting center on a likely-playoff team.
Marvin Williams – Averaging a middling 11 points per game and 4 rebounds. Live 2007 seriously underestimated the star power of Marvin Williams and Josh Smith, who is similarly middling, each of them averaging starters’ minutes.
Hakim Warrick – Warrick is averaging eight points per game, and four rebounds for the Grizzlies. Let’s face it, this was a weak draft for guys over 6’7”.
Deron Williams – Averaging fifteen points per game and a healthy five assists for the Jazz. If only the Jazz weren’t in the cellar in the West.
Chris Paul – averaging sixteen points and four assists at the All-Star break. The Hornets aren’t winning, but I bet they would if he was getting the numbers he earned in real life in 2006-2007.
Channing Frye – 15 points and 6 rebounds for the Knicks? Wow, I’m sure they would’ve kept him if he was regularly putting up those numbers.
Charlie Villanueva – In the trade of all trades, the Bucks got rid of Villanueva and received Ray Allen from Seattle in return. He’s averaging 11 points per game, while Ray Allen is averaging All-Star numbers.
Patrick O’Bryant – traded to the Nuggets, O’Bryant is averaging 14.3 points and 10 rebounds. After looking at Nenê’s numbers, it looks like I made the wrong call here!
LaMarcus Aldridge – Zach Randolph was one of the first trades of the year, as New Jersey sent Richard Jefferson back in return. After being thrust from the bench to the limelight, Aldridge is averaging 16 points and 10 rebounds per game, Aldridge is making a case for Rookie of the Year.
Randy Foye – If only the Timberwolves got these stats out of their backcourt at this point. Foye is averaging a respectable 15 points, five boards, and five assists as the lead guard for the Wolves. 33 points from Foye and McCants on a nightly basis? I’d take that!
Andrea Bargnani – averaging ten points per game for the Raptors as a center. However, his four rebounds per game are quite pathetic. Good thing Bosh is having a monster year.
Tyrus Thomas – Eight points and eight rebounds would have been enough to keep Tyrus Thomas in Chicago in real life. However, his rebounding numbers never approached this in real life.
Rodney Carney – Considering how little burn the bench gets in NBA Live, five points per game is a fairly healthy total. He’s sitting behind Andre Iguodala, who’s averaging a respectable fifteen points per game, on a team that is leading the East, and has Allen Iverson and Chris Webber coexisting and healthy. Wow, so much for realism!
All Star Game
Yao Ming – The Chinese giant is averaging 22 and 10 for a play-off bound team. The Texas big-three are alive and well.
Kevin Garnett – KG is averaging nearly twenty and nearly thirteen. How on earth is his team so bad?
Andrei Kirilenko – AK47 is a defensive beast.
Kobe Bryant – Kobe’s numbers are down from real life, but his team is in the hunt for the playoffs. Amazing to think that this team is the team without Pau and Artest, and before Bynum became hot sh*t.
Shawn Marion – Marion is in the driver’s seat as Phoenix is the hottest team in the league.
Tracy McGrady – T-Mac gives the Rockets two twenty points per game scorers. This is certainly odd in the NBA Live world.
Tim Duncan Duncan averaging a respectable 20 and 10, again.
Richard Jefferson – It’s strange, and strangely appropriate to see RJ in a Blazers’ uniform. He’s averaging close to twenty points per game.
Jason Terry – Terry gives the Mavericks two 20 ppg scorers and the lead in the Texas trio
Shaquille O’Neal – Shaq is back, and the Heat are primed to win the East with forty wins to twelve losses.
Gilbert Arenas – Agent Zero is averaging a mild twenty points per game, good for the All-Star team, even though AI is averaging 24 and six, and is on the bench. Go Computer logic go!
Chris Webber – C-Webb is averaging eighteen points per game and the Sixers are in the playoffs. In contrast to reality, in which Webber had the most pronounced downturn of his career to that point. Webber has been injury free, to boot.
Jason Kidd – 17 and 8 and doubling up with Vince Carter to make the Nets… irrelevant.
Ray Allen – 21 points per game in a glut of twenty point per game scorers. Allen is a Buck again in the steal of the Century.
Dwight Howard – 18 and 12, and Orlando is not quite good enough for playoff contention.
Rasheed Wallace – The Pistons are in the hunt, but don’t figure to be contending for the crown.
