Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr inserted veteran Kevon Looney into the team's starting lineup in place of rookie center James Wiseman for Monday night's 130-108 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves in San Francisco.
Speaking before the game, Kerr said he hoped the move would improve the unit's struggling defense.
"Basically, you guys have heard me all year trying to establish ourselves as a defensive team, and the last two games have been really disappointing defensively, particularly right out of the gate, first quarter," Kerr said. "We gave up 41 to the Knicks, I think, and 38 to Utah. So, I'm going to go with my veteran center, my veteran group together. That group happens to be our best defensive five on the season, that combination. So, the hope is we can get off to a better start."
The early returns for the Warriors were good. Despite only scoring two points, Looney ended the game a plus-21 in 19 minutes.
Kerr hinted at lineup changes after the Warriors' blowout loss to the Jazz on Saturday, saying at the time that "we have to assess everything as a staff." Veteran swingman Kelly Oubre Jr. has struggled throughout the season, shooting just 20.2% from beyond the arc, but Kerr decided to take out Wiseman, the 19-year-old who also has struggled with consistency on both ends of the floor.
The Warriors' regular starting five -- which consisted of Stephen Curry, Andrew Wiggins, Oubre, Draymond Green and Wiseman -- entered Monday with the worst net rating in the league (minus-20.3) among lineups that have logged at least 100 minutes this season, according to NBA Advanced Stats.
While the unit has struggled on both sides of the ball, Kerr reiterated that his focus is on the defensive end.
"[We] continue to try to pound home the identity to this group that we have to be a defensive-minded team if we're going to be any good," Kerr said. "So, I'm mindful of all the talk and lots of suggestions and everybody wants to weigh in. 'Do we need this? Do we need that? Do we need to put more shooting around people?'
"I'm well aware of all that chatter, but I will continue to return to the theme that I've tried to hammer home from day one: We've got to be good defensively, and we've not been good the last couple games, so this is a subtle change, we'll see if it makes a difference."
Looney, 24, has long been a Kerr favorite for his steady play, but he has dealt with a variety of health issues for over a year, and the Warriors have been cautious about his workload. Kerr said that Wiseman will now take Looney's spot in the rotation with the second unit, coming in around the middle of the first quarter.
Kerr said Wiseman handled the benching "perfectly" when he told the rookie about the move earlier Monday. The rookie finished with 13 points, four rebounds and two blocks in 16 minutes in the win.
"He understands this is not a demotion by any means. It's simply a part of his development," Kerr said. "And as I've said to you guys many times, we've got a lot of moving parts. We're trying to develop young players and be a playoff team, be a contender, and we're trying to do all that at once.
"And so part of that process is going to include occasional changes to lineups, combinations, whatever that means, and I'm very confident that this ultimately will be a good part of James' development. He's still going to play, but it gives him a slightly different role, and a different way to look at the game, and it all goes forward."
Wiseman, the No. 2 overall pick in the 2020 NBA draft, is averaging 11.8 points and 6.1 rebounds in 21.4 minutes a game this season.
Looney is averaging 3.8 points and 3.7 rebounds in 14.1 minutes.