Clippers @ Nets, Magic @ Spurs (!), Bucks @ Cavaliers (!!).
The Cavs/Bucks game was in Milwaukee, but yeah: one of the weirdest NBA nights in recent memory. If anything, I'd give the extra exclamation points to the Spurs, who were at home (now an inexplicable 4-4 at home, after going 40-1 there last season) and the Clips, who should have been motivated coming off two straight losses, and were facing a sorry, Lin-less Nets squad that had to play Isaiah Whitehead and Sean Kilpatrick — whoever they are — a combined 93 minutes.
So I guess with the dust cleared, it kinda looks like the current top team in the league is — shocker — the lovable losers from Oakland, with their early-season chemistry issues? 12 straight wins, 16-2 overall, 156-26 in the Kerr era (187-40 including playoffs), with now 104 straight regular season games played without as many two straight losses. When you consider the grueling NBA schedule, with all the B2B games and cross-country flights (something Jaylen Brown recently said was an unexpectedly rough part of the NBA, physically; and something the Warriors have done more of in terms of miles traveled than any other NBA team in each of the last two seasons), going 104 straight games without dropping two in a row is fairly insane.
Then again, so is 156-26. That's like putting up a killer 56-26 season (which would have thrilled me as a Ws fan when Kerr took over, and been the second-highest win total in the 70-year history of the Warriors franchise) ... and then going out and winning 100 straight.