Yaxel Lendeborg didn’t wait long to make his presence felt on Sunday.
After grading his summer league debut as a modest “B” and singling out his own defense as the weak spot, the Warriors’ recent first-round pick came out with a far sharper edge in Golden State’s 98-69 win over San Antonio in the California Classic at Chase Center. Early in the game, Lendeborg teamed with Will Richard to shut down a Spurs attempt at the rim, then cleaned up a broken defensive sequence by Graham Ike with a block of Miles Kelly’s shot from seven feet.
“I thought, defensively, he did a really good job with his rotations, he was early and proactive, and that’s something we’ve talked to him about,” coach Khalid Robinson said.
That kind of versatility is going to matter for Lendeborg once the games count. The Warriors will likely lean on him to guard more than one position, and those early stops were a good sign.
Still, the rookie inconsistency showed up too. After going 6 for 6 from the field and hitting all four of his free throws in Friday’s opener, Lendeborg opened Sunday 0 for 4 and missed both foul shots in the first half.
He settled in after halftime. Lendeborg knocked down a 3-pointer, then pushed the break with Richard and finished at the rim for a quick five-point burst. He ended with 11 points, eight rebounds and two assists in 24 minutes.
Lachlan Olbrich, a second-year bigman, added 13 points, while Chance McMillian scored 12. McMillian, a Vallejo native, kept his comments simple after the game: “I just want to play,” McMillian, a Vallejo native, said. “Every time I step in this building, I’m just happy to see everything.”
Richard, meanwhile, went back to the kind of work that helped him earn minutes with the regular Warriors. He wasn’t hunting shots so much as doing the little things - diving for loose balls, boxing out, taking on whoever Steve Kerr asked him to guard and making the occasional basket.
After taking on a bigger scoring load in the first summer league game, he returned to a more familiar role and attempted just eight shots, making three. His focus was on defense, passing and rebounding.
Deivon Smith also made his case on the floor. The Warriors point guard, a six-footer from Georgia who played for Santa Cruz last season, entered the day with a reputation for playmaking after averaging 5.4 assists per game. Against San Antonio, he showed the same feel with four assists, six rebounds and 12 points, using his handle and burst to get where he wanted before finding teammates.
Lajae Jones had the most noticeable bounce-back of the group. The Warriors’ second-round pick looked tentative in Friday’s summer league debut against the Lakers, but Sunday brought a different energy.
Midway through the first quarter, he ran the lane on a fastbreak and rose for a Chance McMillian pass, catching it with his right hand and throwing down a forceful dunk. In the second quarter, he flashed the same athleticism on defense by sending Ja’Kobi Gillespie’s shot into the fifth row.
The offense was still rough around the edges, dunk included, but Jones showed enough to make the tools obvious. He finished with six points, four rebounds and three assists.
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