Jonas Jerebko not sweating early hiccups with Warriors

The veteran addition has spent his early mornings and days off reporting to the practice facility for more learning.|

OAKLAND - The Warriors' new arrival has not had much time recently to explore the Bay Area. Jonas Jerebko is too busy figuring out how to fit in with the Warriors.

The Warriors even had the day off on Wednesday. That mostly meant Jerebko had more time to learn. Following the Warriors' season-opening win over Oklahoma City on Tuesday, Warriors assistant coach Chris DeMarco asked Jerebko if he planned to go to the practice facility on Wednesday to resume their daily work with the team's younger players. Jerebko already planned to keep his day clear for it.

“We're still learning how to play with each other,” Jerebko said. “We got a couple of new guys trying to learn the plays.”

One of those new guys is Jerebko, whom the Warriors signed to a one-year, $2.1 million deal last summer after the Utah Jazz waived him both to save money and to carve out playing time for their younger players.

It sounds absurd to Jerebko about wanting a revenge game when the Warriors (1-0) play in Utah (1-0) Friday after spending only one season with the Jazz. “I don't really care about them anymore,” said Jerebko, though he said he still remains “good friends” with his former teammates.

Jerebko has other things to worry about regarding his second regular-season game with the Warriors. They acquired the 6-foot-10, 231- pound player believing he could add positional versatility at small and power forward as well as outside shooting. Through five exhibitions and a season opener, though, Jerebko has offered little of it.

Jerebko went scoreless and played only six minutes in Tuesday's win over the Thunder. He averaged 3.8 points on 31.8 percent shooting and 3.4 rebounds in only 14.8 minutes through five exhibition games. And though he prefers the Warriors' quick ball and player movement over his spot-up shooting role with the Jazz, he admittedly does not feel comfortable.

“You have to adapt to the new system,” Jerebko said. “It's not going to be in two weeks. It's going to take some time.”

Hence, Jerebko has spent his early mornings and days off reporting to the Warriors practice facility for more learning.

“I'm trying to be early and I'm trying to get the work in I can and run through the plays until they're in my backbone,” Jerebko said. “I'm going to keep doing that.”

Neither the Warriors nor Jerebko have expressed concern. He has played one regular-season game, after all. The Warriors also cited Jerebko's nine-year NBA career that included stops with the Detroit Pistons (2009-2015), Boston Celtics (2015-2017) and the Jazz last season.

During that stretch, Jerebko averaged 6.2 points, while shooting 45.7 percent from the field and 36.3 percent from 3-point range along with 4.0 rebounds.

As the Phoenix Suns' former general manager, Kerr became intrigued with Jerebko's size and versatility when he saw one of the Swedish native's pre-draft workouts in 2009. The Pistons then selected him at No. 39. Since then, Kerr attributed Jerebko's conservative playing time to fluid rotations and early hiccups as a small sample size.

“He's going to enjoy playing our style,” Kerr predicted. “He's capable of stepping out, making a 3 and making a play. He can bang inside with the big guys.”

Why is the Warriors' system difficult to learn? In Utah, Jerebko said he mostly stood in the corner behind the 3-point line. Draymond Green calls that concept a “cardinal sin” within the Warriors, who preach constant ball movement and spacing. The Warriors also observe role players often feel tentative taking open shots with Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant and Klay Thompson on the floor, even if they encourage them to shoot.

“We don't call a ton of plays. A lot of it is just reads,” Green said. “Figuring those reads out is like a wide receiver learning the audibles. You may figure the playbook out. Then all of a sudden Tom Brady audibles into something and you don't know what the hell he just audibled into. You can figure the plays out. But that's probably 25 percent of it. The other 75 percent of it is all the rambling stuff. That's the toughest part to figure out.”

Therefore, Jerebko has spent almost as much time learning from his younger teammates as they have learned about them.

He already has fit in ways that have not translated on the court. Jerebko and Curry went golfing during the team's recent preseason trip to Las Vegas (Jerebko said he needs to work on his golf game, too, against the more accomplished Curry). He also has enjoyed walks around Walnut Creek with his wife, two-year-old daughter and his dogs. Otherwise, Jerebko said he spent the rest of his time studying the playbook and working out in the gym in hopes to match the Warriors' championship standards.

“It's pretty easy when you got great players around you to get into the system,” Jerebko said. “I'm almost there. But I still got some time.”

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