Warriors’ Damian Jones faces most pivotal month of NBA career

It doesn’t take a basketball savant to appreciate Damian Jones’ upside. At a chiseled 7-foot, 245 pounds, he boasts a 7-foot-3¾-inch wingspan and a 36-inch vertical leap.

The question with Jones long has been whether his intensity, focus and general feel for the game would catch up to his physical tools. For someone so agile, he often has looked awkward, like he is not yet comfortable in his frame.

The Warriors saw enough from Jones, 23, in the G League the past two seasons to make room for him in the rotation. Now, with little more than a week until Golden State’s season opener against Oklahoma City, he is facing the most pivotal month of his nascent career.

By Oct. 31, the front office must decide whether to pick up Jones’ $2.3 million option for next season or let him become an unrestricted free agent in July. It could be a tricky decision for a team already deep into the luxury tax. Though Jones’ potential is unquestioned, he needs to show he is ready to contribute on a nightly basis.

Last year, Kevon Looney became a valued rotation player after the front office didn’t pick up his fourth-year option, only for Golden State to bring him back in July on a one-year, minimum deal, thanks to a tepid market for free-agent big men.

To better evaluate Jones’ progress, head coach Steve Kerr has started Jones at center in each of the Warriors’ first two preseason games. In limited minutes, he has been a case study in extremes, oscillating between ineptitude and brilliance.

Perhaps no sequence better illustrated Jones’ Jekyll and Hyde nature than a 126-second span in the third quarter of Friday night’s win over the Kings in Seattle. Little more than two minutes after missing a wide-open layup, he set a screen for Kevin Durant along the three-point arc, rolled hard to the rim, jumped, fully extended his right arm back to snag a poor lob from Durant and threw it down for a dunk.

Teammates on Golden State’s bench laughed as they traded puzzled glances. Jones is raw enough to test Kerr’s patience, but gifted enough to warrant more opportunity as DeMarcus Cousins rehabs a torn left Achilles tendon.

“Had to make up for that missed layup,” a chuckling Jones said of his highlight-worthy slam.

Added Kerr: “That was incredible. What made it so stunning was that it looked like the pass was going over his head, and Damian just reached up and snagged it out of nowhere. That was probably the play of the night.”

The Warriors see Jones as the ideal replacement for JaVale McGee, who signed with the Lakers in July. Jones, like McGee, is adept at running the floor, blocking shots and hammering home alley-oops.

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