Iceland pulls out of Eurovision 2026, joining four other countries to do so

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Væb, the 2025 Icelandic Eurovision entrant, performing Róa in Basel.
Image: Quejaytee.

On Wednesday, Iceland withdrew from the Eurovision Song Contest 2026, joining Spain, the Netherlands, Ireland, and Slovenia. Each of the five countries backed out of the contest due to European Broadcasting Union (EBU) confirming Israel’s participation in the 2026 edition.

In the days prior, after four countries withdrew from the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest, Iceland’s broadcaster RÚV deferred its decision on participation until a board meeting on Wednesday. Following the meeting, RÚV announced it would not participate. According to the BBC, the broadcaster’s board had previously approved a recommendation to ask the EBU to ban Israel from the 2026 contest, and Iceland was among seven countries that sought a vote on Israel’s participation at the EBU’s general meeting, a request the union declined.

The broadcaster cited domestic public debate and reactions to the EBU’s recent decision on Israel’s participation, stating: “Given the public debate in this country and the reactions to the decision of the EBU that was taken last week, it is clear that neither joy nor peace will prevail regarding the participation of RÚV in Eurovision.” RÚV added that Israel’s participation “created disunity among both members of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and the general public” and that “the Song Contest and Eurovision have always had the aim of uniting the Icelandic nation, but it is now clear that this aim cannot be achieved, and it is on these program-related grounds that this decision is taken.”

According to ABC News Australia and the BBC, EBU members last week approved changes to the contest’s voting rules in response to allegations that Israel manipulated the vote, but took no action to exclude any broadcaster. ABC News Australia also reported that seven countries, including Iceland, requested a vote on Israel’s participation, but the EBU declined to hold one.

The BBC also reported that Golan Yochpaz, chief executive of Israel’s public broadcaster KAN, criticized the effort to remove Israel from the contest, describing it as a “cultural boycott” and warning that “a boycott may begin today with Israel, but no one knows where it will end or who else it may harm.” He questioned whether this was how the contest should be remembered on its 70th anniversary. Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar criticized the countries withdrawing from the contest, saying on X that “the disgrace is upon them.”

Also on Wednesday, Poland announced it would remain in the contest, stating that “Eurovision still has a chance to once again become a space filled with music — and only music,” and adding that “we, like the overwhelming majority of EBU members, offer this opportunity.”

ABC News Australia noted that Iceland, which has never won the contest, has the highest per-capita Eurovision viewing audience of any participating country.


[edit]

Sources

[edit]

  • Iceland becomes fifth country to boycott Eurovision Song Contest over Israel — France24, December 11, 2025
  • Jennifer Shahin. Eurovision chaos intensifies as Iceland becomes fifth nation to back out of contest over Israel’s participation — Sky News, December 11, 2025
  • Iceland becomes fifth country to boycott Eurovision 2026 over Israeli participation — ABC News (Australia), December 11, 2025
  • Mark Savage and Ian Youngs. Iceland becomes fifth country to boycott Eurovision — BBC, December 10, 2025
  • Allen Cone. Iceland becomes 5th nation to boycott Eurovision over Israel inclusion — UPI, December 10, 2025
  • Olivia Le Poidevin, Klaus Lauer, Johnny Cotton, Cecile Mantovani. Israel cleared to stay in Eurovision; Spain, Ireland and others quit in protest — Reuters, December 5, 2025


  Share this article












Share on Mastodon


Shaikin: What the Dodgers are doing isn’t normal in pro sports. Be sure to appreciate it

Dodgers players celebrate after winning Game 7 of the World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays on Nov. 1. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Step into the Dodgers’ team store, turn to the right, and you’ll be staring at Shohei Ohtani.

Not in person, of course. But amid all the jerseys and caps and T-shirts, there is a commercial playing on a loop, with Ohtani waving his fingers through his hair and winking as he displays the product he is endorsing: the top-selling skin serum in Japan.

“Take care of your skin,” the narrator says. “Live life to the fullest.”

Life is good at Dodger Stadium. In the store at the top of the park, you can buy a bottle of skin serum that retails for $118, or World Series championship gear including T-shirts and caps for $54 and up, hoodies for $110 and up, and cool jackets for as much as $382.

If you’re a fan of any team besides the Dodgers, you might despise all the money they spend on players. On Friday after the Dodgers introduced their latest All-Star, closer Edwin Díaz, I asked general manager Brandon Gomes if they really could buy whatever player they wanted.

Read more:How the Dodgers landed Edwin Díaz — and finally found a bona fide closer

“Our ownership group has been incredibly supportive, so if we feel like it’s something that meaningfully impacts our World Series chances, we’ve had that support all the time,” he said. “We’re fortunate to be in that position.”

The Dodgers’ owners spend money to make money, and they wisely hired Andrew Friedman a decade ago to tell them where to spend their money. Sounds simple, but some owners do not spend money wisely, and some do not spend money, period.

And sometimes you do both, and it just does not work out.

In the last decade the Dodgers have made the playoffs every year. Take a guess: What other Los Angeles pro team has made the playoffs the most during the last decade?

It’s the Clippers — eight playoff appearances, no championships and now a disaster.

The Dodgers have won three championships over the last decade. You might not remember that the Dodgers’ owners were ridiculed within the industry for spending $2 billion to buy the team in 2012.

At the time I asked co-owner Todd Boehly how he would define successful ownership of the Dodgers.

“You’re not really asking me that, are you?” he said then. “The more World Series we win, the more valuable a franchise it is, right?”

The Dodgers were valued at $8 billion last year by Sportico.

They signed Díaz for three years and $69 million. I asked Gomes what winter signing he recalled as the biggest during the five years he pitched for the Tampa Bay Rays.

Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman, left, and Dodgers general manager Brandon Gomes welcome star closer Edwin Díaz during his introductory news conference Friday. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

In 2014, he said, the Rays signed closer Grant Balfour: two years and $12 million — after the Baltimore Orioles withdrew a two-year, $15-million deal following a physical examination.

It’s not just the Rays, or even the small markets. The New York Mets’ spending rivaled the Dodgers last season, but the Mets missed the playoffs and lost free agents Díaz, Pete Alonso and Tyler Rogers this week alone. The New York Yankees sound oddly supportive of a salary cap. The Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs talk like big-market teams but do not spend like them.

At the Angels’ team store Friday morning, five customers looked around the team store, where all jerseys sold for 50% off. The attraction at the store Saturday: photos with Santa.

The Angels have not made a postseason appearance since 2014, and their acquisitions so far this offseason: a formerly touted infield prospect once traded for Chris Sale, a talented young pitcher who missed this past season because of injury and another pitcher who finished third in Cy Young voting in 2022 but has not pitched in the majors in more than 18 months. They’ll likely pay those three players less than $4 million combined.

In March, Anaheim Mayor Ashleigh Aitken invited Angels owner Arte Moreno to join her in “an open and honest conversation about the future of baseball in Anaheim.”

This week when the future of the Angel Stadium site came up during an Anaheim City Council meeting, Aitken mused about asking city residents “how much of a priority is it to have the land tied up with a baseball franchise,” Voice of OC reported. (The Angels’ stadium lease extends through 2032, and the Angels have the right to extend it through 2038.)

So consider this a timely holiday reminder for Dodgers fans to give thanks for this ownership group, for what the Dodgers are doing now is exceptional and extremely rare.

Read more:Free tickets vs. 34% raise: Dodger Stadium tour guides contentious divide colors union vote

It would be nice if the Dodgers made more of a commitment to family affordability — and also if the Dodgers did not charge $102.25 for “an iconic photo op with the 2024 and 2025 World Series trophies” — but their attendance nonetheless hit 4 million for the first time.

This is a Dodger town, and the team is the toast of the town. The Dodgers are the biggest winner in American pro sports right now.

The owners are winners too. On Thursday, Boehly’s company staged its holiday party, and the musicians included Eddie Vedder, Bruno Mars, Anthony Kiedis, Brandi Carlile and Slash. Live life to the fullest, indeed.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Oklahoma City Thunder vs. San Antonio Spurs: How to watch the 2025 NBA Cup semifinal

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Oklahoma City Thunder head to Las Vegas, where they’ll face the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA Cup semifinals. (William Purnell/Getty Images)
William Purnell via Getty Images

The Emirates NBA Cup in-season basketball tournament has been an NBA staple for two seasons now, and the previous two winners, the Los Angeles Lakers and the Milwaukee Bucks, have been shut out. That means we’ll see a first-time winner in next week’s Championship final. This Saturday’s semifinals feature an afternoon Eastern conference matchup between the New York Knicks vs. Orlando Magic at 5:30 p.m. ET, followed by the Western conference semifinal between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the San Antonio Spurs at 9 p.m. ET. 

The Spurs picked up a 132-119 victory over the Lakers, the inaugural NBA Cup champs, to advance to the semis, while the Thunder posted their 16th straight win at Wednesday’s quarterfinal, blowing past the Phoenix Suns 138-89 to earn their spot. 

Today’s semifinals and the Championship Final on Tuesday, Dec. 16, will be held at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. You can catch all the NBA Cup action on Prime Video, which holds exclusive rights to the playoffs and Championship Final. Here’s what you need to know to tune in.

Date: Dec. 13, 2025

Time: 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT

Streaming: Prime Video

Tonight’s semifinal between the Thunder and the Spurs will stream exclusively on Prime Video at 9 p.m. ET.

You can catch the Thunder vs. Spurs, and every other playoff game including the Championship final, on Prime Video.

Below is a list of every remaining playoff game in the 2025 NBA Cup. 

All times Eastern

Saturday, Dec. 13

5:30 p.m.: East Semifinal, New York Knicks vs. Orlando Magic

9 p.m.: West Semifinal, OKC Thunder vs. San Antonio Spurs

Tuesday, Dec. 16

8:30 p.m.: Championship Final, Teams TBD

While many games in the group stage were televised on broadcast TV, the playoffs are streaming exclusively on Prime Video.

You can catch every playoff game as well as the Championship final on Prime Video.

Oklahoma City Thunder vs. San Antonio Spurs: How to watch the 2025 NBA Cup semifinal

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Oklahoma City Thunder head to Las Vegas, where they’ll face the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA Cup semifinals. (William Purnell/Getty Images)
William Purnell via Getty Images

The Emirates NBA Cup in-season basketball tournament has been an NBA staple for two seasons now, and the previous two winners, the Los Angeles Lakers and the Milwaukee Bucks, have been shut out. That means we’ll see a first-time winner in next week’s Championship final. This Saturday’s semifinals feature an afternoon Eastern conference matchup between the New York Knicks vs. Orlando Magic at 5:30 p.m. ET, followed by the Western conference semifinal between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the San Antonio Spurs at 9 p.m. ET. 

The Spurs picked up a 132-119 victory over the Lakers, the inaugural NBA Cup champs, to advance to the semis, while the Thunder posted their 16th straight win at Wednesday’s quarterfinal, blowing past the Phoenix Suns 138-89 to earn their spot. 

Today’s semifinals and the Championship Final on Tuesday, Dec. 16, will be held at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. You can catch all the NBA Cup action on Prime Video, which holds exclusive rights to the playoffs and Championship Final. Here’s what you need to know to tune in.

Date: Dec. 13, 2025

Time: 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT

Streaming: Prime Video

Tonight’s semifinal between the Thunder and the Spurs will stream exclusively on Prime Video at 9 p.m. ET.

You can catch the Thunder vs. Spurs, and every other playoff game including the Championship final, on Prime Video.

Below is a list of every remaining playoff game in the 2025 NBA Cup. 

All times Eastern

Saturday, Dec. 13

5:30 p.m.: East Semifinal, New York Knicks vs. Orlando Magic

9 p.m.: West Semifinal, OKC Thunder vs. San Antonio Spurs

Tuesday, Dec. 16

8:30 p.m.: Championship Final, Teams TBD

While many games in the group stage were televised on broadcast TV, the playoffs are streaming exclusively on Prime Video.

You can catch every playoff game as well as the Championship final on Prime Video.

New York Knicks vs. Orlando Magic: How to watch the 2025 NBA Cup semifinal

Jalen Brunson and the New York Knicks will face the Orlando Magic at the 2025 NBA Cup semifinals. (Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images)
IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / Reuters

The 2025 Emirates NBA Cup is down to its final four teams. The New York Knicks will take on the Orlando Magic in the Eastern conference semifinal this Saturday at 5:30 p.m. ET, and the Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs will meet for the Western conference semifinal at 9 p.m. ET. The winner of each semifinal will move on to the Championship final, with the players from the winning team taking home an extra $500,000. 

Today’s semifinals and the Championship Final on Tuesday, Dec. 16, will all be held at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. You can catch all the NBA Cup action on Prime Video, which holds exclusive rights to the playoffs and Championship Final. Here’s what you need to know to tune in.

Date: Dec. 13, 2025

Time: 5:30 p.m. ET/2:30 p.m. PT

Streaming: Prime Video

Today’s semifinal between the New York Knicks and the Orlando Magic will stream exclusively on Prime Video at 5:30 p.m. ET.

You can catch the Knicks vs. Magic, as well as the Championship final, on Prime Video.

Below is a list of every remaining playoff game in the 2025 NBA Cup. 

All times Eastern

Saturday, Dec. 13

5:30 p.m.: East Semifinal, New York Knicks vs. Orlando Magic

9 p.m.: West Semifinal, OKC Thunder vs. San Antonio Spurs

Tuesday, Dec. 16

8:30 p.m.: Championship Final, Teams TBD

While many games in the group stage were televised on broadcast TV, the playoffs stream exclusively on Prime Video.

You can catch every playoff game as well as the Championship final on Prime Video.

New York Knicks vs. Orlando Magic: How to watch the 2025 NBA Cup semifinal

Jalen Brunson and the New York Knicks will face the Orlando Magic at the 2025 NBA Cup semifinals. (Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images)
IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / Reuters

The 2025 Emirates NBA Cup is down to its final four teams. The New York Knicks will take on the Orlando Magic in the Eastern conference semifinal this Saturday at 5:30 p.m. ET, and the Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs will meet for the Western conference semifinal at 9 p.m. ET. The winner of each semifinal will move on to the Championship final, with the players from the winning team taking home an extra $500,000. 

Today’s semifinals and the Championship Final on Tuesday, Dec. 16, will all be held at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. You can catch all the NBA Cup action on Prime Video, which holds exclusive rights to the playoffs and Championship Final. Here’s what you need to know to tune in.

Date: Dec. 13, 2025

Time: 5:30 p.m. ET/2:30 p.m. PT

Streaming: Prime Video

Today’s semifinal between the New York Knicks and the Orlando Magic will stream exclusively on Prime Video at 5:30 p.m. ET.

You can catch the Knicks vs. Magic, as well as the Championship final, on Prime Video.

Below is a list of every remaining playoff game in the 2025 NBA Cup. 

All times Eastern

Saturday, Dec. 13

5:30 p.m.: East Semifinal, New York Knicks vs. Orlando Magic

9 p.m.: West Semifinal, OKC Thunder vs. San Antonio Spurs

Tuesday, Dec. 16

8:30 p.m.: Championship Final, Teams TBD

While many games in the group stage were televised on broadcast TV, the playoffs stream exclusively on Prime Video.

You can catch every playoff game as well as the Championship final on Prime Video.

As Sudan burns, the NBA’s embrace of the UAE shows how sport enables atrocity

VJ Edgecombe of the Philadelphia 76ers runs out of the tunnel before his team’s game against the New York Knicks in Abu Dhabi in October.Photograph: Jesse D Garrabrant/NBAE/Getty Images

As paramilitary fighters from the brutal Rapid Support Forces (RSF) overran the largest city in western Sudan – carrying out mass executions, rapes and ethnic cleansing with weapons supplied by the United Arab Emirates – the NBA’s annual in-season tournament, the Emirates NBA Cup, tipped off on Halloween night, proudly sponsored by the very same Gulf state.

The tournament is the most visible example of the NBA’s expanding partnership with the UAE – a partnership that includes annual preseason games in Abu Dhabi, a lucrative sponsorship deal with Emirates airlines, and plans for a new NBA Global Academy at NYU’s Abu Dhabi campus.

Larger deals are expected to follow. The NBA is reportedly seeking Abu Dhabi’s investment in a new NBA-branded European league, which could launch as early as 2027.

This blossoming partnership has already paid dividends for both sides: the NBA has gained a deep-pocketed investor, while the UAE has found a willing partner to help further normalize its autocratic regime, especially now that it is facing accusations of inflaming genocide in Sudan.

For its part, the NBA says it is following advice from the US government on its relationship with the UAE.

“Basketball has a century-long history in the Middle East, and our activities in the UAE – which include bringing live NBA games to fans in the region and teaching the fundamentals and values of the game to thousands of boys and girls annually – are consistent with our efforts to engage fans and aspiring players in more than 200 countries and territories around the world,” a league spokesperson told the Guardian. “We will continue to rely on US state department guidance everywhere we operate.”

Beneath its image of opulence and modernity, the UAE enforces silence with an iron fist. Dissidents and human rights advocates languish in prisons on arbitrary charges, punished for daring to oppose the state. The nation’s economic prosperity rests on the backs of migrant laborers, who make up 88% of the workforce and who toil with few rights and little recourse against abuse.

The UAE’s influence extends into bloodier terrain beyond its borders. A growing body of evidence links the Emirati government to Sudan’s RSF, the paramilitary faction behind many of the atrocities and crimes against humanity being committed in Sudan.

Sudan’s civil war began in April 2023, when tensions between the Sudanese military (SAF), under army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the RSF paramilitary group, led by his former deputy chief Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, commonly known as Hemedti, plunged the country into a state of all out war. Urban centers such as the capital Khartoum were transformed into battlefields, destroying critical infrastructure and creating the world’s largest displacement crisis.

As the civil war approaches its third year, death toll estimates vary widely. The United Nations and other aid agencies have recorded 20,000 confirmed deaths. A more recent report by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine’s Sudan Research Group claimed that more than 61,000 people have died in Khartoum state,26,000 as a direct result of the violence. Meanwhile, former US special envoy for Sudan Tom Perriello claimed last year that up to 150,000 people had been killed.

The civil war has also been marked by horrific atrocities such as sexual violence, torture, mutilation and ethnic cleansing. This was further underscored when the Sudanese military’s last remaining stronghold in Darfur fell to the RSF recently. The militia embarked on a mass killing spree so severe that images of the blood saturating the ground could be seen from space.

Since the start of the conflict, the Emirates have helped fund and arm the paramilitary group, effectively sponsoring the group’s war crimes and atrocities. Sudan’s military government even brought a case to the International Court of Justice accusing the UAE of genocidal complicity in West Darfur. Despite substantial evidence to the contrary, the UAE continues to deny any role in the conflict, carrying on as though business were proceeding as usual.

In the past few months, the UAE has staged the Asia Cup in cricket, NBA preseason matchups, a Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) event, and Formula 1’s year-end race, which featured a performance by Katy Perry. Next come the Abu Dhabi HSBC golf championship and a major padel tournament. Outside of Grammy-award winning rapper Macklemore, who canceled his Dubai concert in protest last year, no other entity attempted to distance itself from the controversial Gulf state.

The UAE has reaped enormous benefits from the sports world’s apathy. Abu Dhabi’s investment in Manchester City FC was a masterstroke, recasting the Al Nahyan ruling family as savvy investors rather than ruthless autocrats. Its stake in cricket carries a diplomatic edge, given the sport’s popularity across South and Southeast Asia, the same regions that supply much of the UAE’s migrant labor force. Meanwhile, investments in artificial wave pools, tennis and motorsports have broadened its growing sports tourism strategy.

And yet, the ongoing massacre in Darfur seems to have garnered some rare bad publicity for the UAE. Some Manchester City fans have even condemned their owner for “his country’s role in the Sudan conflict, where civilians continue to suffer.”

The silence around the NBA’s new partnership with the UAE is concerning. One of the few to call out the NBA for normalizing the UAE’s role in Sudan is Refugees International, an NGO that advocates for the rights of displaced people. The Emirates NBA Cup COULD bring out the best in everyone. Instead, it’s being used to sportswash atrocities fueled + funded by the UAE in Sudan,” read the tweet. “The NBA shouldn’t let itself be a pawn in the UAE’s normalization of famine + genocide.”

Nevertheless, sports teams and organizations rarely sever lucrative partnerships without resistance. At FC Bayern Munich’s annual general assembly last week, lawyer and activist Michael Ott, who previously led a successful campaign to end Bayern’s sponsorship deal with Qatar Airways, was heckled by attendees after raising concerns about the club’s new agreement with the UAE’s Emirates Airlines.

Ott accused Bayern of “buttressing the image of sketchy political regimes that contradict our values” and warned that the deal with Emirates risked causing “lasting damage to the reputation of our club”. For his remarks, he was openly mocked by board chairman and CEO Jan-Christian Dreesen.

Despite ending previous sponsorship agreements with Qatar and Rwanda, the fact that Bayern Munich’s leadership refused to budge on its ties to the UAE further emphasizes how effective the Gulf state’s brand management and public relations strategies have been.

Don’t expect the NBA, which also maintains partnership with other autocrats like Rwanda’s Paul Kagame, is unlikely to speak out about the UAE’s human rights record … but imagine if they did. Imagine if genocide, war crimes and entrenched authoritarianism were red lines for global sports.

  • Karim Zidan writes a regular newsletter on the intersection of sports and authoritarian politics. He is also the Sports & Dictators fellow at the Human Rights Foundation.

Michael Porter Jr.’s fourth straight 30-point game not enough in Nets’ 119-111 loss to Mavericks

DALLAS (AP) — Anthony Davis scored 20 of his 24 points in the second half to go with 14 rebounds and three blocks, and Cooper Flagg had 22 points and eight assists as the Dallas Mavericks rallied to beat the Brooklyn Nets 119-111 on Friday night.

The Mavericks (10-16) have won five of their last six games and two straight at home for the first time this season. Naji Marshall scored 17 points.

Michael Porter Jr. had 34 to lead the Nets (6-18), who had won three of four following a 3-16 start. Porter has scored at least 30 points in four consecutive games for the first time in his seven-year NBA career.

Brooklyn rookie Danny Wolf added 17 points, 12 in the second half. Nic Claxton had 14 points and 10 rebounds.

The Mavericks outscored the Nets 66-44 in the paint despite Davis playing center instead of power forward with Dallas missing pivotmen Dereck Lively II and Daniel Gafford because of injuries.

The Nets shot a season-best 43.6% from behind the arc, hitting 17 of 39. Porter was 6 of 10 on 3-pointers.

The Mavericks outscored the Nets 29-19 in the fourth quarter, with Brooklyn shooting 28.6% in the period — including 2 of 9 from 3-point distance. With the score tied at 110 with three minutes left, Dallas’ Brandon Williams hit a second-chance 3 following Flagg’s rebound, and Davis followed with a floater following a turnover by Porter.

It was the Mavericks’ first game since Wednesday’s announcement that the oft-injured Lively will miss the remainder of the season following foot surgery. Gafford missed his third consecutive game because of a right ankle injury.

Up next

Nets: Host the Milwaukee Bucks on Sunday.

Mavericks: At the Utah Jazz on Monday.

Watch Stephen Curry celebrate return with ridiculous length-of-court tunnel shot

We’re running out of adjectives to describe Stephen Curry’s shots.

Case in point: Check out Curry’s from the tunnel, length-of-the-court pregame heave Friday night.

From another angle.

Curry had a famous from-the-tunnel pregame tradition at Oracle Arena — which was essentially a very long baseline extended shot — but with the move to the Chase Center, Curry had to adapt the shot, which is now longer than the length of the court. Which is not out of his range, apparently.

Curry returned to the court Friday night against Minnesota after missing five games with a quad contusion. He is averaging 27.9 points and shooting 39.1% from 3-point range this season, and the 13-12 Warriors will need more of that in the coming weeks as the team tries to find a groove and climb up from eighth in the West.