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Monta Ellis and the Warriors Doing Fine Without Jackson, Nelson

11/26/2009 7:15 PM ET By Matt Steinmetz

    • Matt Steinmetz
    • Matt Steinmetz is a Senior NBA Writer for FanHouse
Monta EllisThere used to be more than a few people who would refer to Stephen Jackson as the Warriors' best player. We know differently now.

Jackson wasn't the Warriors' best player the past couple of seasons. It was Monta Ellis. And even if it wasn't (and it was), it for sure is now. For the past week or so, Ellis has been staging his own little renaissance, and everyone's trying to figure out why.

Not coincidentally, the Warriors are playing their best basketball of the season, semi-righting themselves from a disastrous start. Ellis' impressive stretch -- which includes scoring 34, 37 and 42 points in each of the past three games -- comes in the wake of two noteworthy Golden State departures: Jackson and coach Don Nelson.

Jackson, who had been the focal point of the Warriors' offense, was traded to Charlotte on Nov. 16, and Nelson hasn't been with the team since Monday, when it left for a two-game stretch in Texas.

Ellis was best friends with Jackson and his relationship with Nelson is shaky, but he's showing that he might not really need either one of them. He's been the reason the Warriors have played better post-Jackson ... not to mention taken it to another level without Nelson.

True, the Warriors are only 2-3 since the Jackson deal and that might not sound like much. But they hung together in back-to-back road games against Cleveland and Boston, then came home and handled the Blazers. They then went into Dallas and won, before losing Wednesday in San Antonio. They've done it all with a short roster.

With Jackson, the Warriors were 3-6, with victories coming against Memphis, Minnesota and at New York. They'd also endured an awful early November weekend in which the Clippers came into Oakland -- with old friend Baron Davis -- and won by 28, followed by a blowout loss at Sacramento two nights later.

The Warriors are a different team without Jackson, and Ellis is a different player. Everyone has talked about better ball movement, which translates to, "Jackson liked to hold the ball."

In any event, Ellis has flourished. Sure, he might have been best friends with Jackson, but the extra seven-plus shots per game he's getting (from 17.5 to 25) probably makes the longing less painful.

Last Saturday, Ellis not only scored 34 points against the Blazers but also confounded Brandon Roy at the defensive end. Roy shot just 6-for-17 from the field and was clearly bothered by Ellis' quickness.

What's more, Ellis' energy seemed to rub off on his teammates, which hadn't been the case with Jackson.

Ellis was money in his next game against the Mavericks (37 points, eight assists), perhaps not coincidentally with Nelson back in the Bay Area with pneumonia. The next night, against the Spurs, Ellis had 38 of his career high-tying 42 points in the game's first 35 minutes before fatigue seemed to set in.

Perhaps most noteworthy is the Warriors are more watchable. Gone is the inconsistent Jackson and his stubborn isolation, replaced by the inconsistent Ellis and his perpetual motion.

Ellis is hardly the perfect player -- or leader, for that matter -- as his 11 turnovers against Dallas proves. But he looks a lot less imperfect than Jackson.

Ellis' emergence doesn't mean the Warriors' problems are over. Not at all. They still have an issue with the 69-year-old Nelson, who finds himself on the sidelines but just 19 wins shy of overtaking Lenny Wilkens on the all-time coaching wins list.

Follow NBA FanHouse Nobody seems to be clamoring for Nelson's return, either. But he's awfully close to that record and still owed most of $12 million for this year and next. If and when Nelson does come back, he's just as likely to add to the Warriors' problems as solve them. His strained relationship with Anthony Randolph is well-documented.

And it's no longer a secret that Nelson and Ellis have issues. In other words, who knows how delicate it will be if and when Nelson returns. That's a question for tomorrow or next week or farther down the road.

At least for now the Warriors know that Monta Ellis is better than Stephen Jackson.

More Steinmetz on Twitter: @matt_steinmetz

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