By ALAN FERGUSON
STATS Writer
Memphis (1-3) at Golden State (0-2), 10:30 p.m. EDT
Allen Iverson seemed to have a positive attitude about joining
the Memphis Grizzlies, but it took one game for him to express
discontent over being left out of the starting lineup.
As he continues to recover from a hamstring injury, Iverson is
expected to remain a reserve as the Grizzlies face the winless
Golden State Warriors on Wednesday night.
The 10-time All-Star guard signed a one-year contract with the
Grizzlies on Sept. 10, 2008, and wrote on his Twitter page, "God
chose Memphis as the place I will continue my career. ... I feel
that they are committed to developing a winner and I know that I
can help them to accomplish that. I feel that I can trust them."
At his introductory press conference, he expressed his desire to
be a starter after saying in April that he would "rather retire"
than come off the bench with Detroit.
However, he also stated to reporters afterward, "Whatever coach
(Lionel) Hollins wants me to do, give me the assignment and I'll
go out and do it."
With Iverson playing his first game since suffering a partially
torn right hamstring, Hollins' assignment for him was to come
off the bench as part of a three-guard rotation with O.J. Mayo
and Mike Conley.
Iverson had 11 points in 18 minutes in a 127-116 overtime loss
at Sacramento on Tuesday, going 5 of 9 from the field, and
proclaimed unhappiness with his role afterward.
"Go look at my resume and that will show you that I'm not a
sixth man," he said. "I don't think it has anything to do with
me being selfish. It's just who I am. I don't want to change
what gave me all the success that I've had since I've been in
this league."
Hollins said he plans to ease Iverson, six points shy of 24,000
for his career, back into playing after he missed the team's
first three games.
"In this situation we are trying to win the game but we also
want to get him back and fit him in," Hollins said.
Hollins' greater concern is fixing a defense that has allowed
opponents to score 115.8 points per game and shoot nearly 50
percent. The Grizzlies (1-3) couldn't stop the Kings' Beno Udrih
from hitting a tying layup with 1.6 seconds left in regulation
and were outscored 17-6 in overtime.
"Defensively we just broke down tonight," Mayo said. "That
happens sometimes. That's why this is the NBA."
Memphis faces a Warriors team that also struggled to stop
opponents in back-to-back losses to open the season. After a
108-107 defeat to Houston last Wednesday, Golden State allowed
Phoenix to shoot 53.6 percent and make 12 3-pointers in a
123-101 defeat Friday night.
"They dominated the whole game," guard Stephen Jackson said. "We
were real soft out there."
After publicly requesting a trade in August, Jackson was booed
regularly during the team's home opener against the Rockets. He
averaged 15.0 points in his first two games, a mark bested only
by Monta Ellis' 22.5.
With 22.3 points per game, Mayo leads four Grizzlies averaging
18.0 points or more.
After losing seven straight to the Warriors, Memphis swept the
three-game series in 2008-09, winning twice in Oakland.
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