The Golden State Warriors show mixed results as zero days rest. Since 2014, they're 31-30-0 against the spread—a 0.0% win rate with an ROI of -3.0%. While not a strong standalone angle, this data provides valuable context when combined with other factors.

⚖ Neutral
Record31-30-0
Win Rate0.0%
Sample Size61 games
ROI-3.0%
Units Won-1.8u
Time Period2014-2024

Year-by-Year Performance

SeasonRecordWin %ROI
20142-5-00.0%-45.5%
20151-6-00.0%-72.7%
20162-4-00.0%-36.4%
20170-2-00.0%-100.0%
20182-3-00.0%-23.6%
20194-0-00.0%+90.9%
20208-4-00.0%+27.3%
20211-0-00.0%+90.9%
20224-2-00.0%+27.3%
20234-3-00.0%+9.1%
20243-1-00.0%+43.2%

Why This Trend Exists

The Warriors' mediocre zero days rest performance reflects the inherent challenges of their high-tempo, motion-heavy offensive system when legs aren't fresh. Golden State's reliance on constant movement, precise timing, and explosive transition play becomes compromised when players are battling fatigue from back-to-back games. Their three-point heavy approach particularly suffers, as tired shooters lose the subtle mechanics that separate makes from misses at volume. Steve Kerr's deep rotation philosophy actually works against them in these spots. While other teams might lean heavily on their stars during zero rest scenarios, the Warriors' commitment to ball movement and system basketball means role players who are more affected by fatigue still receive significant minutes. This creates inconsistency when bench contributors can't execute at their usual level. The psychological element cannot be ignored either. As a championship-caliber franchise, the Warriors often face opponents treating these games as statement opportunities, creating additional motivation disparities that oddsmakers may not fully capture. This trend matters most when Golden State is laying points on the road during zero rest situations, where the combination of travel fatigue and system disruption creates the most exploitable betting value against them.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Golden State Warriors's ATS record as zero days rest?

The Golden State Warriors have gone 31-30-0 against the spread (ATS) when playing on zero days rest from 2014-2024. This translates to a 50.8% ATS win rate over 61 games.

Is betting on the Golden State Warriors as zero days rest profitable?

Betting on the Golden State Warriors on zero days rest has not been profitable, showing a -3.0% return on investment (ROI). This represents a small but consistent loss over the 10-year period.

How does this compare to the league average?

The Warriors' 50.8% ATS rate on zero days rest is slightly above the expected 50% break-even point but below most profitable betting thresholds. The -3.0% ROI suggests they perform marginally worse than typical league expectations in back-to-back situations.

ANALYZE This Trend

This trend is near break-even. Combine with other factors and compare odds before placing any bets.

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Methodology

All trends in The Archives are calculated from official game results and closing point spreads from 2014 to 2024. ROI assumes a flat $100 bet at standard -110 juice. Win rate is calculated as wins divided by total decisions (pushes excluded). A minimum of 10 games is required for a trend to be published. Data is sourced from The Odds API and verified against official league records.