Steve Kerr said Monday that he has yet to see much progress being made in training camp to shore the Golden State Warriors' turnover problem.

"We fling the ball around, and that's a problem," Kerr said. "I thought coming into this season, it's probably the biggest change we could make as a team was making the easy play, making the simple play, taking care of the ball. That'll only help our defense, and it should give us better rhythm offensively, but it takes a ton of work.

 

"We do fundamental stuff, passing drills every single day, and I would say to this point, very little improvement in that area. I mean, we're just flinging the ball around and turning it over, and our guys are going to have to make that adjustment. Otherwise, we're still going to be doing the same old thing and playing some great games and some poor ones and not taking that next step."

The Warriors last season averaged 15.2 turnovers per game and watched that number rise to 17.3 in the playoffs against the Clippers.

Andrew Bogut agreed with Kerr that the team has been flinging passes around, calling them "bad habits."

"We have to harp on it because it is something that can be deadly if we continue that trend, but not to overreact," Stephen Curry said. "We want to still be able to be aggressive and make plays and have that freedom out there, but we know what 17 and 18 turnovers a game gets you in the tough situations. Throughout the course of an 82-game season you might get away with it here or there, but that's the difference between a couple, four, five wins, and we understand that."