If you aren't watching the Golden State Warriors this season, you're sleeping on history, my friend. Through 26 games, they've won 25 (they lost to the Milwaukee Bucks last Saturday and face them again tonight). You don't need to be a basketball fan to know that's remarkable. You more likely need to be a basketball fan to know that the greatest NBA team ever was the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls. They finished 72–10 and are now sitting around, shaking in their Js, watching as the Warriors steam roll their way through the record books.

The truly amazing thing about the Warriors isn't that they're doing it with significant ease, but that they're having so much fun. At the center of all that is Draymond Green, a 6'7" forward/center, which he's too small for in theory, but perfect for in reality. You look at a guy like that, who screams and pounds on his chest, who never backs down, and you wonder how he became the player he has.

Well, he got it from his mama, of course.

You can find Mary Babers-Green on Twitter anytime the Warriors are playing, telling it like it is, letting the Warriors' players and coaches know what, exactly, they're doing wrong and, more fervently, letting their opponents know what they're doing even more wrong.

So we called her up yesterday, the day after the Warriors cruised to a 128-103 trouncing of the Phoenix Suns and Draymond recorded his fourth triple-double of the season (an NBA best).

You still have any energy after that big win over the Suns last night?

I was sleeping.

You were sleeping?! I assume you woke up and saw what happened?

Yeah, I saw it. [laughs]

Did you watch the Bucks loss last weekend?

I was at that game. They was tired. The game before that, Steph [Curry] had said, “I can officially say that I’m tired.” I knew something then. I said, “Steph tired?!” They got in at 4:00 that morning. When I got to the hotel, I called Dray and he was asleep. I was like, “Oh no.” And I knew, when I saw those shots—they was 16% from 3 point?—oh yeah, they was dog tired.

"One thing I always said: You all need to take some socks, and ball them up and teach Festus [Ezeli, Warriors center] how to catch. And once he learns how to catch, take a tennis ball and throw it at his face."

Did you see them after the game?

Dray came out and he was almost relieved. Not to say, oh we want to lose, but saying, now we can go back to learning. Now we can go back to figuring things out. He was like, “We was playing in championship mode every night. It was draining.”

How many more times you think they’ll lose?

I’m gonna go out there and say they’re gonna be at least 73-9. That means they’ll beat the record.

Are you as active in real life watching games as you are on Twitter?

Heck yeah. The whole house. My daughter lives with me too so if I’m upstairs shouting, she’s downstairs shouting. That’s what we do. We shout. It’s like a rite of passage.

When did all this live-tweeting start?

I’ve done this since Dray was in college [at Michigan State under coach Tom Izzo]. Me tweeting was like my way of me being at the game cause I was tweeting what I would be saying at the game. But he deleted my Twitter. [laughs] He always says I have no filter. Once he got in the NBA, I was actually tweeting his games, I just didn’t have any followers. So that first year, I could do whatever and say whatever. By last year, it was a lot of people following me. I even had a couple of celebrities. It was pretty cool.

Anybody you’ve been really excited about?

Taye Diggs followed me.

Did you tell Draymond?

Yeah, like, “Guess what?!” He just laughed and he was like, “Ohhhh boy.”

Wait, but he took your Twitter away? Tell me about that.

He took it away because he said I didn’t know how to act. He was like, “Whatever comes up, comes out.” So then I got back on there and he called and was like, “Delete that!” And I’m like, “No!” [laughs]