Here’s our latest Warriors stock report after Golden State’s 94-87 loss to the Bulls on Thursday night. What’s up, what’s down?

DOWN: Crunch time — Last season, as they rumbled to an NBA record 73 wins and only lost nine games, the Warriors had a monster point differential of plus-10.8 per game. But this season, even with 11 losses and more to come, the Warriors point differential is even better: plus-12.2, just shy of an NBA record (plus-12.3, 1972 Lakers). So why is the record worse if the dominance is more pronounced? Crunch-time performance.

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Why Leandro Barbosa decided to join the Warriors’ coaching staff Both last year’s Warriors and this year’s Warriors had a ton of blowouts. Both also had a batch of close games. Last season, when games were tight down the stretch, the Warriors rose to unprecedented levels of success. Remember that escape job at home against the Nets? Or the Steph Curry 40-foot bomb in Oklahoma City to complete a wild comeback? The record-setting Warriors played seven overtime games. They won six. There was a certain magic to them in tight spots. But that’s gone this season.

The NBA defines “clutch” situations as the last five minutes of a game that is within a five-point difference. The Warriors played 140 such minutes a season ago. In them, they outscored teams by an astounding 110 points. No other team was better than plus-62. But this season, in 80 such clutch minutes, the Warriors have only outscored teams by nine points. They are 0-3 in overtime games. They’ve gone from historically spectacular to league average in the game’s most critical junctures.

So what’s up? It’s primarily been an offensive problem, as it was in Chicago. Defense crank up, get more physical and the Warriors have begged down. Against the Bulls on Thursday night, they were outscored 9-0 in clutch spots, missing all six of their shots and all four of their 3s. That brought their season shooting percentage in such situations to 39.7 percent (eighth worst in the NBA) and their 3-point percentage to 24.6 (only 16 makes in 65 attempts, sixth worst in the NBA).

Cumulatively, the Warriors have put up league record offensive efficiency numbers this season: 114.0 points per 100 possessions. But in the clutch, they tumble down to a 102.3 rating, equivalent to a bottom-10 lottery team. Their defense has been worse as well, from 101.3 regularly to 105.2 in crunch time. But that’s not as pronounced. It’s the offensive numbers that are concerning. And it’s the star scorers who have struggled.

Kevin Durant is 5-of-15 overall and 2-of-8 from 3 in clutch situations this season. Steph Curry is 9-of-24 overall and 4-of-12 from 3. Klay Thompson is 3-of-12 overall and 1-of-8 from 3. Combined, they’ve made only 18 of their 51 shots and nine of their 32 3s.

Draymond Green has actually performed well down the stretch. Everyone remembers his early-season defensive heroics, closing games with game-winning steals against the Bucks and Pelicans and a pair of game-winning blocks against the Hawks. He’s also shot a team-best 8-of-13 in the clutch. But when the game’s online, one of the Warriors’ three snipers are typically firing. And this season, they’ve been inaccurate.

“Most big plays are big shots,” Draymond Green said. “You come up with a stop here and there, but you usually hit big shots. The shots just aren’t falling right now.”

Up: Patrick McCaw’s aggressiveness — After nine minutes and zero shots, replacement starter Patrick McCaw finally bombed away a 3 from the left wing in Chicago. He hit it and it seemed to give the rookie a boost of confidence. McCaw became more aggressive as the night went on, pump-faking and driving hard for an athletic layup, leaking out for an alley-oop finish in transition and finishing with 11 points in 29 minutes. McCaw’s increased opportunities and potential development over the next month-plus without Durant could be huge come next season and beyond.

Andre Iguodala on McCaw…