Warriors Re-Assign Damian Jones To G League

  • Second-year center Damian Jones was re-assigned to the G League on Tuesday by the Warriors, according to Mark Medina of The Bay Area New Group (Twitter link). Jones has spent most of the season with the Santa Cruz Warriors, but was recalled for brief stint in Golden State this week.

Warriors' Depth Allows Players To Rest Minor Injuries

  • While some players around the NBA might feel pressure to play through injuries, that’s not the case for Warriors players like Kevin Durant, who missed a game last week due to a leg issue. Golden State’s talent and depth allows the club to rest players to avoid making minor ailments worse, as Durant explains to Mark Medina of The San Jose Mercury News. “We have such a deep team. Guys can go out and get those knick knack injuries taken care of,” Durant said.

Stephen Curry Could Have Signed Max Deal in 2012

Five years ago, Stephen Curry signed a four-year, $44MM extension with the Warriors. Two NBA Most Valuable Player awards and two NBA championships later, that contract turned out to be a mammoth bargain. However, when Curry originally signed the deal on Halloween 2012, the risk was all on the Warriors, Marcus Thompson II of The Athletic writes.

Before Curry’s mantle was stuffed with MVP trophies and NBA championship rings, he was known as a potentially prolific shooter with troublesome ankles. He missed 56 games with ankle injuries in 2011/12 and tweaked his ankle once again during the 2012/13 preseason. However, before Curry and his representation agreed to the $44MM extension, the Warriors told Curry’s agent Jeff Austin that the team would be willing to offer a max deal in free agency that summer.

“They said if he was healthy at the end of the season, they set aside the max money for him,” Austin said. “The Warriors were terrific the whole process. They told him if he could stay healthy, he would get the max.”

Curry’s team-friendly deal paved the way for Golden State to add players such as Andre Iguodala and last season, Kevin Durant. It also allowed the team the financial flexibility to retain Klay Thompson and Draymond Green. The Warriors signed Curry to a supermax deal worth over $201MM this offseason and the team is primed to reach their fourth consecutive NBA Finals.

Patrick McCaw Emerges As Backup Shooting Guard

  • The Warriors aren’t afraid to mix up their rotation, as evidenced by Steve Kerr‘s decision to run Patrick McCaw as the first shooting guard off the bench as opposed to Nick Young, Mark Medina of The Mercury News writes. McCaw’s stat line leaves much to be desired but he’s a versatile threat on both ends of the ball and the club likes his work ethic.

Pacific Notes: Curry, Warriors, Kings, KCP

In an in-depth piece for The Athletic, Marcus Thompson II takes a look back at the contract extension Stephen Curry signed five years ago with the Warriors, a deal that helped set Golden State’s dynasty in motion.

As Thompson details, Curry had been plagued by injury issues in his first few NBA seasons, so the Warriors presented him with two options: He could pass on a rookie scale extension and get a maximum salary contract the following summer if he stayed healthy in 2012/13, or he could accept a four-year, $44MM extension offer from the club. Curry opted for the latter, and while it became one of the most team-friendly deals in the NBA, the two-time MVP doesn’t regret signing it.

“At the end of the day, it gave me peace to just play basketball,” Curry said. “That was an underrated factor. I didn’t have to worry about it anymore. It was good money and I wouldn’t have to think about that for four years.”

Of course, Curry eventually cashed in on a much bigger scale — earlier this year, he signed a new five-year contract with the Warriors that was worth an NBA-record $201MM. Still, Thompson suggests that even that record-setting deal didn’t include everything Curry wanted, with the Dubs resisting adding a player option and a full no-trade clause.

Here’s more from around the Pacific division:

Warriors Exercise Damian Jones’ 2018/19 Option

The Warriors have exercised Damian Jones‘ third-year option for 2018/19, per RealGM’s log of official NBA transactions. Mark Medina of The Bay Area News Group had reported on Monday night that Jones’ option would be picked up.

Jones, the 30th overall pick in the 2016 draft, is one of two Warriors players who has rookie scale team option for 2018/19. The other, Kevon Looney, won’t have his option exercised by Golden State, as we learned on Monday.

[RELATED: Decisions On 2018/19 Rookie Scale Team Options]

Neither Jones nor Looney has a real role for the Warriors, but there are a couple key differences between the two players. For one, Looney is already in his third season, so Golden State management has had an extra year to decide whether or not he’s in the club’s long-term plans — Jones is coming off an injury-plagued rookie season, meaning the Dubs haven’t had a chance to take a long look at him yet.

Additionally, Jones’ third-year option will count against the cap for just $1,544,951 in 2018/19. Looney’s fourth-year option would have had a cap charge of $2,227,081. While that might not seem like a significant difference, every dollar will be important for the Warriors going forward, since they project to be in luxury-tax territory for the foreseeable future.

Warriors Won’t Pick Up Looney’s Option

The Warriors will not pick up their fourth-year option on forward Kevon Looney, Chris Haynes of ESPN tweets.

The decision doesn’t come as a surprise, since Looney isn’t part of the rotation and the Warriors need to watch their spending. As Bobby Marks of ESPN points out, Golden State already has $127MM in contract guarantees for next season. By allowing Looney to become an unrestricted free agent after the season, the Warriors will clear $2.3MM off their books.

By declining the option, the Warriors can only offer him a first-year salary of $2.3MM or less in free agency. Golden State had to decide by the end of this month whether to pick up his option.

Looney, 21, has only appeared in two games this season. The 6’9” Looney has averaged 2.6 PPG and 2.4 RPG in 8.1 MPG over 60 career games, including 53 last season.

Looney was the team’s first-round pick and the 30th overall player chosen in the 2015 draft. Looney, who is making approximately $1.23MM this season, had two hip procedures during his rookie year and only appeared in five games.

2017 Offseason In Review: Golden State Warriors

Hoops Rumors is breaking down the 2017 offseason for all 30 NBA teams, revisiting the summer’s free agent signings, trades, draft picks, departures, and more. We’ll evaluate each team’s moves from the last several months and look ahead to what the 2017/18 season holds for all 30 franchises. Today, we’re focusing on the Golden State Warriors.

Signings:Stephen Curry vertical

Camp invitees:

Trades:

  • Acquired the draft rights to Jordan Bell (No. 38 pick) from the Bulls in exchange for cash ($3.5MM).

Draft picks:

  • 2-38: Jordan Bell — Signed to two-year, minimum salary contract.

Departing players:

Other offseason news:

Salary cap situation:

  • Operating over the cap and over the tax line. Carrying approximately $135MM in guaranteed team salary. Projected tax bill of approximately $32.3MM. Only minimum salary exception available.

Check out the Golden State Warriors’ full roster and depth chart at RosterResource.com.


Story of the summer:

The top two free agents of the NBA’s 2017 class were members of the Warriors, but Golden State was never worried about losing either Stephen Curry or Kevin Durant. Coming off a dominant 2016/17 season, which was capped off by a 16-1 playoff record and the team’s second championship in three years, the Dubs were a lock to bring back Curry and Durant.

Curry and Durant were far from the Warriors’ only free agents though. Role players such as David West, Zaza Pachulia, and JaVale McGee were also set to hit the open market, and important contributors like Andre Iguodala and Shaun Livingston would join them.

Retaining Curry and Durant meant keeping Golden State’s Big Four intact, and there would always be free agents willing to team up with that group for a shot at a title. But the Warriors faced the very real possibility of turning over half their roster and losing guys like Iguodala and Livington, who played key roles in the team’s two championships.

However, just when it looked like the Warriors might lose their 2015 Finals MVP, Iguodala agreed to re-sign. And each of the players listed above joined him on new deals of their own. All in all, Golden State re-signed a league-high seven of their own free agents, ultimately undergoing the least roster turnover in the NBA.

The willingness of team ownership to pay a big luxury tax bill made that possible, as did Durant’s offer to take a more modest salary than he needed to. While Durant’s discount didn’t give Golden State any additional cap flexibility, it will significant reduce the Warriors’ projected tax bill, and may have made a difference in the Warriors’ willingness to go a little higher than they wanted to on Iguodala’s new deal.

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