Golden State Warriors' Jonathan Kuminga will miss the game against the Chicago Bulls due to an ankle injury. His absence, alongside Draymond Green’s injury, complicates the Warriors’ lineup. Facing injury woes,
Could a three-team trade centered on Julius Randle bring Bulls' Nikola Vučević and Patrick Williams to the Golden State Warriors?
Ahead of the February 6 trade deadline, Warriors have been predicted to trade Jonathan Kuminga to the Nets for Cameron Johnson.
The most recent injury report on Golden State Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga and the duration of his time sidelined.
And don’t forget, this past offseason, the Warriors lost a $30 million chunk of salary when they jettisoned Chris Paul strictly for luxury tax avoidance. The NBA owners wanted a system that brought big-market, big-spending teams like the Warriors to heel, and they received it.
Golden State Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga will miss the upcoming game against the Sacramento Kings on January 22 due to an ankle injury, adding to the Warriors' list of injured players. His absence is a setback given his recent performance,
The Warriors are expected to have a future with Jonathan Kuminga, and have received a positive update on his ankle injury.
Amid Golden State’s trade market inquiries, prized young forward Jonathan Kuminga – who’s out with a sprained right ankle and eligible for restricted free agency this summer – remains a player Golden State is reluctant to part with, league sources told HoopsHype.
For clarity, the Warriors would send Kuminga, Wiggins, Anderson, and Gary Payton II to the Heat for Butler. Some may consider Butler a drama queen who’s no longer a team player, but claiming that Butler’s skill set wouldn’t benefit a franchise like the Warriors would be nonsensical.
“The Warriors were among the first teams to make a trade this season, trading for guard Dennis Schröder from the Brooklyn Nets on Dec. 15," Newsweek’s Ricardo Klein wrote Saturday. “The Feb. 6 trade deadline is a highly anticipated one, and Golden State's front office is increasing its dealmaking aspirations.”
For the last few years, the Warriors have operated in wait-and-see mode. Blessed by having Curry in his prime (or at least on the early decline) the Dubs have been able to sweat the small stuff of the NBA — luxury tax avoidance, draft-pick management, two-way contracts, founding a women’s team.