Warriors' Familiar Struggles Persist as Kuminga Trade Interest Builds Ahead of Deadline

Building on recent reports of rebuffing Anthony Davis overtures while shopping Jonathan Kuminga, the Golden State Warriors fell to 19-18 after a 103-102 loss to the Clippers—mirroring their record through 37 games in four of the last six seasons. With the Feb. 5 trade deadline nearing, GM Mike Dunleavy downplays blockbuster expectations akin to last season's Jimmy Butler deal, amid growing interest in the benchwarmer forward.

The narrow defeat to a James Harden-less Clippers squad underscores ongoing depth woes, echoing historical patterns: play-in finishes in recent postseasons, except the outlier 2021-22 champs (29-8) and last year's 17-20 start that rallied post-Butler trade to 23-8 before Curry's injury halted them in the second round.

Stephen Curry, nearing 38 by playoffs, leads with 28.7 PPG (ninth league-wide), but rotation uncertainty lingers. Kuminga, limited to 9.5 MPG recently—including healthy DNPs and benchings—has the Warriors at 9-9 with him, 10-9 without. League sources report suitors including the Sacramento Kings, Chicago Bulls, Washington Wizards, and Dallas Mavericks, though the Mavs balk at Draymond Green's $25.8M in any lingering AD talks.

Dunleavy, on 'Warriors Pregame Live,' stressed incremental moves: 'We’ll look to do stuff that makes our team better. But I wouldn’t bank on that type of move.' With three unprotected firsts available, upgrades tempt, but caution reigns given Curry's age and Coach Steve Kerr's 12-man rotations among 14 healthy players. G League standout Charles Bassey (17.6 PPG, 11 RPG for Santa Cruz) looms as a post-Jan. 5 call-up option.

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Stephen Curry celebrates Golden State Warriors' thrilling comeback win over Clippers in NBA Play-In Tournament.
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Warriors rally from 13-point deficit to beat Clippers in play-in

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Stephen Curry scored 35 points to lead the Golden State Warriors to a 126-121 comeback victory over the Los Angeles Clippers in the NBA Play-In Tournament on Wednesday. The Warriors overcame a 13-point fourth-quarter deficit with a 39-19 run, advancing to face the Phoenix Suns on Friday for the West's No. 8 seed. The loss eliminated the Clippers from postseason contention.

The 2025-26 NBA trade deadline on February 5 brought significant roster changes across the league, with teams acquiring stars to bolster playoff chances amid injuries and rebuilds. Moves included the Golden State Warriors adding Kristaps Porziņģis and the Cleveland Cavaliers obtaining James Harden. These transactions signal shifts in team strategies as the regular season nears its end on April 12.

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A CBS Sports analysis argues that the Golden State Warriors should keep Stephen Curry sidelined for the remainder of the season to boost their NBA draft lottery odds. Curry, aged 38, has not played since January 30 due to a legitimate knee injury. The team holds a 33-35 record, sitting ninth in the Western Conference.

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