
via Imago
Dec 23, 2024; San Francisco, California, USA; Golden State Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga (00) looks on against the Indiana Pacers in the third quarter at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Eakin Howard-Imagn Images

via Imago
Dec 23, 2024; San Francisco, California, USA; Golden State Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga (00) looks on against the Indiana Pacers in the third quarter at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Eakin Howard-Imagn Images
The Warriors are deep into contract talks with Jonathan Kuminga, and what began as a promising step toward securing their future has instead become a drawn-out standoff. The 22-year-old forward is eligible for a rookie extension, but negotiations have dragged on for months, leaving Golden State in a delicate position just weeks before training camp.
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Reports suggest the Warriors have put forward a deal in the range of two years, $45 million, with team control baked in through a second-year team option. By comparison, Kuminga’s draft-class peer and fellow restricted free agent Josh Giddey secured a four-year, $100 million fully guaranteed contract with the Chicago Bulls, setting a clear benchmark. That contrast has highlighted the gap between how the Warriors view Kuminga and how his camp believes he should be valued. With only nine players under contract and the October 1 qualifying-offer deadline approaching, Golden State faces pressure to finalize terms or risk dragging the situation into the season.
That uncertainty prompted a sharp response from former NBA champion Kendrick Perkins, who didn’t mince words about the potential fallout. “They don’t want you, dog. They don’t value you because if they did, you wouldn’t be going through this,” he said on NBA Today, pointing back to Kuminga’s benching during last year’s play-in and early playoff games as proof of strained trust. Perkins warned that a disgruntled Kuminga could start chasing stats for his next deal. At the same time, veteran leaders like Stephen Curry, Jimmy Butler, and Draymond Green continue to demand a culture of unselfish, championship-first play.
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Perkins also highlighted the political layer behind the standoff, clarifying why the locker room could be affected: “Jonathan Kuminga wasn’t Mike Dunleavy’s pick. That was Bob Myers’s pick. So again, when you look at this situation, it’s going to cause turmoil in the locker room if you bring him back at $7.9 million because he’s going to go out there and play individual basketball… You’re going to have a team that’s led by three vets, probably three future Hall of Famers, that’s going to be preaching agenda-free basketball. So there’s the problem.”
The stakes for Golden State couldn’t be higher. If he takes qualifying offer like draft class peer Cam Thomas, it would save the franchise tens of millions in tax bills. Still, it would also hand Kuminga a no-trade clause, limiting the team’s flexibility to reshape the roster midseason. For a franchise still clinging to the tail end of its dynasty window, the decision on Kuminga isn’t just about dollars, it could determine whether the Warriors’ locker room remains united in pursuit of one last run.
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Anthony Slater Reveals How Jonathan Kuminga’s Standoff Has Stalled the Warriors
While Perkins has focused on the cultural risk, reporters close to the situation have outlined just how much this stalemate is freezing the Warriors’ roster-building. On NBA Today, Anthony Slater explained, “There’s been renewed efforts, genuine efforts this week to try to get it over the finish line… but the big difference between the two situations is [Josh] Giddey signed four years no team options either way. We know the Kuminga situation doesn’t have nearly the structure or relationship.”

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Dec 25, 2024; San Francisco, California, USA; Golden State Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga (00) shoots against Los Angeles Lakers forward Rui Hachimura (left) and guard Gabe Vincent (right) during the fourth quarter at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images
That lingering uncertainty has the Warriors’ front office frozen in place, unable to pull the trigger on much-needed moves. As Anthony Slater noted, the team is still clinging to just nine signed players, stalling pursuits of veterans like Al Horford for frontcourt muscle, De’Anthony Melton for perimeter lockdown, and even a reunion with the gritty Gary Payton II for that championship-proven edge.
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Are the Warriors undervaluing Kuminga, or is he not living up to his draft potential?
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These aren’t luxuries—they’re puzzle pieces for a squad desperate for size, defensive bite, and battle-hardened depth—but everything’s on ice until Golden State gauges whether Kuminga’s extension lands in a salary sweet spot that leaves cap space for reinforcements.
With Jimmy Butler now anchoring the wing after last winter’s blockbuster from Miami, Kuminga’s role has shrunk to the fringes—15 points a night in limited minutes—potentially eroding his leverage and motivation just as the Warriors need him most.
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The ripple effects run deeper, as Slater laid bare: “They need two things this year. They either need Jonathan Kuminga to explode in year five and present them with the type of depth at the wing that they really need, or they need him on a tradable number that can go get them the type of depth… and if he’s on the qualifying offer he’s probably going to be neither.”
This isn’t mere offseason drama; it’s a pivot point for a franchise teetering on dynasty’s edge. A Kuminga breakout could fuel a Curry-led resurgence, but a standoff risks dooming the Warriors to irrelevance as their core ages out and free agency beckons for the 22-year-old star.
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Are the Warriors undervaluing Kuminga, or is he not living up to his draft potential?