The Warriors’ free-agent board just got a little thinner.
ESPN’s Shams Charania reported that Rui Hachimura has agreed to a two-year, $28 million deal with the Clippers, taking one of the more intriguing names off the market for Golden State. The Warriors had reportedly been in contact with Hachimura, but that conversation now leads nowhere.
That leaves Golden State still sorting through a shrinking list of options as it waits on the LeBron James situation. If James signs elsewhere, the Warriors will need to shift quickly, because the market keeps narrowing around them.
Hachimura would have brought one clear skill to the table: shooting. He has hit 42.6 percent from three over the last three seasons, which is exactly the kind of floor-spacing punch teams covet.
But the fit with Golden State never looked especially clean. His biggest limitation is on-ball defense, and the Warriors are still looking for a wing who can handle the lateral quickness required to check elite small forwards.
Right now, the only healthy forwards under contract are Gui Santos and Yaxel Lendeborg, and the team expects to re-sign Draymond Green. All three are more naturally suited to power forward than small forward, which makes the need for another wing even more obvious.
One name that could surface soon is Ziaire Williams. Golden State has not been linked to him yet, but that may change.
He looks like the best wing the Warriors can realistically chase now that Hachimura is gone. The question is price.
Williams has made just 34.2 percent of his threes over the last two seasons, and the expectation is that he would cost more than a veteran minimum deal.
If that’s the case, the Warriors would have to dip into some of their mid-level exception to get him. And that may not happen until they know where James is headed.
For Golden State, the waiting game is starting to carry a cost. The longer James holds off, the fewer viable options the Warriors are likely to have if he ends up going somewhere else.
In Other News...
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Meltons first run with the Warriors never had much time to breathe, and that is part of what makes this next stretch so interesting. Golden State is clearly comfortable with the idea that Melton can answer a real need next to Curry, but the pressure is immediate: he has to stay available, settle into the role quickly and show that the fit the front office sees is more than just a theory on paper. [Read more 🡒]
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Greens criticism landed in the middle of a broader back-and-forth about how to judge the deal, with some seeing Philadelphia as the clear winner and others pointing to the uncertainty around Paul Georges recent play and health as a reason to slow down. Even in a league that lives on bold swings, this is the sort of transaction that can look one way on the day it happens and another way once the dust settles, which is why the discussion around Boston is far from finished. [Read more 🡒]
Warriors May Already Regret Passing On This Draft Night Opportunity
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Instead, the player drawing the most attention has been the one they watched land elsewhere, and he has already started to look like more than just a Summer League flash. His recent run has only sharpened the sense that Golden State may have passed on a chance to add a wing with real long-term value, especially with other names the team liked still waiting to make their own summer debuts. [Read more 🡒]
