Lead: Jonathan Kuminga, the 23-year-old fifth-year forward for the Golden State Warriors, has become a trade focal point after signing a two-year, $46 million deal this summer and becoming trade-eligible on Jan. 15. Golden State has sat him out of the rotation for roughly a month while reportedly preparing to move him, and the player has pushed for a new opportunity. This story outlines three illustrative trade packages — involving the Lakers (with a Nets third-party role), the Kings (with the Bulls facilitating), and the Mavericks — that aim to match salary and roster needs ahead of the Feb. 5 deadline.
Key Takeaways
- Jonathan Kuminga is a 23-year-old, fifth-year forward with a two-year, $46 million contract signed in the summer; he became trade-eligible on Jan. 15 and has been out of Golden State’s rotation for about a month.
- His on-court production this season is weak by advanced metrics (12th percentile in EPM), even as teams still value his athletic upside and age.
- Golden State reportedly prefers not to take back long-term salary, leaving expiring contracts and second-round picks as the likeliest return.
- Three conceptual trades: (1) a Lakers deal routed with the Nets to balance salary and send Jake LaRavia to the Warriors; (2) a Kings move with the Bulls absorbing Malik Monk to clear salary for Sacramento; (3) a Mavericks swap that would send Klay Thompson back to Golden State on a one-year, $16 million arrangement.
- None of the three proposed packages are transformational for the Warriors; they more realistically produce expiring deals and future second-round picks rather than a clear roster upgrade.
- The Warriors face a narrow window to recoup value: hold and hope a summer market improves, or accept limited assets now and preserve cap flexibility.
Background
Golden State drafted or developed Kuminga as a high-upside athlete with positional length and scoring upside, but the relationship with head coach Steve Kerr has not translated into a regular role. Despite the club signing him to a two-year, $46 million pact this offseason — a move widely interpreted as preserving trade value — his on-court production this year has lagged, with EPM placing him in the 12th percentile among NBA players. The contract made him a tradable asset but also complicated matching rules because of league salary mechanics.
The Warriors, constrained by championship windows and a roster oriented around established veterans, appear reluctant to add long-term salary in return. That stance narrows acceptable deals to those that either shed salary or involve short-term expirings and draft compensation. Simultaneously, teams seeking inexpensive upside wings have shown intermittent interest in Kuminga, in part because teams covet young, controllable athletic forwards even when recent metrics are poor.
Main Event
Trade concept 1: Lakers-Nets-Warriors. In this model, Los Angeles would acquire Kuminga and offer him a clearer, higher-usage role; the Nets would function as a third-party conduit to make salary math work. The package envisions the Warriors receiving Jake LaRavia — a young wing with size and shooting upside who has underwhelmed this season — plus expiring contracts or future second-round picks. The Lakers gain a developmental starter candidate; Golden State takes a low-cost upside wing and retains short-term financial flexibility.
Trade concept 2: Kings-Bulls-Warriors. Sacramento has been linked to Kuminga repeatedly, but its reluctance to send Malik Monk’s long-term money to Golden State has stalled prior talks. A three-team swap would have Chicago absorb Monk’s deal, allowing the Kings to add Kuminga to a roster that favors versatile wings. Golden State would receive two recent first-round picks who have not met expectations (Devin Carter and Dalen Terry in the hypothetical), plus small trade considerations and expirings.
Trade concept 3: Mavericks-Warriors. Dallas reportedly has interest in Kuminga; in this scenario the Mavs send Klay Thompson back to Golden State on a short-term, roughly $16 million deal this season to achieve salary parity. Golden State would regain a veteran shooter who could provide playoff offense and a one-year bridge while continuing to hunt for an upgrade. Dallas would acquire a young, switchable forward who could fit alongside Luka Dončić and boost athleticism on the wing.
Analysis & Implications
From Golden State’s perspective, the market for Kuminga is shaped by two competing facts: his age and upside make him attractive as a project, but his current performance metrics and limited trust from the coaching staff reduce his immediate trade value. Teams eyeing cheap upside will balk at paying long-term salary to acquire him, especially if the Warriors insist on not taking back lasting contracts. That dynamic pushes realistic returns toward expiring deals and late picks rather than immediate rotation-altering assets.
For acquiring clubs, Kuminga represents a low-cost swing on athleticism and potential. The Lakers and Mavericks could plausibly provide the minutes and defined role Kuminga has lacked in Golden State, possibly unlocking better production that would raise his long-term value. Sacramento’s reported persistent interest suggests some front offices view Kuminga as a culture fit for high-tempo, wing-centric lineups; whether that belief translates into game impact remains an open question.
Salary mechanics and base-year compensation (BYC) rules complicate one-for-one exchanges, especially with the Lakers. Those arcane rules often force multi-team transactions or creative use of expirings to satisfy the league’s matching requirements. Practically, the Warriors’ insistence on avoiding long-term salary creates a structural constraint that will likely cap the quality of offers they can credibly accept at the deadline.
Comparison & Data
| Player / Item | Notable figure |
|---|---|
| Jonathan Kuminga | 23 years old; 2-year, $46M contract; EPM 12th percentile |
| Jake LaRavia (trade concept) | EPM ~41st percentile (this season) |
| Klay Thompson (hypothetical return) | ~$16M salary for the upcoming season |
These figures frame the core negotiation: Kuminga’s newly signed $46 million pact is short but significant for trade matching, LaRavia represents a youthful but unproven alternative, and Thompson’s expiring-ish salary can be a useful matching asset. The table underscores why Golden State might prefer expirings and picks over long-term salaries in any deal.
Reactions & Quotes
“He has ‘demanded’ to be traded,”
Yahoo Sports report
That phrasing, as reported in the originating piece, reflects sources saying the player has pushed for relocation after sitting out of the rotation. Teams and agents often use public pressure to accelerate trade conversations; the long-term effect depends on whether front offices view the statement as leverage or a signal of urgency.
“Golden State reportedly doesn’t want to take back any long-term salary,”
Yahoo Sports report
Multiple trade scenarios hinge on this stance. If the Warriors hold firm, interested clubs must either send expirings, absorb bad contracts elsewhere, or include draft compensation — a constraint that narrows the field of viable offers before the deadline.
“The Lakers reportedly have some interest in Kuminga,”
Yahoo Sports report
Los Angeles’s reported curiosity makes strategic sense: the Lakers have converted non-max, medium-term signings into useful rotation pieces before. Whether they commit meaningful assets depends on how the front office grades Kuminga’s upside versus the Lakers’ near-term championship timeline.
Unconfirmed
- The exact front-office offers on the table for Kuminga at the time of writing are not publicly confirmed; reported negotiations reflect league sources but not finalized deals.
- Interest from specific teams (beyond publicly reported inquiries) and the Warriors’ internal bottom-line for acceptable assets remain unverified.
- Any suggestion that Golden State will definitely move Klay Thompson or receive Michael Porter Jr. in exchange is speculative and has not been confirmed by team announcements.
Bottom Line
Jonathan Kuminga’s combination of age, athleticism and a recently signed two-year, $46 million contract makes him a tradable asset, but his low EPM and a lack of rotation minutes have reduced his market value. Golden State’s apparent refusal to take back lasting salary narrows realistic returns to expirings, second-round picks and fringe rotation pieces rather than a clear, immediate roster upgrade.
For potential suitors, Kuminga is a low-cost bet with upside that might blossom in a different role; for the Warriors, the choice is between continuing to try to reclaim value over the summer or accepting limited compensation now and preserving roster flexibility. With the Feb. 5 deadline approaching, expect more noise, some three-team creativity to solve BYC and matching issues, and ultimately deals that prioritize contract clarity over headline-making assets.