vvoland wrote:If the 'ceiling' of this scenario is moving JK as an expiring, I don't find that to be a rational take. Yes, JK can get hurt but, even at that point, you'd want the 2nd year so he can recover while you still have his rights. No one would trade for an injured JK on a 1 year deal w/ no bird rights except as JUST as matching/expiring salary. He'd have to have a pretty rough start to the year before getting hurt to tank his value below what PHX and Sac are currently 'offering' (3-4 years in the low 20s).
If you have a ~22 million dollar expiring you have access to players from teams that have decided it's time to scrap this build and move in a different direction vs wanting to trade for Kuminga as a talent. It gives GS more options to have a better pool to pick from to strengthen the team with Curry as their best player. Maybe a team doesn't want Kuminga and his salary, they just want to move player X making ~20 mil and possibly get an asset too? For instance, Tatum has issues coming back and Boston decides to move D.White but doesn't want Kuminga's contract past this year.
But let's say you're right and he only cares about his numbers, showcasing his scoring ability, and improving his game for the next team. GREAT, we move him in Feb, when the BYC restrictions fall off, we're not hard capped at the 1st, more teams are involved, his stock is up (in this scenario), and we get something better than malik monk and a non-lottery 1st for JK AND moody (or buddy). He doesn't even have to play that well for him to be more valuable in Feb than he is now, considering this is, likely, his nadir.
Showcasing his scoring talents is also probably playing outside the offense, ignoring getting the ball to Curry or at a lesser extent Butler and with that, he may end up costing GS some valuable wins and probably getting benched since GS wants to be higher in the standings this year vs let Kuminga showcase his talents and possibly lose more games. So he could cost GS wins and quite possibly not get the reps in with the type of offensive/defensive team they need to try to win a championship which this is all about with Curry.
There is, however, the other possibility, that unlike the 12 games you saw after the JB trade where JK played, he actually contributes to winning to start the 25-26 season. It has happened before, albeit before JB got here. IF he does that, his value to this convalescence facility will be dramatically different from what people are currently discussing. It seems like to you and most of the posters here, there are 2 possibilities to the JK extension. He plays just well enough for some idiot team to trade for him or he doesn't and we're stuck with some albatross of a contract and we'll be thrilled to decline that 2nd year option. I think those are the worst case scenarios with a handful of better, some much better, options also available.
I have no problem believing Kuminga can contribute to winning if he plays the right way on this roster at this time, he could have done that last year but his mind was on scoring vs helping the team win.
Sure, having JK on a TO is better than a PO. I don't think it's THAT much better than having him on a standard 2 year deal. Particularly, if they got it done early, finished up the rest of their business and got on with their summer. I mean, how poorly does he need to play for the dubs to:
a. not be able to trade him in feb for the sac or phx offers BUT w/o having to move Buddy or MM
AND
b. not pick up the option next summer, if only to keep the salary slot.
The complete difference between a TO and a standard 2-year deal is that you open the door to teams wanting to just dump a multi-year salary now and a player with a TO allows them to do that. Say Tatum has complications, Boston may decide to cash out on Derrick White who makes around ~20 million, a player like that could increase GS's chances at the Finals which this is what it's all about. Maybe Norm Powell is on the block because Miami isn't willing to extend him where a 1st and expiring contract around ~20 million can basically rent him (unless the new team gives him a small extension). There are more possibilities of moving Kuminga if he can also be looked at as an expiring contract. One injury in Boston made them sell off players, someone else could end up in that situation again (including GS and they decide to go all in on trying to develop Kuminga, possibly declining the TO and give him a much larger contract if they're truly ready to go in a different direction).
If GS gives Kuminga a 2-year deal with no TO, trading as an expiring contract is out the window and that could be enough to stop GS from acquiring the right type of player in that 20 million price range to increase their odds of winning a championship which is what this current era in GS is all about since acquiring Butler. When they acquired Butler, I think Kuminga had a small window after coming back from injury to either show he's all in with winning, finding a role to help the team win vs showcase himself as a top option and he went with the top option role.
Kuminga shot bad (44% FG%, 17% 3pt$) when he came back and he still put up nearly 17 FGA per36, that wasn't good for a team needing to optimize as much as they could to climb in the ratings. The right move, especially when coming back was to find a role and play it vs being a bad volume shooter, know your situation.