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Jonathan Kuminga’s commitment from the Golden State Warriors has not wavered. While most attention was directed towards their decision not to include Brandin Podziemski in potential win-now trade offers involving Paul George and Lauri Markkanen, the Dubs also decided not to trade Kuminga, which shows that they are still confident in his potential to become the team’s next superstar.
Keep in mind that the Warriors aren’t prepared to give in to the 21-year-old’s every demand during extension talks, despite his optimistic outlook. The Warriors, in fact, are sending a clear message that they will not be offering Kuminga the maximum amount he is planning to ask for in his next contract.
According to ClutchPoints’ Brett Siegel, the Warriors would once again be tied down financially if Kuminga were to get a max rookie scale extension, which is something his camp will be requesting. “The Dubs don’t seem to be focused on this contract, even though it is August.”
There is no need for Golden State to re-up Kuminga prior to 2024-25. The front office can relax and let the rookie extension deadline of October 21st pass without major concerns, since the Warriors will still have the right to match any contract he signs in restricted free agency next summer. Joe Lacob and Mike Dunleavy Jr. essentially have the ball in their court here.
When negotiating Kuminga’s next deal, Golden State will keep these factors in mind.
On extension, how much is Jonathan Kuminga worth in the market?
Put an end to any hope that the Dubs will offer Kuminga a rookie max extension before to 2024–25.
Just recently, Scottie Barnes and Franz Wagner inked a five-year, $224 million deal; both have showed considerably more with the Orlando Magic and the Toronto Raptors than Kuminga has in his time with the Warriors. No Warriors fan is completely unbiased when they say Barnes and Wagner are better suited to scrape the ceiling as well.
Two significantly more practical comparisons of Kuminga extensions surfaced in the past year.
While he may not be Jaden McDaniels’s superhero defender, he shares many of the same agility, play finishing skills, and defensive versatility as the Minnesota Timberwolves’ forward. Kuminga has the potential to develop into the same versatile tertiary offensive option and solid defender for the San Antonio Spurs as Devin Vassell, despite the fact that Vassell is a better shooter and uses different positions on the court.
Last October, McDaniels extended his contract for another five years at a cost of $131 million, or 16.4 percent of the salary limit for this season. The five-year, $135 million deal that Vassell signed a few weeks ago accounts for 20.9% of the 2024-25 cap but will be reduced in subsequent years.
Earning 20% of the anticipated $151.1 million salary cap for 2025-26 would start Kuminga at $30.2 million in the first year of an extension. Parameters that appear to be in line with Kuminga’s anticipated desires—standard eight percent rises from there—amount to approximately $175 million for a new five-year agreement for him.
“Given his development and position with Golden State, it is surprising that Kuminga and his camp will consent to anything less than $30 million per year entering the 2024-25 season,” Siegel stated. He did finish the previous season as the team’s third-leading scorer, trailing only Thompson and Curry. When Kuminga meets with the Warriors to discuss contracts before the season begins, the $224 million extensions that Scottie Barnes and Franz Wagner received this offseason will undoubtedly be brought up.