The goal will be simple when the Warriors step on the court Saturday in Las Vegas for their eighth and final Summer League game. Get to the final horn in excellent health.
After seven games, including three in the California Classic, significant decisions are at least 80-percent settled. Several players showed enough for further evaluation but only one appears ready to compete for a role in the NBA.
Guard Will Richard, three months removed from winning a national championship at the University of Florida, has a chance to contribute for Golden State. Maybe as a rookie.
Though six games, Richard is averaging team-highs in minutes (23.9 per game), scoring (11.5 points) and steals (1.7). He’s shooting 42.4 percent (25-of-59) from the field, and only 20.7 percent (6-of-29) from deep. The Warriors anticipate his 3-ball to come around, a 6-foot-4 guard shooting 63.3 percent inside the arc – and 92.9 from the line – is testimony to finding buckets.
After shooting 9 of 26 from the field and 2 of 11 from deep in his first two games, during the California Classic, Richard’s efficiency has trended up since the season moved to Vegas. He’s shooting 48.5 percent from the field, 22.2 percent from distance and an astonishing 80 percent inside the arc.
And it’s not as if the NBA Warriors are blessed with a surplus of finishers in the paint.
“It’s clear,” Warriors Summer League coach Lainn Wilson told reporters in Vegas this week, “that he’s starting to look a little more comfortable.”
Beyond the numbers, what seems particularly valuable to Golden State is Richard’s relentless energy and considerable defensive aptitude, which are packaged with the kind of composure that develops over 105 starts for an elite college program.
With Stephen Curry, Jimmy Butler III and Draymond Green accounting for more than 80 percent of the 2025-26 payroll, the Warriors are limited to supporting their core by adding relatively cheap labor. A taxpayer midlevel exception, and then vet minimums and youngsters on rookie deals. They were in no position to offer Kevon Looney the two-year, $16 million contract he signed with the New Orleans Pelicans – especially when the front office feels good about the chance to add veteran center Al Horford.
With unrestricted free agent Gary Payton II still on the market, the Warriors do not have a strong point-of-attack defender. There still is a chance GP II returns, according to league sources, but it would be at a significant reduction from his $9.1 million salary last season.
Knowing Payton could hit the market after the 2022 NBA Finals championship, the Warriors shopped for a POA defender in the ‘22 draft, snagging Ryan Rollins in the second round. He was shipped out a year later in the Chris Paul trade and now is in Milwaukee.
The Warriors brought in De’Anthony Melton, who has strong defensive credentials, last season, only to lose him three weeks into the season to a torn ACL. He’ll be back in the league next season, and the Warriors are at his door.
Which brings us back to Richard. At 6-foot-4, with a 6-foot-10 wingspan, he shows the kind of two-way effectiveness coach Steve Kerr and his staff are craving. He’s 22 years old and probably would have the lowest salary on the roster. For someone who was the 56th overall selection in the 2025 draft, he plays like a keeper.
Yes, Golden State’s primary goal against the Cleveland Cavaliers (4:30 p.m. on NBA TV) in the consolation game Saturday at Cox Pavilion is to escape unscathed. It offers the Warriors one more look at Richard in “game conditions” before training camp. As if they need it.
Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast