Like any agent worth his commission, Aaron Turner is his client’s biggest cheerleader, as he is first among those who believe Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga is a starting role away from becoming a perennial NBA All-Star.
Maybe he is, but that’s not happening in Golden State. Not as long as the core trio – Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler – remains intact. And if there’s no room for Kuminga in the starting lineup, he can’t be the player he wants to be.
“It’s probably true,” Turner said Friday during a guest appearance on “Dubs Talk.” “But that doesn’t mean that it can’t work, or it’s not OK for the time being. JK’s an ambitious 22-year-old. I’m not going to take that away from him. I love that. He should be. (He’s) young. You want to keep growing and get better.
“The way JK moves is he wants to keep pushing the envelope, and I’m not going to take that away from him. I actually agree with it. Can he be the player he wants to be here, right now, with this roster composition? No. But that doesn’t mean he doesn’t want to win and he’s not willing to sacrifice for the group.”
That concession is bound to have an impact on any contract offer. How high are the Warriors willing to go for someone slotted to come off the bench as a sixth or seventh man?
Golden State’s latest offer, roughly $75 million over three years, really is a two-year deal because Year 3 is a team option. That offer was made with considerable reluctance, and bumping up to $100 million or more is does not seem to be on the horizon.
Turner acknowledges that Kuminga’s contract value is lower than most of his fellow lottery picks in the 2021 NBA Draft, largely because he entered the league with a team with an incumbent superstar. A team built not to develop but to chase championships.
“Those other guys didn’t really go to teams that were winning,” Turner said. “If the Warriors didn’t win in ’22, (negotiating a new contract) is probably very fluid and easy. But they did, and that kind of complicated things.”
Five of the six players selected before Kuminga in the 2021 NBA draft signed extensions last summer.
No. 1 overall pick Cade Cunningham (Pistons), No. 3 pick Evan Mobley (Cavaliers) and No. 4 pick Scottie Barnes (Raptors) received five-year $224 million rookie maximum deals. So, too, did No. 8 pick Franz Wagner (Magic), who was selected right after Kuminga. No. 2 pick Jalen Green (Rockets) took a three-year extension worth $106 million and No. 5 pick Jalen Suggs was extended for five years at $150.5 million.
Each of those players joined a rebuilding team. Cunningham, Green, Mobley, Barnes, Suggs and Wagner were starters from Day 1.
So, too, was Josh Giddey, selected sixth overall by Oklahoma City. The Thunder studied him for three seasons before tapping out last summer and trading him to Chicago. After one season with the Bulls, Giddey received a four-year extension worth $100 million.
Four years into their careers, each has been identified as a cornerstone for his current franchise. The same can’t be said of Kuminga, who also entered with much less experience.
Blame it on the circumstances, if you will, as there is no way to project how high JK might be flying if he had been drafted by a team without an established core.
Kuminga is acutely aware of the nine-figure contracts among his peers and dreams of having one. He is worth it, according to Turner.
“JK does a good job of running his own race,” he said Friday. “He’s not too caught up in what everyone else is doing. He understands his circumstances are unique and accepting of that.
“But does he think he’s on the level of those guys and the money they’ve gotten? Yeah, he does. He does. And, frankly, I do too.”
The Warriors have no desire to offer Kuminga $100 million or more. Four seasons into his NBA career, they do not unanimously perceive him as a franchise cornerstone. They hope he can be the path to acquire a veteran who would be more compatible with their core.
If Kuminga enters next season with the Warriors, he’ll be a reserve. Someone who can come off the bench and change the direction of a game. With so many veterans expected on the final roster, his youthful energy will have tremendous value.
It’s one thing to accept such a modest role, quite another to embrace it with joy.
“If you look at any championship team, sacrifice is required,” Turner said. “It needs to come from somebody with talent. That’s just part of it. JK’s probably got to be that guy. Not saying the other guys don’t have to do it on the team as well, but he’s going to have to sacrifice his personal ambitions and goals, which he’s not gotten a chance to chase yet.
“He hasn’t gotten that part of his career like some of his peers, where he gets to kind of figure out exactly who he is. That’s kind of been suppressed by the first championship the Warriors won in ‘22 and then kind of everything they came after that.”
Coming off the bench doesn’t speak to Kuminga’s heart. Barring a last-minute trade – and such discussions have a way of being revisited – he’ll have to land an opportunity where he can become a starter. And be the player he wants to be.
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