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The Warriors’ big bet dilemma: How feasible is the transaction of Antetokounmpo Curry injured and retreated?

6:14am, 20 May 2025【Basketball】

The urgent championship window

Stephen Curry's 37-year-old age is like a countdown hourglass, forcing the Warriors management into "stop-all" mode. When the Warriors were crazy about All-Star players on the 2025 trading deadline, their underlying logic was obvious - this team must seize the last glory of Curry's peak period. Jimmy Butler's joining is the product of this thinking: exchange the protected first-round pick + Wiggins for the instant combat power, which not only maintains current competitiveness but also leaves room for second transactions.

Data proved that the deal was successful in the short term: Butler played 18 wins and 5 losses in 23 games, with a winning rate of 78.3% increased by 34 percentage points from before the deal. But what the management is really anxious about is: if you want to win the championship, what is the upper limit of this lineup? The crisis of the collapse of the assessment system

The second round of the series against the Timberwolves should have been the ultimate test, but Curry's first hamstring strain caused the season's reimbursement, completely destroying the assessment opportunity. The 13-minute sample data has no reference value - the Warriors scored 21 points when Curry was present, but who can tell whether this was an accidental outbreak or a system suppression? What's more fatal is that all key issues are unresolved:

Butler's ability to lead the team alone (the first round of injury-related combat efficiency declines)

Whether Kumingga's 26.8-point playoff performance is sustainable

Can Podjemsky assume the responsibility of the second ball holding point

The existing information can only prove that the Warriors are slightly stronger than the Rockets in the reconstruction, but this is meaningless to compete for the championship. The Rockets and Thunder’s young core is still evolving, while the Warriors core trio (Curry 37/Butler 36/Green 35) will continue to decline.

Anteaux's strategic paradox

The Warriors' reinforcement logic is in a dilemma: it is necessary to retain Curry Butler Green's core framework, and to introduce a third superstar. Currently, the team has only $31 million in salary space except for the Big Three. The only realistic goal is to acquire Giannis Antetokounmpo through the transaction.

The structure of trading chips is full of contradictions:

Advantages: Curry's private bond with Antetokounmpo (all-star selection + public praise)

Disadvantages: Butler/Green must be packaged for salary matching (34-year-old veterans are difficult to enter the reconstruction team's eyes)

Risks: A third party may need to be introduced to eat garbage contracts (refer to the Trail Blazers to handle Lillard transactions)

If Curry Butler Antetokounmpo is forcibly formed, the Warriors will trigger the second rich line (US$190 million), resulting in:

Losing the Mini Middle Class Special,

The first round pick is frozen after 7 years, cash transactions are completely banned. This means that the rotation lineup can only rely on the minimum salary veteran (such as renewing Payton II/Hilde), and the depth problem will be more serious than the 2024 season.

The division of contemporary team building philosophy

Warriors management is facing concept hedging:

Cole insists on the deep philosophy of "ten-player rotation" (2022 championship model)

Lakob is obsessed with superstar superposition strategy (2016 Durant case)

This division has completely intensified when Curry retreated from injury. The real cap of the existing lineup is a mystery, but the decision window is closing – Curry/Butler/Green’s contracts will all expire in the summer of 2026. The more cruel reality is: even if you bet on Antetokounmpo, the difficulty of building a lineup under the new version of the labor-management agreement is far greater than that of the "Cosmic Brave" period in 2017.

Warning of historical reincarnation

The failure of the Lakers/Clippers/Suns in 2024 proves that simply building superstars is a high-risk strategy. If the Warriors choose Antetokounmpo, they are likely to repeat the same mistake: the starting salary accounts for more than US$140 million, which lacks qualified rotation on the bench (refer to the dilemma of the Suns' Nurkic supporting the inside alone)

Injury in a key battle, the system collapses

The management's hesitation at this moment is reasonable: the team-breaking transaction may waste Curry's last peak, but maintaining the status quo is equivalent to chronic suicide. Perhaps the only thing that can be confirmed is that the Warriors can no longer replicate the "low wages and high energy" championship miracle in 2022 - the era when Wiggins' salary cuts and Poole's child labor contracts have long become a historical masterpiece with the surge in the salary cap.