CauleyStein deal may alter 202021 math for Warriors
The Warriors are finalizing a trade that will send center Willie CauleyStein to Dallas for a 2020 secondround pick, a league source confirmed with The Chronicle.
In July, CauleyStein signed a twoyear, $4.4 million contract with Golden State, with a player option for 202021. By unloading that deal, the Warriors will drop $2.57 million below the hard cap and save $5.66 million toward the luxury tax.
Before Friday, the Warriors didn’t have a secondround pick in six of the next seven drafts. But the pick acquired from Dallas, which will probably be in the 5060 range because it initially belonged to Utah, is a minor asset when compared to the roster implications of dealing CauleyStein.
The Warriors already have 11 players under contract for 202021, which leaves only four open spots. With CauleyStein now gone, Golden State has enough room under the hard cap to convert the twoway
contracts of both center Marquese Chriss and point guard Ky Bowman to standard NBA deals.
It’s also possible the Warriors could only convert Chriss’ deal, keep Bowman on a twoway contract, and use the 15th roster spot on a player from outside the organization. If he stays on a twoway deal, Bowman, who’s 42 days into his 45day limit with the NBA club, could rejoin Golden State once the Santa Cruz Warriors’ season ends March 28.
Teams can retain the rights to players signed to twoway deals, allowing them to become restricted free agents in July. If the Warriors convert both of their twoway contracts to standard NBA deals, they won’t be able to fill the twoway contracts this season because the deadline to do so has passed.
By dealing CauleyStein to Dallas, Golden State will obtain a $2.17 million trade exception, which it could use to deal for a player without sending back matching salary. The Warriors can’t split up a trade exception in multiple deals, and they can’t get more than one player in return for a trade exception. Once the trade with Dallas is finalized, Golden State will have a year to use its trade exception.
In 41 games with the Warriors this season, CauleyStein averaged 7.9 points, 6.2 rebounds and 1.5 assists. According to a league source, Golden State believed he could be a solid rotation player for a 202021 team that will try to return to contention. However, it ultimately prioritized the salarycap flexibility that shedding his contract provided.
With CauleyStein gone, the Warriors don’t have a prototypical NBA center. Their center rotation now includes Chriss, Omari Spellman, Alen Smailagic and
Kevon Looney (when healthy). Forward Draymond Green can also play center.
Chriss got the start Friday night against the Pacers, but head coach Steve Kerr said the startingcenter job could fluctuate between Chriss and Spellman. In Dallas, CauleyStein figures to replace center Dwight Powell, who suffered a seasonending Achilles tear in a loss to the Clippers on Tuesday, in the starting lineup.
“It’s never an easy time as a player,” Kerr said of waiting for the Feb. 6 trade deadline to pass. “I played on a lot of teams, six teams in my 15 years. There’s always a time where you get a little nervous.
“That’s one of the biggest things you do as a coach is you make sure you’re communicating with guys and staying in touch with everybody. You’re making sure everyone’s OK, but also acknowledging the realities of our job and our work.”