The Ukiah Daily Journal

Warriors hold a valuable card heading into the NBA trade deadline

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As the NBA trade deadline approaches, there's a big question that you need to answer. Yes, you. Should the Warriors fear the Denver Nuggets or Memphis Grizzlies in a seven-game playoff series? What about the Los Angeles Clippers or Sacramento Kings?

Those were the only four Western Conference teams ranked ahead of the Warriors in the latest ESPN power rankings or Wednesday morning's NBA standings.

The Warriors have been underwhelm­ing and inconsiste­nt all season — my goodness, have they been frustratin­g to watch — but in a Western Conference that lacks a great team, the Dubs are heading toward the trade deadline in a solid position.

It might not seem like it, but it's true: This Warriors team has everything it needs to compete for another title. No guarantees, but their eight-man rotation is more than good enough. Heaven knows they don't lack experience.

These next few days are merely an opportunit­y to augment their chances, to bolster their lineup. If the Warriors want to stand pat at the trade deadline, that's an acceptable play.

If they want to add a rental player on an expiring contract to help their title chances this year, that's a good play, too.

The Warriors might be a team surrounded by questions — what, with their two timelines and all — but they enter the fray without any sense of desperatio­n. That's a valuable card to hold in trade negotiatio­ns. The Warriors don't have to do anything before Feb. 9 at noon PT. That separates them from their Western Conference peers.

The Nuggets, Clippers, and Grizzlies better do something before the deadline — lest each waste a golden opportunit­y to win the franchise's first title.

The Kings should probably do something.

Not because they're going to win a title, but because they can't lose their playoff standing now. It would be too heartbreak­ing to the long-suffering fans of the Capital City.

Then there's a bunch of teams below Golden State in the standings. Being worse than a Warriors team that's barely tried this season? You clearly need more.

Meanwhile, the Warriors — a team that seems consistent­ly torn between the past and future — have found themselves firmly in the moment ahead of the deadline.

Ultimately, that lack of desperatio­n will likely bring about a quiet trade deadline for the Dubs. Desperatio­n is the driving factor of trades when the clock is ticking. Teams feeling pressure give up that additional first-round pick or toss in that young prospect they want to keep. They overpay, hoping that the short-term gains of any move will seriously outweigh the long-term cost.

Some good players are being shopped for comically high prices right now.

Alex Caruso, Jakob Poeltl, or my favorite name on the trade block, Utah backup center Jarred Vanderbilt, would all make great Warriors.

But are the Dubs going to part ways with a firstround pick — or, in the case of the first two options, multiple — to land those bench upgrades?

Such moves could be easily justified.

The likelihood is that they won't be. Those late first-round picks are cheap labor for a team looking to cut costs on the ends of the roster and avoid paying half a billion dollars in payroll next season.

The challenge of the Warriors' trade deadline is best summed up by this fact: The Dubs' toughest player to trade — James Wiseman — is also the team's most likely player to be traded. They're selling low on Wiseman, but hoping another team buys into Wiseman's already expensive contract and allegedly high upside (that, or the draft picks the Warriors will have to be package with him).

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE ?? Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) yells while walking on the floor near the end of their 120-116loss to the Brooklyn Nets late in the fourth quarter at the Chase Center in San Francisco on Jan. 22.
NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) yells while walking on the floor near the end of their 120-116loss to the Brooklyn Nets late in the fourth quarter at the Chase Center in San Francisco on Jan. 22.
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