Canadiens: Taking On The Struggling Flames

While the Calgary Flames have a 6-4-0 record in the last 10 games, they’re not having a great season. With just 40 points and in second-to-last place in the Pacific Division, most agree that the Alberta outfit will be a seller come trade deadline day, whether GM Craig Conroy is ready to admit it or not.

When they faced the Montreal Canadiens in October, we were treated to a fantastic goalie battle that ended in overtime on a Mike Matheson goal. Dustin Wolf made 26 saves on 28 shots and had a .929 save percentage, while Jakub Dobes was outstanding with 36 saves on 37 shots for a .973 save percentage.

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Martin St-Louis has confirmed that Jacob Fowler will be in the net for the Canadiens on Wednesday night, he has never faced the Flames. Meanwhile, Jakub Dobes has a 1-1-0 record, a 1.01 goals-against average, and a .967 save percentage against st Calgary. As for Montembeault, he has faced the Flames three times and has a 0-2-1 record with a 2.69 GAA and a .913 SV%. 

At the other end of the ice, Wolf has a fantastic record against the Habs. He’s 3-0-1 with a 1.49 GAA and a .948 SV. As for backup Devin Cooley, he has never faced Montreal and has appeared in only 13 games this season. Considering the Flames last played on Monday, Wolf would be well-rested, but tonight’s tilt with the Habs is part one of a back-to-back for the visitors who’ll be facing the Boston Bruins on the road tomorrow. Statistically, at least, the Bruins are the easier match-up this season; they are second-to-last in the Atlantic Division with 46 points.

Up front, Nick Suzuki is the Canadiens’ most productive forward against Calgary with 14 points in 20 games, followed by Phillip Danault with 11 points in 30 games and Brendan Gallagher wraps up the top three with eight points in 22 games. The latter now only needs one goal to tie Mats Naslund as the 14th-best goal scorer in team history, and one assist to join Chris Chelios in 37th place in the team’s all-time assist leaders’ rankings. As for Alexandre Texier, he is chasing his 100th career point, and playing alongside Suzuki and Cole Caufield on the first line can only help in that department.

Meanwhile, Jonathan Huberdeau leads the Flames in points against the Habs with 32 points in 37 games, followed by Nazem Kadri with 24 points in 43 games, and Blake Coleman wraps up the top three with 14 points in 21 games.

World Junior Championship standout Zayne Parekh is set to rejoin the Flames on their current road trip. The 19-year-old has set a new record for most points by a Canadian defenseman in a single edition of the WJC. However, he got himself in trouble on New Year’s Day when he told the press he felt he could be more open with the media during the tournament—adding that NHL athletes often come across as robots with no personality, and that a lot of guys tell him to give really simple answers when with the Flames. He apologized for the comments after Canada’s bronze medal win.

The Canadiens have won six of the last 10 duels between the two sides, but the visitors have won the previous two matches at the Bell Centre. Gord Dwyer and Garrett Rank will officiate while Ryan Daisy and Shawn Oliver will be the linesmen. The game is set for 7:30 tonight, and you can catch it on RDS and Sportsnet.


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Why Scott Perry won't make ‘rash' decision despite Kings' disastrous season

Why Scott Perry won't make ‘rash' decision despite Kings' disastrous season originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The way the Kings have operated over the past two decades has given Scott Perry some clarity on how he plans to handle things as general manager moving forward.

If you need a refresher: The Kings, after 16 long seasons without a playoff appearance, finally broke the streak as the No. 3 seed in the Western Conference just three seasons ago. Since then, they fired coach Mike Brown, traded away franchise point guard De’Aaron Fox and hired a new front office regime to clean up the mess.

If you take a closer look, the Brown firing fell on the lap of Fox, who was blamed for the decision despite being vocally outspoken about his close relationship with the coach. Amid all the outside narratives, no one from the Sacramento leadership held a press conference to clarify the situation or address the decision.

Instead, they let the narratives run and then traded Fox two months later.

“You fire the coach and don’t do an interview?” Fox told ESPN’s Anthony Slater after the trade. “So all the blame was on me. … I felt at the time the organization didn’t have my back.”

Kings owner Vivek Ranadive urged McNair to fire Brown as the coach was driving to the airport for a road trip, a decision that stemmed as “panic was rising internally” among the organization, Slater reported in a column published Wednesday, citing team sources. Ranadive, at the time, was on vacation in Cabo San Lucas.

Sacramento then, in another desperate move, traded Fox to the San Antonio Spurs in a three-team deal that brought Zach LaVine, a player Ranadive has long been enamored by, to the Kings. The move was finalized despite McNair’s apprehension, Slater reported, citing league sources.

McNair was relieved of his duties immediately after the Kings’ play-in loss to the Dallas Mavericks.

From the Beam Team fairytale to back to the dumps of the West, Perry watched from afar, and he was hired to fulfill the challenging role left vacant after McNair’s firing. But he took notes as he observed the three-year rollercoaster. And now, even as the Kings sit with an 8-29 record and remain one of the worst teams in the league, Perry, unlike previous front offices, won’t make decisions out of desperation.

“I use the phrase prudent and opportunistic,” Perry told Slater. “Which I’m going to continue to be. I’m not someone who’s going to do something rash. Nothing rushed or panicked.”

The trade deadline is where things are perceived to change for Sacramento, but as Perry alluded to, he won’t “blow it up” if it doesn’t make sense for the Kings long-term.

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Macklin Celebrini & The Sharks Beat Frustrated Blue Jackets

Zach Werenski(16) and Sean Monahan(6) scored the only goals for Columbus, and Jet Greaves stopped 31 of 34 Sharks shots, including 10 of 11 of the Sharks five power plays, as the Blue Jackets would lose to San Jose 5-2. 

First Period - SOG 12-11 CBJ - No CBJ Goals

The first eight minutes of the game was uneventful for the most part, with the Jackets generating shots on goal, while the Sharks took a few minutes to get going. 

The Jackets took their first penalty with 12:16 left in the first period when Damon Severson went to the box for interference on the Sharks Ty Dellandrea. Jet Greaves was able to make two saves on the power play to kill off the man advantage. 

After the Sharks failed power play, they actually started ramping up the intensity a bit. But with 4:40 left in the first, the Blue Jackets would get their first power play chance of the night when Ty Dellandrea got called for tripping Kent Johnson. The Sharks killed it with ease, keeping the game scoreless. 

Pavol Regenda would score for the Sharks to give them a 1-0 lead with 48 seconds left. The goal was fueled by a defensive breakdown, led by former CBJ Alex Wennberg. 

Sharks superstar Macklin Celebrini was held to zero shots and 2/6 in the faceoff circle. 

Second Period - SOG 17-5 Sharks - CBJ Goal - Werenski

The Blue Jackets gave the dangerous Sharks their second power play when Zach Aston-Reese was called for tripping Ryan Reaves. Alex Wennberg scored to make the score 2-0 with 15:46 to play in the second. Of course, a former Jacket would score on them, they always do. 

With 14:15 left, Igor Chernyshov went to the box for hooking Sean Monahan, giving them their second power play. The Sharks aggressive penalty kill was able to stop the CBJ power play with little to no effort. 

The CBJ would give the Sharks another power play when Dante Fabbro went off for interference with 11:03 left in the second period. Luckily, the Blue Jackets were able to kill it off, keeping the score at 2-0 Sharks. So far, Jet Greaves has had to make 7 power play saves on the night.  

Denton Mateychuk was called for tripping Ty Dellandrea with 4:45 left in the period. Dellandrea went hard into the goal post and had to be helped to the bench. Boone Jenner was called for high-sticking Macklin Celebrini with 35 seconds left on the first penalty, giving the Sharks a two-man advantage. Somehow Columbus was able to kill both penalties and keep the score at 2-0. But Jet Greaves had to make three more saves on the power play. 

Blue Jackets superstar Zach Werenski would score a goal to cut the lead in half to make it 2-1. That was a massive goal with under a minute left to give the Jackets some life. That was Werenski's 16th goal, which leads all NHL defensemen. 

Just one second after the faceoff, Mathieu Olivier and the Sharks Ryan Reaves engaged in a heavyweight fight. This would be their second fight in as many seasons. Olivier seemingly got the best of Reaves, with both trading blows before Reaves finally went down to the ice. Mathieu Olivier is the undisputed heavyweight champion of the NHL. 

Watch this. 

Third Period

Adam Fantilli drew a penalty 2:20 into the third period when Barclay Goodrow slashed him, giving the Jackets their third power play. Unfortunately, Columbus couldn't score on Ohio-born goalie Alex Nedeljkovic, keeping their one-goal lead. 

Halfway through the third period, the CBJ were dominating the pace of play, outshooting the Sharks 10-2, they just couldn't seem to catch a break. 

Zack Ostapchuk put the game away when an offensive pass went astray, giving him a breakaway. He would score on Jet Greaves to make the game 3-1. 

But, just 50 seconds later, Sean Monahan would score his 6th goal to bring the game back to a one-goal deficit. 

Mario Ferraro would score on an empty net with two minutes left to ice the game. Macklin Celebrini would finally get on the score sheet when he sank an empty netter. 

The Jackets fall to the San Jose Sharks 5-2. 

Final Stats

CBJ APP

Player Stats

  • Zach Werenski scored his 16th goal to lead all NHL defensemen.
  • Sean Monahan scored his 6th goal.
  • Dmitri Voronkov picked up his 13th assist.
  • Kirill Marchenko recorded his 19th assist.
  • Ivan Provorov tallied his 11th assist.

Team Stats

  • The Jackets power play went 0/3.
  • The Columbus PK stopped 4 of 5 Sharks power plays.
  • Columbus won 58.6% of the faceoffs - 41/70
  • The Blue Jackets had 16 blocked shots.

Up Next: Columbus travels to Vegas to take on the Golden Knights on Thursday. 

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The Stats Behind Game #42: Buffalo 5, Canucks 3

Welcome to this edition of the Vancouver Canucks post-game analytics report. This recurring deep dive breaks down the analytics behind each Canucks game as recorded by Natural Stat Trick. In this article, we look back on Vancouver’s most recent 5-3 loss to the Buffalo Sabres. 

The Canucks outplayed the Sabres by a wide margin on Tuesday. Vancouver held a 27-18 even-strength scoring chances advantage while winning the even-strength high-danger scoring chances battle 12-7. In the end, though, Buffalo was able to capitalize on their opportunities while the Canucks could not find a way to beat Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen until the third period. 

As for the heatmap, it shows just how strong Luukkonen was all night. The Sabres goaltender stopped 13 of the 14 high-danger shots he faced, with seven of those stops coming while shorthanded. Ultimately, Vancouver got goalied in this game as they threw everything they could at Buffalo's net. 

Vancouver Canucks vs. Buffalo Sabres, January 6, 2026, Natural Stat Trick. 

To wrap things up, the duo of Filip Hronek and Zeev Buium had a strong showing in this game. During their 17:10 of even-strength ice time, the Canucks held a 12-7 shots advantage while winning the high-danger scoring chances battle 6-2. If these two can continue to develop chemistry, Vancouver may have found their next dynamic first pair duo. 

Jan 6, 2026; Buffalo, New York, USA; Vancouver Canucks goaltender Thatcher Demko (35) watches as Buffalo Sabres left wing Jordan Greenway (12) looks to make a pass during the second period at KeyBank Center. Mandatory Credit: Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

The Canucks continue their road trip on Thursday when they take on the Detroit Red Wings. Vancouver and Detroit have already met this season, with the Red Wings skating away with a 4-0 victory at Rogers Arena. Game time is scheduled for 4:00 pm PT.

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.

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Bench boost: Four players who are turbo-charging Celtics' second unit

Bench boost: Four players who are turbo-charging Celtics' second unit originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Considering all the consternation about the Boston Celtics’ depth following their summer roster overhaul, maybe the most surprising aspect of their climb to No. 2 in the Eastern Conference has been how much they’ve been able to lean on their depth pieces. 

The Celtics, winners of four straight and eight of their last nine overall, have routinely leaned on a 10-man rotation in recent weeks, and that’s with early season starter Josh Minott struggling to break free from the land of DNPs. 

The C’s are now 17-3 whenever their bench generates 35+ points this season (and 6-9 when they don’t). What’s more, Boston is 18-2 when the bench makes at least seven 3-pointers (and 5-10 when they don’t). 

Over the last eight games, Boston’s bench production is up to 41.9 points per game, with bench players shooting 48.9 percent from the field and 42.6 percent beyond the 3-point arc. Celtics reserves are averaging 7.9 3-point makes per game over that span.

Boston’s bench players are a combined +80 in that span. The next-closest bench unit is Detroit’s at +44.

Boston’s recent bench boost coincidences with the resurgence of Luka Garza, who overcame his own DNP stretch to reenergize the Celtics’ reserve groups. Offseason addition Anfernee Simons looks more comfortable in his bench role and shoulders the offensive burden, while Garza, Hugo Gonzalez, and Jordan Walsh fly around injecting a little bit of chaos into every possession.

Given Boston’s bench success, here’s one notable way each of the four primary bench players have impacted winning:

Simons says… defense?

Simons’ offensive credentials are well-established. He erupted for 27 points in the second half against the Bulls to ensure the Celtics got to the finish line of a win on a night where Jaylen Brown and Derrick White were struggling with their offensive efficiency. 

But Joe Mazzulla keeps making it a point to highlight Simons’ defensive efforts.

The NBA’s defensive tracking data suggests that opponents are shooting a team-worst 36.7 percent against Simons over the last eight games. He’s holding opponents to a team-best 8.4 percent below expected field goal percentage in that span.

The Celtics have done a good job hiding Simons. The folks at the stat-tracking site BBall Index suggest he ranks 486th out of 506 players this season in matchup difficulty. But Simons also deserves credit for his defensive toughness. He’s fighting through screens, he’s staying attached to cutters, and he’s doing all he can to repair a reputation as an uninterested defender.

Simons limits his fouls — something he’s done throughout his NBA career — and when he stays close to his assignment, he’s making things difficult.

Opponents are shooting 1.7 percent less than expected on all of his contested shots, and 4.5 below expected at the rim. Both marks rank in the 83rd percentile or better for his position.

Hugo and the o-boards

The Celtics are gathering offensive rebounds on a staggering 46 percent of their missed shots while the 19-year-old Gonzalez is on the floor over their last eight games. For context, the Houston Rockets lead the NBA with an offensive rebound percentage of 40.8, while the Celtics slot sixth overall at 33.6 percent. 

Gonzalez and his relentless motor can often be seen streaking from the corner in hopes of extending possessions. Even when he doesn’t corral the miss, the chaos he creates throwing himself into the big-man mosh pit can often create second-chance opportunities for Boston.

Individually, Gonzalez corrals rebounds on 6.6 percent of his team’s missed shots while he’s on the court, which ranks in the 88th percentile among all wings, per Cleaning the Glass data. Gonzalez’s ability to help clean the glass has been vital for a Celtics team that lacks pure size, particularly off the bench.

One more notable number for Gonzalez: The Celtics have a defensive rating of 96.5 during his 165 minutes of floor time over the last eight games. That’s the best mark on the team by nearly 5 points. 

Garza’s bone-crunching screens

Garza’s been a force since rejoining the rotation, averaging 10.4 points and 5.6 rebounds over 21.9 minutes per game over his last eight outings. What’s more, he’s shooting 54.5 percent on 3-pointers in that span.

But his biggest impact is generating quality looks for everyone else on the roster.

Garza leads the NBA with 41 screen assists since December 20. That’s five more than the next-closest player (Sacramento’s Maxime Raynaud, 36). Garza’s 96 screen points generated also tops the NBA in that span, with the next closest player being Minnesota’s Rudy Gobert at 81 screen assist points. 

For the season, Garza is averaging 6.6 screen assists per 36 minutes. That’s the second-best per-36 number in the league, trailing only Dallas’ Dwight Powell (8.2). Garza is content to set screens and either roll like a maniac to the basket, or pop free for an open 3-point look. 

The Celtics are outscoring opponents by a team-best 28.5 points per 100 possessions during Garza’s 175 minutes of floor time over the past eight games.

Baylor taking charge(s)

Like Simons, fans will tend to fixate on Baylor Scheierman’s offensive output (and he’s actually been highly efficient while shooting 42 percent on 3s this season). But he’s quietly emerging as a defensive pest with the way he’s goading opponents into offensive fouls.

Scheierman, despite limited playing time, is second on the team with 11 offensive fouls drawn. Only Derrick White (19) has drawn more this season, and the next-closest is Gonzalez at six.

Scheierman has a knack for taking a charge in a key spot or getting a whistle while getting jostled by a moving screen. He ranks in the 99th percentile for his position while generating 1.6 offensive fouls per 100 possessions.

The Spin | Revealed after 100 years: how a corrupt official robbed Percy Fender of the England captaincy

Documentary makers seeking funds to finish making film of an extraordinary man and his influence on the game

After a mere 100 years the Spin, always first with the news, is finally able to reveal the details of one of the more extraordinary secrets in the history of English cricket. The story comes from the private family archives of the former Surrey captain Percy Fender, which are being compiled into a fascinating new documentary film. It has always been a mystery that Fender, who was described by Wisden as “the shrewdest county captain of his generation” was never picked to lead England. After all these years, it now appears he was blackmailed out of the job by a corrupt cricket official.

In a private audio recording made shortly before his death in 1985, Fender explains that in May 1924 he was approached “by a gentleman who was very well known in the cricket world” who, during the course of a conversation over two half-bottles of champagne in Fender’s flat at the Adelphi, offered him the England captaincy for the 1924-25 Ashes tour. Fender was an amateur, and had a day job as wine merchant that meant he would need to arrange cover while he was away on the six-month tour. The “very well known” gentleman suggested he could do it for him.

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Kings reportedly ‘checked in' with Warriors on Jonathan Kuminga situation

Kings reportedly ‘checked in' with Warriors on Jonathan Kuminga situation originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Kings’ interest in young Warriors wing Jonathan Kuminga hasn’t wavered.

And since Kuminga is back out of Steve Kerr’s rotation, those talks apparently have been rehashed.

Kuminga, who signed a two-year, $46.8 million contract in late September that ended a months-long standoff with the Warriors, is trade eligible beginning Jan. 15.

The Warriors reportedly are “exploring the deadline landscape,” ESPN’s Anthony Slater reported in a column published Wednesday, citing league sources, but are willing to keep Kuminga past the deadline if nothing appealing materializes.

Slater added, citing league sources, that Kings general manager Scott Perry checked in with Warriors GM Mike Dunleavy last week on the situation.

Kuminga, in a stunning turn of events, started the first 12 games for Kerr this season, averaging 14.9 points on 48.1-percent shooting, with 6.8 rebounds and 3.1 assists in 29.1 minutes over that span.

Since then, he has registered several DNPs, including sitting out of 12 of Golden State’s last 13 games.

Over the summer, the two teams engaged in several discussions for a trade involving Kuminga. Perry visited Kuminga during his workout in Miami over the summer when he was a restricted free agent. He, Kings assistant GM B.J. Armstrong and coach Doug Christie also had conversations with Kuminga over the offseason.

“There remains mutual interest,” Slater wrote.

However, Perry is hesitant to offer the same 2030 protected first-round pick that was on the table for Kuminga in the summer, Slater wrote. The Warriors don’t want to take on a multiyear contract they view as “negative value,” Slater reported, citing league sources, which has made veteran Kings guard Malik Monk a “nonstarter” in negotiations.

There are other pathways to getting a deal done, but it isn’t easy.

And both sides have made it clear they won’t make any rash or impulsive decisions to get it done.

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Middling Warriors in similar spot as last year ahead of NBA trade deadline

Middling Warriors in similar spot as last year ahead of NBA trade deadline originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It’s déjà vu all over again for the Warriors less than a month from the Feb. 5 NBA trade deadline. 

A 103-102 loss to a James Harden-less Los Angeles Clippers team Monday night, one month to the date from the deadline, dropped them to 19-18 on the season, giving the Warriors the same record through 37 games in four of the last six seasons. 

The other three seasons are 2020-21 when they finished as the No. 9 seed and missed the playoffs after losing twice in the play-in tournament, 2022-23 when they were the No. 6 seed and beat the Sacramento Kings in seven games before losing to the Los Angeles Lakers in six, and last season when they won their play-in game as the No. 7 seed and lost to the Minnesota Timberwolves in five games without Steph Curry after beating the Houston Rockets in seven. 

The two seasons they weren’t 19-18 were the 2021-22 championship team, in which the Warriors were 29-8 through 37 games, and 2023-24 when they went 17-20. That season ended with a play-in tournament blowout loss to the Kings in Sacramento that also was Klay Thompson’s final game with the Warriors. 

Hope didn’t start for the Warriors last season until the trade deadline after acquiring Jimmy Butler. But the Warriors were stuck in the blocks at the beginning of the race and sprinted to the end to try and catch up. Their superstar who will be 38 years old at the start of this season’s playoffs couldn’t make it through the finish line. 

Curry’s strained hamstring put a stop to the Warriors’ puncher’s chance of making a run at another ring. He’s averaging 28.7 points per game in Year 17, the fourth highest of his career, and ranks ninth in the league. Of the eight players ahead of him, Nikola Jokić, 31 on Feb. 19, is the only one who’s in his 30s. 

The first and most obvious avenue for improvement this season starts the day Jonathan Kuminga becomes trade eligible on Jan. 15. The summer saga of Kuminga’s restricted free agency has turned into him holding a $22.5 million contract on the bench as he watches games in warmup gear. Kuminga played 21 and a half minutes against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Dec. 6 and then was a healthy DNP (Did Not Play) in the Warriors’ next three games, going 1-2. 

Coach Steve Kerr raved about a string of practices Kuminga put together and said he would be rewarded in the Warriors’ Dec. 18 game against the Phoenix Suns. The Warriors lost by one point and Kuminga played nine and a half minutes where he scored two points on 1-of-5 shooting and had four rebounds. 

Kuminga was ruled inactive with an illness two nights later against the Suns and was back to being a healthy DNP in five straight games. Kerr said Kuminga was going to be in the rotation against the Oklahoma City Thunder but he was a late addition to the injury report with lower back soreness and missed a game the Warriors also were down Curry, Butler and Draymond Green. Kuminga has been a healthy DNP in the two games since. 

The Warriors are 9-9 in games Kuminga has played this season, and 10-9 without him.

League sources told NBC Sports Bay Area the Kings, Chicago Bulls and Washington Wizards all have different levels of interest in Kuminga. The Dallas Mavericks, who initiated contact with the Warriors about their thoughts on trading for Anthony Davis, as The Athletic’s Sam Amick first reported, also like Kuminga, sources confirmed. But the Mavericks do not have interest in Green, whose $25.8 million contract would be needed in a deal to get Davis, who’s making $54.1 million. 

And the Warriors also haven’t shown any interest in trading Butler, another big contract that would land Davis, one year later.

The Mavs badly want to get off Davis’ contract ahead of him being eligible for a $275 million max deal next summer, and draft picks are more enticing. Teams like the New Orleans Pelicans and Brooklyn Nets are eyeing the future and will want draft compensation more than anything for their best players who could be available. One league source speculated Trey Murphy’s price tag would cost giving the Pelicans three first-round picks, and two to the Nets for Michael Porter Jr., if either player is available. 

Letting go of draft picks while also knowing what the post-Curry era could look like is the Warriors’ best bet of adding a big enough piece to really compete. How far will they go? 

The Warriors own their future first-round pick in every year aside from 2030, which they can trade the rights to that year only if it lands in the top 20. They have three unprotected firsts, the ability to swap in three other years and the protected pick in 2030 over the next seven drafts. 

The Butler move made Curry believe again. Can he believe the Warriors in their current construction right now are championship material? 

Warriors general manager Mike Dunleavy joined NBC Sports Bay Area’s Bonta Hill, Chris Mullin and Festus Ezeli on “Warriors Pregame Live” before Golden State’s eventual 120-97 win against the Orlando Magic two weeks ago and poured water on the idea of making a move as big as last year’s Butler acquisition. Kerr recently also spoke publicly on the precautionary tales of teams that went all-in for a star and now don’t have any future first-round picks.

“We’ll look to do stuff that makes our team better,” Dunleavy said. “But I wouldn’t bank on that type of move. To get a guy like Jimmy Butler, to have the improvement that we did … that’d be pretty unrealistic.”

The Warriors went 23-8 with Butler down the stretch last season. Their record was one game below .500 at the trade deadline, and the season ended in the second round of the playoffs after Curry’s injury. 

Even if the Warriors don’t make a move to the magnitude of Butler, this year’s situation is similar in the way of addition by subtraction, and the sentiment is shared despite them liking the players who make up the bottom half of the roster. The Warriors lost four players and brought in one with Butler. Aside from his talent, the move allowed the Warriors to solidify roles and rotations much better. 

If the Warriors can move multiple players for one who would be in their top four every night, “that would make things a lot easier [for them], it’s kind of what happened last year,” one league source said.

Kerr still is using 12 guys, and Kuminga isn’t one of them, with 14 players healthy. Open roster spots would open a lane to a standard contract for Pat Spencer, and the Warriors might have big help, literally, in waiting from their Santa Cruz G League affiliate. 

Charles Bassey, a 6-foot-10, 230-pound center/power forward was a former top high school recruit and second-round pick in the 2021 draft who has 115 games of NBA experience, including two this season. Santa Cruz traded for Bassey, 25, on Dec. 27 and in 26.4 minutes per game he has averaged 17.6 points, 11 rebounds and 3.4 blocked shots through his first five games with a 60.3 field goal percentage and 45.5 3-point percentage. 

His last three games have been some crazy box scores, and Bassey’s energy and effort jumps out. First, he went for 17 points, 17 rebounds and six blocked shots on New Year’s Eve and then dropped 34 points on 13 of 21 from the field and 3 of 6 on threes, 13 rebounds and two blocked shots. Bassey in Santa Cruz’s most recent game went for 14 points, 15 rebounds and another three blocked shots. The Sea Dubs won all three games. 

“He’s an NBA player,” one source said. 

“He still is,” another source said. “All that stuff is real.”

Like Kevin Knox last year, though, Bassey isn’t eligible for a two-way contract. Teams started being able to sign players to 10-day contracts on Jan. 5. As Bassey has impressed the Warriors, the big man is sure to be on other teams’ radars outside of them as well with rosters soon to be in flux.

More traction to Kuminga’s market is going to come the closer we get to Jan. 15, starting a three-week window to the trade deadline. Both sides agree it’s best to move forward and on from each other. The Warriors’ picture of what team they’ll be to make another run should become clearer in the next four weeks, and likely sooner, just like a year ago.

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