
The Golden State Warriors wrapped up a 2-1 road trip without the injured Steph Curry and Draymond Green. In Sunday's 123-91 shellacking of the Chicago Bulls, they also played without the healthy Jonathan Kuminga.
Kuminga has had an up-and-down tenure with the Warriors after they drafted him at No. 7 in the 2021 draft. After a protracted contract negotiation this summer, Kuminga began the season in the starting lineup — and now finds himself buried on the bench.
With two stars out — Green left Tuesday's 99-98 loss to the Philadelphia 76ers in the second quarter — and Jimmy Butler missing the first two games of the road trip, Kuminga had a big opportunity to show off. He did not.
In Thursday's game, Kuminga had nine points on 4-of-12 shooting, along with six rebounds and three turnovers. The Warriors were outscored by 18 points in his 20 minutes on the court.
Saturday, Kuminga shot 1-of-10 in a 99-94 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers, and played only nine minutes in the second half, with coach Steve Kerr going with third-year forward Gui Santos over Kuminga in crunch time. Sunday, Kuminga didn't play at all. Kerr explained after the game that Santos had been playing well and the Warriors had "a lot of mouths to feed."
Steve Kerr reveals why Jonathan Kuminga was a DNP in tonight's win pic.twitter.com/RTlmFPfC40
— Warriors on NBCS (@NBCSWarriors) December 8, 2025
With Santos, a former No. 55 pick, eclipsing Kuminga, it appears the Warriors have given up waiting for their star prospect to emerge. When Green comes back, there will be even fewer minutes available at forward, especially when Kuminga's lack of shooting (32 percent on three-pointers, 43.8 percent overall) makes it difficult to play him alongside Green and Butler.
Kuminga signed a two-year, $48.5M contract this summer with a team option for the 2026-27 season. After contentious negotiations, Kuminga sounded ready to leave his only NBA team, but he ended up in the starting lineup to begin the season. In October, Kuminga averaged 17.5 points, 7.5 rebounds and 3.5 assists and shot 55.4 percent and 45 percent on threes. Since then, his shot has fallen apart, and he has more turnovers than assists.
It appears Kerr is playing whoever he thinks can help the 13-12 Warriors win, regardless of pedigree. First-round picks Moses Moody and Brandin Podziemski have been coming off the bench while converted lacrosse player Pat Spencer is starting, alongside late-second-round picks Will Richard and Quinten Post. The team also just got De'Anthony Melton back, who had 13 points and two steals in 17 minutes Sunday.
If Kuminga isn't helping, he's trade bait, though it's unclear what kind of market there is for the 23-year-old. If nothing else, the Warriors, stuck at the first salary cap apron, want to at least swap Kuminga's deal for a like-sized contract. But the idea that they'll get a good return is unrealistic.
Granted, Kuminga also suffered a knee injury last month, and doesn't seem outwardly upset by his limited minutes. He could well find himself back in the rotation based on matchups when the Warriors return home.
But if Kuminga isn't playing, they might as well find him a new home. Perhaps he'll thrive on another team, but if Gui Santos is outplaying him, there's likely no future for Kuminga with Golden State.
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