
The Golden State Warriors are 10-10, just lost Steph Curry and desperately need veteran reinforcements. Two in particular can't come soon enough.
Curry injured his quad muscle Wednesday night in a loss to the Houston Rockets. He's been the Warriors leading scorer this season (27.9 PPG), and the team is 9-7 when he plays and 1-3 without him. That's why the team could really use offseason signings De'Anthony Melton and Seth Curry to join the team.
De'Anthony Melton signed with the Warriors for the second straight summer after his 2024-25 season was derailed by a torn ACL. Melton is still less than a year past his surgery, which happened Dec. 4, 2024, and will be re-evaluated next week. However, he was healthy enough to scrimmage at the Chase Center with the G League Santa Cruz Warriors Wednesday.
Melton joined Jonathan Kuminga, also making his way back from a knee injury, in a full-court, five-on-five practice. That's a good sign Melton could be ready to return to a team that's struggled to stop opposing guards. The most recent one to torment them was Houston's Reed Sheppard, who scored a career-high 31 points Wednesday as Moses Moody, Will Richard and Brandin Podziemski all failed to contain him.
After the game, Jimmy Butler complained that the Warriors "let anybody do whatever they want" on offense.
Jimmy Butler on the 10-10 Warriors: “We don’t box out. We don’t go with the scouting report. We let anybody do whatever they want - open shots, get into the paint, free throws. It’s just sad.” pic.twitter.com/ZisXNbRBa1
— Anthony Slater (@anthonyVslater) November 27, 2025
Even if he's playing limited minutes in his comeback, Melton should help provide defense for a Warriors team that's simply blowing assignments. Podziemski in particular has a tendency to over-help and end up guarding no one. Melton can also help provide three-point shooting for a team highly dependent on Steph Curry on the perimeter.
While the health of Melton's knee will determine when he comes back, it's money and cap concerns that are holding out Curry's brother, Seth. The Warriors agreed with Seth before the season, then released him as planned before the season, because they couldn't afford his full minimum salary after being hard-capped at the first luxury-tax apron.
But they've been able to sign the younger Curry since mid-November. They're waiting in order to have more flexibility for later moves, like a trade involving the unhappy Kuminga, while Seth, a 43.3 percent career three-point shooter, cools his heels.
It has to be tempting to add Seth with Buddy Hield shooting 31 percent from deep this season while providing very little defense. And like Melton, it's tempting simply to have a veteran who knows where to be on the floor.
They'll likely wait, especially with Kuminga nearing his return and Melton possibly right behind. But sitting at 10-10, the Warriors don't have a lot of time to waste hoping their current roster turns things around.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!