Jonathan Kuminga didnât play a single second last Sundayâand that silence may have said everything. The 23-year-old forward received his first healthy DNP of the season, a stunning development that only intensified league-wide belief that his days with the Golden State Warriors are numbered ahead of the Feb. 5 trade deadline. As speculation continues to swirl, one voice finally cut through the noise: Steph Curryâs.
Speaking candidly to reporters, the Warriorsâ franchise icon offered empathy, advice, and a subtle acknowledgment of the harsh reality facing Kuminga. Curry urged the young forward not to lose his âspirit,â even as circumstances suggest a separation may be inevitable.
âReally, the hardest part is, whether itâs going well or whether itâs not, not losing your spirit,â Curry said. âThatâs been JKâs challenge as a young player. Things change so quickly, and thereâs all these declarations about who he is as a player, and does he fit.â
It was a revealing momentâequal parts mentorship and quiet warning. Because while Curry emphasized belief, the numbers, rotations, and timing tell a much colder story.
Kuminga opened the 2025â26 season looking like a breakout star. Through his first six games in October, he averaged 17.6 points, 7.5 rebounds, and 3.5 assists while shooting an efficient 55 percent from the field. The athleticism was undeniable. The confidence was visible. The role seemed secure.
Then it vanished.
Within the first 10 games, Kuminga lost his starting spot. By November, his minutes had dipped to just over 24 per game. In December, that number fell furtherâto 19.1 minutesâbefore bottoming out with a healthy DNP that sent a clear message across the league.
Despite the regression, Curry continues to publicly back his teammate.
âWe still have high hopes that heâll impact our team this year,â Curry said. âBut youâre a game or two away from it coming right back to you. And if youâve checked out, or if youâre not engaged in the learning process, then you might miss your moment.â
Those words matterâbut so does context. The Warriors are under no obligation to force-feed minutes to a player they may soon move. Kuminga is on a two-year, $46.8 million deal with a team option, making him one of the most attractive low-risk trade assets on the market. Any acquiring team gets a four-month audition before deciding his long-term future in the summer of 2026.
That reality has fundamentally reshaped how Golden State approaches his role. Steve Kerr doesnât need to protect Kumingaâs trade value by playing him extended minutes. The Warriors already know there will be interest. In fact, multiple teamsâreportedly at least five, including the Chicago Bullsâare monitoring Kuminga closely as he becomes trade-eligible on Jan. 15.
From a front-office perspective, the situation is brutally pragmatic. From a human one, itâs far more complicated.

Curry acknowledged that tension directly.
âEverybodyâs journey is a little different,â he said. âThereâs that balance of who you think you are as a player versus what a team needs you to do in any given moment throughout a year.â
Translation: talent alone doesnât guarantee opportunityâespecially on a team trying to win now.
For Kuminga, the next few weeks may define his career trajectory. A trade could unlock a featured role elsewhere. Staying in Golden State could mean continuing to fight for minutes in an increasingly unforgiving rotation. Either way, the clock is ticking.
Steph Curryâs message was supportive, sincere, and honest. But beneath the encouragement was an unspoken truth: belief doesnât always stop change. And as the deadline approaches, the Warriorsâand Kumingaâmay be running out of time to find common ground.
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