Through 16 seasons in the NBA, Golden State Warriors superstar point guard and future Basketball Hall of Famer Stephen Curry is still widely considered one of the best players today. His effectiveness on the court, despite his age, has allowed the Dubs to keep themselves in contention for at least a spot in the NBA Playoffs over the past few years following the franchise’s last league championship in 2022.
But at 37 years old, Curry’s window to win another NBA title with the Warriors isn’t exactly all that wide. The Warriors’ front office made a big move ahead of the 2025 NBA trade deadline last season to provide Curry a big hand when the team swung for the fences and acquired Jimmy Butler. Although the Warriors got dominated by Anthony Edwards and the Minnesota Timberwolves in the second round of the 2025 NBA Playoffs, there’s a case to be made that they would have taken down the Timberwolves had Curry’s hamstring injury not occurred.

Curry is now healthy, however. And with a full offseason with Butler, the Warriors should come more prepared for the 2025-26 campaign.
That being said, the Warriors have not made significant moves in the offseason. They have not even made any, at the time of this writing – the only team that has not moved the needle yet on that front following the conclusion of the 2024-25 season.
Curry is aware of it, but he can’t do much but to keep trusting the Warriors could deliver from behind the desk.
“It’s different, for sure,” Curry said last week, per Sam Gordon of the San Francisco Chronicle. “But my confidence is built on the identity we were able to create over the last third of the regular season last year and the playoff journey.”
Added Curry: “We have a really good team.”
One major subject that stands in the way of the Warriors’ offseason progress is the continued contract standoff between Golden State and forward Jonathan Kuminga, who is a restricted free agent.
Whatever form the Warriors’ roster is in once the new season begins, the two-time Most Valuable Player is ready to roll with it.
“The veteran presence that we have — me, Jimmy (Butler), Draymond (Green) — we understand how to prepare through that uncertainty and hit the ground running in training camp knowing we should have some movement by then. But you control what you can control.”
Last season, the 11-time NBA All-Star averaged 24.5 points, 6.0 assists and 4.4 rebounds, while posting a 57.2 effective field goal percentage through 70 games.
