After the Golden State Warriors benched Jonathan Cuminga, it was puzzling why the move was made. Although he averaged a career-high 16.1 points per game in 26.3 minutes, this doesn’t appear to be a Golden State phase. Although Kuminga thought his fortune exceeded $30 million, his team disagreed. Unfortunately, he may carry the brunt of his decision.
On the Gil’s Arena podcast, Gilbert Arenas gave his thoughts from the Warriors’ perspective on why they benched him.
“If he doesn’t sign that contract, his ** goes to that bench and he’s going to be six-man value,” Arenas said. “If he had signed that contract, whatever they wanted, he would have started, doing whatever he wanted.”
Going back to Kuminga’s performance last season, he was a spark plug for their attack. His youth, athleticism and tenacity complimented the veterans of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green. While his role changed each night, teams prepared for Kuminga’s skill set.
Is Jonathan Kuminga worthy of starting for the Warriors?
Related Golden State Warriors NewsThe article continues below
The Warriors forward had eight straight 20-point games, coming off the bench in five of them. Kuminga got to the basket with ease and defenses had a hard time stopping him. Although he is productive whether he is on the bench or not, his financial value for his next contract could decrease. After all, Cade Cunningham and Evan Mobley will make about $44 million per year once their new contracts begin in 2025-26.
Arenas went on to illustrate his point by comparing it to star players coming off the bench.
“Since they didn’t hit the numbers they both wanted, they’re going to bring him off the bench,” Arenas said. “Whatever he does off the bench is going to be limited as a six and that’s what he’s going to be worth.”
“It’s like going to Phoenix and saying, ‘Kevin Durant out, Booker out, Beal off the bench…what.'” How does that make sense? I’m scared he’s going to go out there and have 40 (points). I’m afraid he’s going to go out there, try to carry the team and keep his value.”
Although Cuminga plays his heart out, Arenas is spot on. Injuries may occur and its value may be reduced. However, teams saw his potential and talent. Not to mention that Kuminga is only 22 years old and still has a lot of growing to do. The Warriors can control his minutes and reach a consensus. If they do, they’ll see how much he can bring to Golden State.