With Warriors already in luxury tax, will Jordan Poole's breakout season net him max extension?
- Oops!Something went wrong.Please try again later.
- Oops!Something went wrong.Please try again later.
- Oops!Something went wrong.Please try again later.
- Golden State WarriorsLiveTodayTomorrowvs--|
- Boston CelticsLiveTodayTomorrowvs--|
- Jordan PooleLiveTodayTomorrowvs--|
SAN FRANCISCO โ It took a moment for Jordan Poole to soak it all in, wearing the hat and T-shirt with confetti dropping from above at Chase Center as the Golden State Warriors clinched a trip to the NBA Finals.
If itโs a feeling he wants to help duplicate, the punitive luxury tax penalties wonโt be a deterrent for the Warriors to keep him.
Warriors president of basketball operations and general manager Bob Myers cut off the question before it could be finished, flatly saying โnoโ when asked by Yahoo Sports if financial concerns would keep the franchise from keeping one of its youngest, most productive players.
โNo, no,โ Myers told Yahoo Sports. โI mean, thankfully [I] work for an ownership group in Joe [Lacob] that has committed all kinds of resources to winning. And I know that because every time I asked him about roster and strategy, itโs always winning.โ
Itโs not exactly a choice Poole or the Warriors have to address this offseason, as Poole is finishing his third season โ leaving the option for the two to come to terms on a rookie-scale extension before October. If they donโt come to a deal, Poole would hit restricted free agency in July 2023.
โYou donโt need me to tell you what our payroll is. Itโs pretty high,โ Myers told Yahoo Sports. โSo he just wants to win. And weโve spent a lot and weโve kept all the players we want to keep, so I donโt see that changing.โ
The Warriorsโ payroll is some $40 million over the luxury tax threshold of $175 million, which means as a luxury-tax repeater, the bill could almost equal dollar-for-dollar of player salaries. However, there are estimates the Warriors are bringing in nearly $100 million in playoff revenue alone, so itโs not like Lacob and the team ownership group will cry poverty, as Myers alluded to, especially in the name of winning.
The Warriors could try to lock up Poole for a long-term deal before he could even test free agency in 13 months, especially with Andrew Wiggins being up for free agency at the same time.
Pooleโs rookie-scale maximum extension would put him in the five-year range nearing $190 million. The class of 2019 will be up for extensions this summer, meaning Zion Williamson, Ja Morant, Tyler Herro and Poole will headline matters.
Any extensions agreed to wonโt kick in until after the 2022-23 season, and the Warriors exercised Pooleโs fourth-year option this past October for $3.9 million, making him one of the biggest bargains in the NBA, let alone on the NBA Finals stage.
Poole performed efficiently and under control during the Western Conference finals, shooting 64% and 40% from 3-point range against Dallas in the five-game series. He often resisted the urge to take bad shots or to disrupt the offense, and it has followed suit in what heโs done through this playoff run (53% shooting, 39% from three).
After years of misses late in the first round, the Warriors brass struck gold with Poole in 2019, and after a shaky start, he began finding his footing last season before breaking out this year. Heโs not cut in the mold of Stephen Curry or Klay Thompson, so it took some time to figure out the best way to deploy the scoring guard from Michigan. He tests and stretches defenses more inside the 3-point line, but is just as aggressive and potent from long range as Curry and Thompson.
Poole finished fourth in the Most Improved Player balloting, averaging 18.5 points and four assists in 76 games, while also solidifying the Curry-less minutes when he sits to start the second and fourth quarters.
โFrom Day 1, just being able to try to put my imprint on the team in a positive way,โ Poole said of his role, following the Game 5 clincher. โWhether it was in the locker room, asking questions and finding ways to fit in and learn and really thrive by being myself alongside these greats, basketball greats, from the coaching staff all the way to the players.โ