Kristaps Porzingis
Getty
Kristaps Porzingis
The Golden State Warriors prepared to face the Phoenix Suns on Thursday night without Stephen Curry and without their newest addition. The team had just completed its biggest trade deadline move, acquiring Kristaps Porzingis from the Atlanta Hawks in exchange for Jonathan Kuminga and Buddy Hield.
But the pregame conversation centered on when Golden State would actually see the 7-foot-2 center in uniform. The Warriors went on to erase a 14-point fourth-quarter deficit and defeat the Suns 101-97, but the focus after the victory remained on Porzingis.
Warriors head coach Steve Kerr provided clarity on Porzingis’ timeline before Thursday’s game, confirming the center would join the team in Los Angeles ahead of their Saturday night matchup against the Los Angeles Lakers. However, Kerr expressed doubt that Porzingis would be ready to debut in that game.
Kerr Addresses Porzingis Timeline and Health Confidence
Steve Kerr, Golden State Warriors
GettySteve Kerr, Golden State Warriors.
Porzingis is expected to meet the Warriors in Los Angeles on Friday. That will give the organization its first opportunity to integrate him into the roster. The exact timeline for his debut remains unclear, though Kerr indicated it would come soon after his arrival.
Kerr emphasized the Warriors’ confidence in Porzingis’ ability to stay healthy moving forward. This comes despite the center appearing in just 17 games this season. Porzingis hasn’t played since January 7, sidelined by left Achilles tendinitis and complications from postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, a condition that has limited him throughout the year.
“I don’t think we would’ve made the trade if we didn’t think he could be healthy and consistent in terms of being in the lineup,” Kerr said. “That’s the plan.”
The 30-year-old center has missed 100 games over the past two and a half seasons. That includes 35 this year alone. That availability track record represents the primary risk in acquiring Porzingis, particularly for a Warriors team already reeling from Jimmy Butler‘s season-ending ACL tear sustained in late January.
Kerr said Rick Celebrini, the Warriors’ director of sports medicine and performance, conducted thorough medical evaluations before the organization green-lit the deal. The Warriors believe Porzingis is ready to return. They expect him to be available regularly once he’s cleared to play.
What Porzingis Brings to the Warriors
Kristaps Porzingis has been traded to the Golden State Warriors.
GettyKristaps Porzingis has been traded to the Golden State Warriors.
When healthy, Porzingis addresses multiple needs for Golden State. He provides size and length to a roster that has consistently lacked interior presence during the Curry era. His ability to stretch the floor as a shooter, protect the rim defensively, and create spacing makes him a unique fit for the Warriors’ system.
Kerr acknowledged what Porzingis represents for the roster if he can stay on the court. The coach emphasized the specific ways Porzingis fills gaps that have existed throughout Golden State’s championship years.
“When he’s right, he’s a helluva player,” Kerr said. “You’re looking at a guy who really fits what we need: size, space, shooting, rim protection. Every team needs that, but we’ve always needed that since we’ve been here. We’ve never had a player quite like him.”
Curry also weighed in on the addition, expressing excitement about getting a healthy Porzingis on the floor. The Warriors star pointed to Porzingis’ championship experience with Boston, noting the familiarity and presence he could bring to a team that has long searched for that type of interior player.
“I’m just hoping that he’s healthy, first and foremost, so that he can do what he can do on the floor,” Curry said. “Him and Al [Horford] won a championship together [in Boston]. Different context, but the idea of familiarity and skill set and size and presence that we’ve been looking for a while.”
Porzingis was averaging 17.1 points, 5.1 rebounds, and 2.7 assists this season on a Hawks team that has undergone significant roster changes. He won an NBA championship with the Celtics in 2024 before being traded to Atlanta last summer, making Golden State his sixth team since entering the league as the fourth overall pick in 2015.
Why the Warriors Made This Move
The Porzingis acquisition came after Golden State’s pursuit of Milwaukee Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo fell short at the deadline. The Warriors made what they considered a solid offer for Antetokounmpo, but the Bucks declined to engage seriously, leaving Golden State to pivot to other options.
Porzingis had been on the Warriors’ radar since early January, partly because of his $30.7 million expiring contract. That financial flexibility made him an attractive target for a Warriors front office looking to add talent while maintaining future cap space.
The trade also allowed Golden State to move on from Kuminga, whose development timeline didn’t align with the urgency of Curry’s championship window. Rather than waiting for Kuminga to reach his ceiling, the Warriors opted for a player they believe can contribute immediately once healthy.
The risk is obvious. Porzingis has been unavailable more often than not over the past three seasons, and his injury history includes chronic issues that don’t simply resolve. Managing his workload and keeping him on the court will fall largely to Celebrini, who previously navigated similar challenges with Otto Porter Jr.‘s chronic foot problems during the 2021-22 season.
Final Word
The Warriors sit at 28-24, clinging to the eighth seed in a Western Conference playoff race that offers little margin for error.
Butler’s injury devastated the Warriors’ highest hopes for this season. His playmaking and presence cannot be replaced by Porzingis, whose skill set is entirely different. What Porzingis can provide is interior defense alongside Draymond Green, rebounding the Warriors have lacked, and floor spacing that opens driving lanes for Curry and the team’s perimeter players.
The success of the trade hinges entirely on availability. If Porzingis plays 25 or more of the Warriors’ remaining 30 games, the move will be viewed as a productive use of assets. Anything significantly less calls into question whether Golden State should have explored other options or simply held onto Kuminga.
Kerr acknowledged that losing Butler lowered the team’s ceiling this season, but maintained that the Warriors still have enough talent to make a legitimate playoff run. Whether that optimism proves justified depends almost entirely on whether Porzingis can stay healthy enough to contribute consistently over the final two months of the regular season and into the postseason.