SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors sit at 10–10 and look painfully ordinary after a month of play. Many expected a top-four push, but the roster’s limitations have set a different tone. They lack size, they lack athleticism, and they lack the internal depth needed to survive an unforgiving Western Conference. These issues stem from years of draft failures that never aligned with the Warriors’ lofty ambitions. Winning masked these cracks. Time has now uncovered them.
Warriors Are Paying The Price For Draft Failures Swept Under The Rug
How the Dynasty Era Hid Structural Problems
May 6, 2023; Los Angeles, California, USA; Golden State Warriors guard Jordan Poole (3) before playing against the Los Angeles Lakers in game three of the 2023 NBA playoffs at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports
Bob Myers’ exit in 2023 handed control to Michael Dunleavy Jr., but continuity could not hide deeper problems. Myers earned immense credibility with four championships and two Executive of the Year awards. Yet his tenure on the Warriors also produced a string of draft failures now impossible to ignore. The team built great rosters around Stephen Curry but failed to build sustainably behind him. Those choices have left an aging core without the young talent required to extend a dynasty.
A Decade of Missed Opportunities
The pattern began in 2016. Damian Jones and Patrick McCaw both fell out of the league within a few seasons. Jordan Bell arrived in 2017 and left little imprint. Jacob Evans followed the same path in 2018. Alen Smailagić, Eric Paschall, and Nico Mannion all produced short, forgettable stays. Justinian Jessup never reached the NBA. Jordan Poole was the one success story. Even he was eventually traded.
Then came 2020, the franchise’s most damaging whiff. Golden State selected James Wiseman second overall during the chaotic COVID-era draft process. He played 89 games before falling out of the league. LaMelo Ball and Tyrese Haliburton became franchise leaders elsewhere. The miss set the trajectory for the current roster. That single choice explains why the post-Curry future for the Warriors is bleak and represents one of the clearest draft failures of the era.
The 2021 class offered some hope. Jonathan Kuminga and Moses Moody have flashed talent and earned extensions. Still, neither has solved the team’s glaring physical deficits consistenly. The Warriors passed on Franz Wagner, Alperen Sengün, and Jalen Johnson, each of whom could address their size gap today.
The New Regime and Its Challenge
The 2022 group brought more limited returns. Patrick Baldwin Jr. exited the league after 62 games. Ryan Rollins is a budding star but not in San Francisco. Only Gui Santos looks like a developmental piece worth monitoring. Dunleavy’s first drafts appear more promising. Brandin Podziemski and Trayce Jackson-Davis already contribute meaningful minutes though their impact is inconsistent at best. The team hopes that Quinten Post, Alex Toohey, and Will Richard will provide longer-term value.
The Cost of Past Decisions
Golden State now faces the consequences of years spent whiffing on numerous picks. The roster is small, slow, and heavily reliant on a 37-year-old Curry. Those critical misfires in 2020 and 2021, combined with a decade of late-round misses, weakened the foundation of a once-formidable contender. They are not falling because of a single wrong move. The Warriors are falling because their draft failures finally caught up to them.
Where do they go from here?
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