Earlier this season, the head coach Steve Kerr shared a questionable concern for the state of the Golden State Warriors, calling them a fallen dynasty. Now, a new ranking has only intensified that reality.
Greg Swartz of Bleacher Report recently named Draymond Green the NBA’s most overrated player and ranked Kristaps Porzingis fourth. No other team placed two players inside the top ten. For a franchise trying to squeeze one more championship out of the Stephen Curry era, that perception matters. It is not just noise. It speaks directly to Golden State’s ceiling.
Draymond Green’s Defensive Decline
Green’s impact has never lived in the box score. His value came from defensive orchestration, switchability, and playmaking. That version of Green anchored four title runs.
This season tells a different story. Green averages 8.6 points, 5.7 rebounds and 5.2 assists while shooting 41.7%. More concerning is the defensive data. The Warriors are only marginally better defensively with him on the floor, and his steal rate sits at its lowest mark since his rookie year.
Swartz highlights how Green’s reputation no longer matches his production. That disconnect is the core of the “overrated” argument.
“The Warriors are only slightly better on defense with him on the court (minus-1.3 swing rating, 59th percentile) and Green is only pulling in 0.8 steals per game, the lowest since his rookie season. If Green isn’t defending at a high level, there’s little else Golden State can count on him for,” Swartz wrote.
Green still carries a $27.7 million player option next season. Nearly a decade removed from his Defensive Player of the Year award, he no longer looks like the late-2010s version who could flip a playoff series with his defense alone. For a team built on championship standards, that regression is not minor.
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Kristaps Porzingis: Talent vs Availability
Porzingis was acquired after Golden State missed on Giannis Antetokounmpo at the trade deadline. The move was framed as a low-risk swing. In reality, it was a gamble on health.
Porzingis has not played more than 65 games in nearly a decade. This season, he appeared in just 17 games. He is managing Achilles tendinitis and previously dealt with P.O.T.S., an autonomic nervous system disorder that sidelined him for extended stretches.
Even when available, his production has dipped. He averages 17.1 points, 5.1 rebounds and 1.3 blocks, all near career lows. His 36 percent mark from three sits below his career norm.
Golden State needs his size, spacing and rim protection. But expecting him to replicate Giannis-level impact is unrealistic. The Warriors did not land a franchise-altering force. They landed a conditional upgrade.
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What This Means for the Warriors’ Title Window
Curry remains All-NBA caliber. That is the reason this conversation still exists. But championship teams require elite two-way pillars around their superstar. Right now, Golden State’s secondary core is under public scrutiny.
If Green is no longer a defensive anchor and Porzingis is unavailable or diminished, the Warriors’ title hopes narrow significantly. More importantly, their failed pursuit of Antetokounmpo looms large. Missing at the deadline may have been the last realistic swing at extending the dynasty.
The Warriors are not rebuilding. They are resisting decline. But when two cornerstone players headline the NBA’s most overrated list, the margin for error disappears and the future beyond Curry grows even more uncertain.