Rounding up all Warriors and NBA related news for Wednesday, May 1st.

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Golden State Warriors v Los Angeles LakersPhoto by Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images

In today’s Dub Hub:

ESPN’s Brian Windhorst explains why a LeBron James trade to the Warriors or any other team is unlikely
The Ringer outlines what type of point guard is Stephen Curry
76ers force Game 6 after Tyrese Maxey hits clutch shot vs. the Knicks

A notable shift is underway in the NBA as former postseason mainstays, such as Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors and LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers, find themselves watching the playoffs from home while a new generation of stars contend for this year’s title. Because of this, speculation has emerged about these aging superstars potentially teaming up for one final championship push.

Among Golden State fans, there’s been keen interest, specifically, in the prospects of trading for James or even the Phoenix Suns’ Kevin Durant. However, NBA insider Brian Windhorst poured cold water on this notion during a segment on ESPN’s Get Up, asserting that a James trade, whether to the Warriors or elsewhere, is nothing more than a fantasy. Windhorst specifically points to James’s hefty $50 million salary cap hit as a significant obstacle, making it challenging to facilitate any trade due to salary matching constraints.

Warriors News:

Great teams find some new part of themselves in those runaway four-on-three opportunities. If you trap Curry beyond the arc, for example, you invite the drive and lob from Draymond Green that are sure to follow. But not every Steph has a Draymond. Often, end-point shooters and cutters are forced to take control of the offense in those situations, replacing the wizardry of a System guard with something much clumsier. Even Steph has bumped up against the limits of what he can accomplish as one of the smallest players on the floor, and he’s the historical exception; over the past 20 years, Curry’s Warriors are the only team to even make the Finals playing a style defined by its lead guard.

The NBA’s LeBron-Curry-Durant torch has passed to a new generation | The Athletic

One of James, Curry, Durant or Leonard was the best player on nine of the 10 NBA champions from 2011 to 2020 … and those four were so good that they also managed to represent the best player on eight of the 10 teams that lost the NBA Finals in that decade. That’s 20 conference champions, 17 of them fronted by one of these four. (Your exceptions being Dirk Nowitzki in 2011 and Jimmy Butler in 2020, while 2013 Leonard wasn’t quite yet what we’d see in the following Finals.)

Now, they can’t even scratch the second round, except for perhaps Leonard making it as an observer. You wonder if any of the four ever will again as leading men; things might only get worse given their age and team situations, with Curry and James facing second-tier status with the Warriors and Lakers in a crowded Western Conference, and the expensive, flawed and asset-mined Suns leaving Durant unlikely to contend until he returns to Oklahoma City. (Wait, am I allowed to say that out loud?)

Which Bay Area GM faces more pressure: 49ers’ Lynch or Dubs’ Dunleavy? | NBC Sports Bay Area

Dunleavy now has to decide if it’s time to break up the best shooting backcourt in basketball history and move on from Klay Thompson, or if the two sides can come to a deal that makes sense for both in free agency. Dealt with a Big Three decision last offseason, his first as GM, Dunleavy brought Green back on a four-year, $100 million contract that made Curry a happy man. He also showed his willingness to stir the pot for any chance to make the Warriors better when he traded Jordan Poole for Chris Paul the morning of his first draft sitting at the head of the table.

NBA reporter Nick Friedell argues why the Warriors should go after Kevin Durant