Rivalries with playoff implications + Mariners move into first & more!

Two weeks are left in MLB’s regular season and the postseason picture is starting to become a bit more clear. A couple of rivalry matchups had playoff implications as the Yankees defeated the Red Sox and the Dodgers defeated the Giants. Three of the four teams currently sit in playoff positions while the Giants are just 1.5 games out of the final NL Wild Card spot. Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman discuss each series and look at what the final two weeks hold for these teams. Are the Yankees and Red Sox destined to meet in the postseason? Can the Dodgers maintain their control of the NL West? Can the Giants claw their way into the final Wild Card spot? The guys answer all of these and more.

Those two series were not the only ones from the weekend with postseason implications. There were four sweeps that saw the Mariners, Blue Jays, Guardians and A’s take home victories. The Mariners completed a 4-game mop and put themselves into the drivers seat for the AL West as they overtook the Astros for first place. Plus, Cal Raleigh is looking like he may just take the MVP trophy from Aaron Judge. The guys dive into every series and look at how each one affects the postseason picture.

Later, Jake and Jordan recap the Brewers and Phillies clinching playoff berths. What will the last two weeks look like for each team, and how well are they positioned for a postseason run? Plus, the Mets continue to struggle as they dropped their series to the Rangers over the weekend. New York currently holds the last NL Wild Card spot, but can they hang on to it for two more weeks? Jake and Jordan talk about what they see for any postseason future in Queens.

All of this and more as every series from the weekend is recapped on Monday’s Baseball Bar-B-Cast.

Brewers and Phillies clinch playoff berths

Mitchell Leff/Getty Images
Casey Sykes/Getty Images
Brewers and Phillies clinch playoff berths

Mitchell Leff/Getty Images
Casey Sykes/Getty Images

Mitchell Leff/Getty Images Casey Sykes/Getty Images

(2:00) – Yankees & Dodgers take down rivals

(16:21) – Mariners move into 1st after mop & Blue Jays, Guardians & A’s sweep

(34:07) – Brewers & Phillies clinch playoffs, Mets continue to struggle and Astros face a huge test

(49:52) – Turbo Mode

(1:02:07) – Previewing the week ahead

🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

Carson Benge, Jonah Tong earn 2025 Mets Player Development Award honors

The Mets announced the their 2025 Player Development Awards on Monday afternoon, and outfielder Carson Benge and right-hander Jonah Tong were among those who earned honors.

Benge, the Mets’ first-round pick in the 2024 MLB Draft, earned Player of the Year honors, while Tong took home the Pitcher of the Year Award.

Benge, 22, has been on a meteoric rise through the farm system, beginning the season with High-A Brooklyn and now playing with Triple-A Syracuse. While Benge is slashing .279/.380/.460 across all three levels this season, he was particularly great with Double-A Binghamton, where he slashed .317/.407/.571 with eight home runs and 23 RBI in 32 games, earning a quick promotion to the Triple-A level.

Benge, who ranks as Joe DeMayo’s No. 3 prospect in the Mets system, is likely to make his big league debut at some point in 2026.

As for Tong, he knows all about a quick ascension through the minors. A seventh-round pick of the Mets in 2022, Tong quickly went from a relatively unknown prospect to a major leaguer. He started the 2024 season with Low-A St. Lucie and was with Binghamton by the end of the year.

Tong’s 2025 minor league numbers are staggering. In 20 starts with Binghamton, Tong posted a 1.59 ERA with 162 strikeouts in 102.0 innings. After two scoreless appearances with Syracuse, Tong was called up to the bigs. While his numbers are skewed by a very rough outing against Texas in his latest start, Tong allowed just one earned run on six hits over 5.0 innings in his major league debut against the Marlins.

Additionally, infielder Elian Peña was named DR Academy Player of the Year and LHP Osiris Calvo was tabbed as the DR Academy Pitcher of the Year. Peña, just 17, hit.292/.421/.528 with nine home runs over 55 games in his first pro season. Calvo, who missed all of 2024 due to injury, pitched to a 2.51 ERA in 11 outings.

iOS 26 Finally Gives the iPhone a Real Fitness App

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With the launch of iOS 26, Apple has added a bunch of new features to the Fitness app—features that it has been sorely missing. Finally, you can track a workout from your phone without an Apple Watch, and you can pair a bluetooth heart rate monitor to your phone to get heart rate data. And though it seems like a small change, Apple Watch users will love the fact that you can now create and edit custom workouts on your phone.

How to get the new Fitness updates

The new features in the Fitness app are part of iOS 26, which comes out today. (That’s the version with the controversial “liquid glass” look, but you can turn it off if you hate it.) To install it, go to Settings, General, and then tap Software Update. 

Once you’ve, you’ll find that the Fitness app has a new tab at the bottom, labeled Workout. This is where you’ll find the fun stuff. 

How to track a workout from the Apple Fitness app (with or without a watch)

Workout selection screen and in-workout screen

Credit: Beth Skwarecki

In the Workout tab, you’ll see a variety of workout types that you can start just by tapping the play button. Outdoor Run, Outdoor Walk, Outdoor Cycle, and Hiking are available for everyone. To access the other workout types, like Indoor Run, Indoor Cycle, Yoga, High Intensity Interval Training, and Traditional Strength Training, you’ll need to pair a heart rate monitor. 

(The idea seems to be that the app needs some kind of data to track. If you run outdoors, GPS data tells the app how far and how fast you’re running. If you’re on a treadmill, it’s got nothing to go on—unless it has a device telling it your heart rate.) 

So what counts as a heart rate data source? I had success with: 

I did four short runs today: three testing each of the above, plus one with just the phone by itself and no heart rate monitor. Each of the four tracked my speed and distance, made a map of where I’d been, and (if there was a heart rate monitor paired) recorded my heart rate data. I was able to view these workouts afterward from the Sessions card on the Summary tab, where Apple Watch-only workouts would normally be found.

To be clear, the three workouts I did without the Apple Watch did not require the watch at all. I left it behind in my car, and was able to track these workouts just fine. 

How to mirror your workouts from Apple Watch on your phone

in-workout: Apple Watch screenshot on left, iPhone screenshot on right.
Apple Watch screenshot on left, iPhone screenshot on right. (I did my best to take these at the same time…I was close, OK?)
Credit: Beth Skwarecki

The new mirrored workouts just work. You can start a workout from the Fitness app, or from your phone, and either way you get a Live Activity on your phone’s lock screen. Tap that, and you’ll see a screen in the Fitness app that shows the same data you see on your watch.

This can be handy for cardio machines especially—set your phone in front of you, and look at that instead of having to take your hand off the handlebars and turn your wrist to see how many seconds you have left in your interval.

If you don’t see the workout view on your phone, swipe right from the workout screen on your watch and select View to enable it. 

How to create custom Apple Watch workouts on your phone

Workout creation screens

Credit: Beth Skwarecki

The Apple Watch already had a feature where you could create custom workouts, or set yourself a goal for a workout (like running for a certain amount of time, or racing your past self on a favorite route). Now, that’s all available in the fitness app. 

To find it, go to the Workout tab of the Fitness app. instead of hitting the triangle play button on your phone to start a workout, tap the timer icon. This takes you to the screen with routes, goals, and custom workouts. 

I had never before bothered with the custom workouts since they were so annoying to access on the watch, but today I created a short interval workout and ran it as part of my testing. (One thing to know: You need to create a work interval and a rest interval before creating a repeat loop—some apps have you do this in the opposite order, which tripped me up.) 

In total, these new features make the Apple Fitness app a lot more useful. You no longer need a third-party app to use a Bluetooth heart rate monitor or to track a simple run around the neighborhood. It’s now a real workout app, rather than just something you open to check how many times you’ve closed your rings.

MLB Power Rankings: Brewers, Phillies clinch playoff spots, Mariners surging, races galore

Featured in this week’s MLB Power Rankings, we’ve officially entered clinching season, the Mariners surge into first place, the final spot in the NL Wild Card race is up for grabs, Nick Kurtz hits a baseball which might be mistaken for a UAP, Kody Clemens enjoys the game of his life, and much more.

(Please note these power rankings are a combination of current performance and long-term projected outlook)

Let’s get started!

Note: Rankings are from the morning of Monday, September 15.

1) Milwaukee Brewers

Last week: 1

The Brewers were the first MLB team to clinch a playoff spot, but now they might be without veteran left-hander José Quintana due to a calf injury.

2) Philadelphia Phillies

Last week: 2

The Phillies also clinched a playoff spot on Sunday by virtue of the Dodgers’ win over the Giants, but their magic number is down to one to win the NL East.

3) Toronto Blue Jays

Last week: 3

The Blue Jays finished off a three-game sweep of the Orioles over the weekend, which gives them an exceptional 50-25 record at home this season. Only the Phillies (51-23) has a better record at home in MLB.

4) Chicago Cubs ⬇️

Last week: 6

Anthony Rizzo’s retirement ceremony from Saturday was an absolute blast, and it was even cooler to see him in the bleachers with the fans and participate in the “cup snake.” He almost ended up catching a home run, to boot. Give him a break, he’s out of practice.

5) Detroit Tigers ⬇️

Last week: 4

Quite the scare for the Tigers, as ace Tarik Skubal was forced to exit Friday’s start with left side tightness, though he’s currently on track to make his next start.

6) Los Angeles Dodgers ⬆️

Last week: 7

The Dodgers have won six out of seven to pull away from the Padres and now we’ll see a potential playoff preview with a series against the Phillies to begin the week.

7) New York Yankees ⬇️

Last week: 5

Jazz Chisholm Jr. is just one homer away from a 30-30 season, which would make him the third player in franchise history to reach the mark. Alfonso Soriano did it twice (2002, 2003) and Bobby Bonds (1975) are the only others to do it.

8) Seattle Mariners ⬆️

Last week: 12

Winners of nine straight, the Mariners have powered their way past the Astros and into first place in the AL West. Now they’ll hit the road for three against the playoff hopeful Royals before a huge showdown against the Astros in Houston this weekend.

Cal Raleigh hit his 54th homer on Sunday, tying him with Mickey Mantle for the most-ever by a switch-hitter in a single season.

9) Boston Red Sox ⬇️

Last week: 8

The Red Sox avoided a sweep on Sunday night as Garrett Crochet struck out 12 batters over six innings against the Yankees for his 16th win.

10) San Diego Padres ⬇️

Last week: 9

This Padres took care of business by winning three out of four against the MLB-worst Rockies. Perhaps the best sign? Jackson Merrill hit three homers during the series. He’s endured a frustrating sophomore campaign, but it would be a huge lift going into the postseason if he’s locked in at the plate.

11) Houston Astros ⬇️

Last week: 10

For the first time since June 1, the Astros are not in first place in the AL West. This week will be crucial, as they’ll get the Rangers and Mariners at home.

12) Texas Rangers ⬆️

Last week: 13

Speaking of those Rangers, they ripped off six straight wins before taking a loss against the Mets on Sunday. Now comes the biggest series of the season, as they’ll head to Houston for a three-game series against the Astros. Buckle up, everyone.

13) New York Mets ⬇️

Last week: 11

Pete Alonso walked it off on Sunday as the Mets finally snapped their eight-game losing streak. Nolan McLean is doing everything he can to will the Mets to the postseason. His 1.19 ERA is the lowest in franchise history through a pitcher’s first six starts.

14) Cleveland Guardians ⬆️

Last week: 15

The Guardians are seven games over .500 for the first time since late May. They are getting hot at the right time, but is it too late?

15) San Francisco Giants ⬆️

Last week: 16

The Giants lost two out of three to the Dodgers this weekend, but they are still very much alive in the NL Wild Card picture. They’ll embark on a seven-game roadtrip this week, tipping off with a huge series against the Diamondbacks. And just to make things more interesting, the Giants are reportedly calling up top prospect first baseman Bryce Eldridge.

16) Arizona Diamondbacks ⬆️

Last week: 18

Credit to Torey Lovullo and company, as the Diamondbacks are still within spitting distance in the NL Wild Card race despite selling off parts at the trade deadline. That being said, Friday’s game against the Twins will be one they’ll likely wish they had.

17) Kansas City Royals ⬇️

Last week: 14

Six games back in the Wild Card race with 12 games to play. It’s probably not going to happen. Still, we saw a big moment for Salvador Perez as part of Saturday’s loss to the Phillies.

18) Cincinnati Reds ⬇️

Last week: 17

More missed opportunities for the Reds, who were swept by the suddenly-hot Athletics over the weekend. Elly De La Cruz went 1-for-11 in the series and has just one home run over his last 70 games dating back to June 23.

19) Tampa Bay Rays ⬆️

Last week: 20

Like the Royals, the Rays probably have too much ground to make up. Still, there’s reason to watch this club as Junior Caminero is three homers away from tying Carlos Peña’s franchise record with 46 home runs.

20) St. Louis Cardinals ⬇️

Last week: 19

Masyn Winn has officially been shut down for the season as he prepares for surgery to repair the meniscus in his right knee. While the injury hampered him during the second half, he has a real chance to win his first Gold Glove Award this fall.

21) Athletics ⬆️

Last week: 24

Oh my goodness, Nick Kurtz. Feel free to marvel and admire at the longest home run of the season.

22) Miami Marlins

Last week: 22

Sandy Alcantara has completed six innings in six straight starts and holds a 3.09 ERA in 10 starts dating back to July 23.

23) Baltimore Orioles

Last week: 23

Dylan Beavers owns a .440 on-base percentage over his first 24 games (92 plate appearances) in the majors. Only Aaron Judge (22 percent) has walked at a higher clip since Beavers (21.7 percent) made his MLB debut on August 16.

24) Los Angeles Angels ⬇️

Last week: 21

The Angels have been eliminated from the postseason, marking 11 straight years that they have missed the playoffs. That’s the longest playoff drought in MLB. Poor Mike Trout.

25) Atlanta Braves

Last week: 25

Drake Baldwin looked like the favorite for the NL Rookie of the Year Award coming into the month, but he’s just 3-for-36 (.083) over his last 10 games. Cubs right-hander Cade Horton (0.84 ERA over his last 10 starts) might have surpassed him.

26) Minnesota Twins ⬆️

Last week: 27

What a day for Kody Clemens on Friday against the Diamondbacks. His 14 total bases tied Kirby Puckett (August 30, 1987) for the most in franchise history.

27) Pittsburgh Pirates ⬇️

Last week: 26

That’s what I’m talking about. After struggling in his first career start, Bubba Chandler showed exactly why he’s one of the most exciting pitching prospects in the game on Saturday against the Nationals.

28) Washington Nationals

Last week: 28

After slugging 22 homers through the end of June, James Wood has hit just five homers with a .675 OPS over his last 62 games.

29) Chicago White Sox

Last week: 29

If the White Sox can win six of their final 12 games, they’ll manage to avoid 100 losses. That would be a step forward, no?

30) Colorado Rockies

Last week: 30

We’re now in our 33rd season of Rockies baseball. They’ve had plenty of great players in that time and all sorts of offense at Coors Field, but it wasn’t until Mickey Moniak on Sunday that a Rockies player managed four hits, two home runs, and two stolen bases in the same game.

Bismack Biyombo returns to San Antonio on one-year deal

When Victor Wembanyama went out last season with a blood clot in his shoulder, the San Antonio Spurs turned to Bismack Biyombo. They signed the veteran big man and he played in 28 games for them, starting 26, giving them 5.1 points and 5.6 rebounds a game.

That was enough for the Spurs to bring him back. The Spurs have agreed to a one-year contract with Biyombo, a story broken by Shams Charania of ESPN.

Biyombo, entering his 15th NBA season, is an insurance plan for the Spurs. Wembanyama will start at center and seems poised for another huge leap entering his third season (which should scare the league). Behind him, the Spurs added Luke Kornet for depth. Biyombo slots in behind them at the five, he’s not going to see a lot of run, but it’s smart to have the veteran in house.

This is likely a fully guaranteed contract at the veteran minimum. That brings the Spurs up to a full roster of 15 heading into training camp, although Lindy Waters III is only partially guaranteed.

Rangers legend Eddie Giacomin dead at 86

Legendary Rangers goalie Eddie Giacomin has died at the age of 86.

Giacomin, the second Ranger to have his jersey number retired, had his No. 1 raised to the rafters in 1989.

He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1987.

“Eddie Giacomin was an integral member of the New York Rangers for a decade and personified what being a Ranger is all about, both to his teammates and the Blueshirts faithful,” the Rangers said in a statement. “You cannot discuss the history of this organization and not immediately think of Eddie. The great Rod Gilbert called him the heart of their team, and we cannot think of a greater honor to bestow on one of the greatest goaltenders to ever play the game. Our thoughts are with Eddie’s family, friends and teammates during this incredibly difficult time.”

Giacomin debuted with the Rangers during the 1965-66 season and spent his first 10 1/2 seasons with New York before finishing his career with the Red Wings.

A six-time All-Star (all with the Rangers), he won the Vezina Trophy following the 1970-71 season, when he had a 2.07 GAA and led the league with eight shutouts.

During his career on Broadway, Giacomin went 267-172 with a 2.70 GAA and .905 save percentage. 

Warriors reportedly increased offer to Jonathan Kuminga, but staring contest continues as deadline approaches

Deadlines have a tendency to spark activity, and with the start of NBA training camps now just two weeks away — and with the October 1 deadline for restricted free agents to accept their teams’ qualifying offers just one week beyond that — we’re starting to get rumblings of some movement in the long-stagnant stalemate between the Golden State Warriors and forward Jonathan Kuminga.

Over a quiet summer, both team and player remained dug into their respective positions. Kuminga has sought either a lucrative long-term extension in Golden State that signals a pathway to a starting job and a starring role, or a sign-and-trade to an interested suitor willing to provide him with such an extension and path. According to multiple reports, both the Suns and Kings had designs on giving Kuminga a multi-year deal to slot into their starting lineups; Golden State general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr., however, reportedly wasn’t interested in the trade proposals that Phoenix and Sacramento had pitched the Warriors for Kuminga’s services.

The Warriors, in turn, have wanted to bring Kuminga back on a shorter, less lucrative pact: a reported two-year, $45 million standing offer with a team option on the second year that would require Kuminga to waive the de facto no-trade clause he’d receive as a player signing for one guaranteed season with a team that holds his Bird rights. That structure would allow Warriors brass to trade the 22-year-old forward at whatever time they deem most convenient and to the destination of their choosing — even if it’s not one that Kuminga would prefer to spend the next phase of his career.

A new week brings renewed hope, though. Jake Fischer reported last week that Kuminga was “strongly considering … accepting the $7.9 million qualifying offer” that would allow him to hit unrestricted free agency next summer — taking the same tack that fellow RFA Cam Thomas took in Brooklyn and introducing the threat of the Warriors losing him without receiving any players or draft compensation in return — and that “we could finally see some movement on the Kuminga front next week.” Sure enough: Anthony Slater and Shams Charania of ESPN reported Monday that Dunleavy and Co. have upped their offer to Kuminga — albeit in a context that still allows Golden State to retain as much control as possible over when and where to move the No. 7 pick in the 2021 NBA Draft:

Late last week, Dunleavy offered Kuminga a three-year, $75.2 million deal with a team option in the third season, sources told ESPN. That’s $48.3 million guaranteed in the first two seasons and basically the same per-year salary as fellow restricted free agent Josh Giddey, who re-signed with the Chicago Bulls for four years and $100 million. The difference: Half the length and a team-controlled third season and a subliminal understanding that the contract is more trade asset than commitment to a partnership.

Dunleavy and the Warriors are requesting the same structure as their previous proposal on the two-year, $45 million framework — a team option on the second season and a waiving of the inherent no-trade clause, sources said.

Kuminga, as you might expect, remains reluctant to assent to any resolution that grants Golden State that kind of control, given his well-publicized frustrations over what he sees as years of inconsistent opportunities and stunted growth under head coach Steve Kerr. Slater and Charania report that Kuminga and his agent, Aaron Turner, have responded to the Dubs’ latest pitch with one of their own, but that Dunleavy and owner Joe Lacob still haven’t taken their bats off their shoulders:

One of the latest counters, sources said, came in the past week: One year on a negotiable number, presented as a souped-up version of the qualifying offer, getting Kuminga a financial bump (up from $8 million) and unrestricted free agency next summer while wiping away the inherent no-trade clause and allowing the Warriors to use him as an expiring contract at the deadline. It would serve as a bridge deal that gives both sides the ability to examine another year together, but also a much more trade-friendly salary number as opposed to the qualifying offer, which has an Oct. 1 deadline. It is similar to a concept the Brooklyn Nets proposed to Cam Thomas.

Dunleavy declined the concept, sources said, and it is Lacob who is apparently against the balloon one-year offer, leaving the Warriors too vulnerable to losing Kuminga next summer for nothing.

Kuminga has proven capable of putting up numbers, averaging 15.8 points on 49.9% shooting and 4.7 rebounds in 25.6 minutes per game over the last two seasons. That production has increased when he’s gotten the opportunity to start: 17.1 points on 51.4% shooting to go with 5.1 rebounds, 2.7 assists and 1.4 combined steals-and-blocks in 28.8 minutes per game over 56 starts.

Only a handful of players Kuminga’s age have produced like that over the past couple of seasons: Alperen Şengün, Jalen Williams, Evan Mobley, Chet Holmgren and Jalen Johnson. All five of those guys havealreadysecuredmonsterbags; all five, though, have also shown themselves to be high-level defensive players, high-level playmakers, or both. Kuminga, on the other hand, owns a 1.3-to-1 career assist-to-turnover ratio and hasn’t developed into the kind of on-ball stopper that you’d hope for from a 6-foot-8, 210-pound über-athlete with a 6-foot-11 wingspan.

That’s a problem in Golden State, where the ecosystem that Kerr has built around Stephen Curry requires everybody else to move the ball and their bodies, knock down 3s off the catch, defend like demons, and generally fit into a defined role. The need to get in where you fit in became even more acute once the Warriors traded for Jimmy Butler: a high-efficiency, low-turnover defensive ace who plays Kuminga’s position. Warriors lineups featuring all three of Butler, Kuminga and Draymond Green got outscored by 36 points in 105 minutes last season, according to PBP Stats, scoring at a rate that would’ve ranked dead last in the NBA; lineups featuring Butler and Green without Kuminga, however, were +180 in 940 minutes, and scored at a top-five-caliber clip.

Time and again down the stretch last season, Kerr limited or eliminated Kuminga’s minutes, leaning into what worked best for Golden State in pursuit of playoff positioning and postseason success. Kerr only dusted Kuminga off when forced to after Curry injured his hamstring in Game 1 of the Warriors’ second-round series against the Rockets. Over the next four games, Kuminga averaged 31 minutes a night, averaging 24.3 points per game on 55/39/72 shooting splits; he also had five assists against eight turnovers over those four games; the Warriors lost his minutes by 28 points, lost all four games, and lost the series.

It’s the dilemma in a nutshell. The Warriors’ only chance of playing meaningful basketball come springtime lies in doing everything possible to optimize the roster around Curry. Kerr clearly feels that, for all Kuminga’s athleticism and gifts as a scorer, his specific shortcomings as a connective playmaker and defender make him an awkward fit next to Steph. That athleticism and those gifts are clear, though, and clearly have value; with Curry, Butler and Green all on the wrong side of 35, Dunleavy and Co. know that Kuminga, and whatever contract he winds up signing, likely represents the Warriors’ best trade chip to play in search of new sources of talent.

Kuminga and his reps know that, too, and want the deal to reflect that, in both length and dollars. But committing to a deal that pays Kuminga more money up front (potentially foiling the Warriors’ plans of filling out the roster with reportedly waiting vets like Al Horford, De’Anthony Melton, Gary Payton II and Seth Curry) and that stretches beyond the summer of 2027 (when Curry, Butler and Green are all slated to be off the books, giving the Warriors all the financial flexibility in the world if they want it) would complicate matters significantly for Golden State, now and in the future.

The staring contest, then, continues, for both the Warriors — who have effectively sat out the NBA’s offseason, standing as the only team in the league to make no signings, still featuring six open roster spots on the verge of camp, and seeing options like once-rumored target Malcolm Brogdon come off the board — and Kuminga, who enters his fifth pro season still looking to definitively carve out his niche. With camp a mere fortnight away and the Oct. 1 qualifying offer deadline just three weeks out, it’ll be awfully interesting to see who blinks first.

Warriors reportedly increased offer to Jonathan Kuminga, but staring contest continues as deadline approaches

Deadlines have a tendency to spark activity, and with the start of NBA training camps now just two weeks away — and with the October 1 deadline for restricted free agents to accept their teams’ qualifying offers just one week beyond that — we’re starting to get rumblings of some movement in the long-stagnant stalemate between the Golden State Warriors and forward Jonathan Kuminga.

Over a quiet summer, both team and player remained dug into their respective positions. Kuminga has sought either a lucrative long-term extension in Golden State that signals a pathway to a starting job and a starring role, or a sign-and-trade to an interested suitor willing to provide him with such an extension and path. According to multiple reports, both the Suns and Kings had designs on giving Kuminga a multi-year deal to slot into their starting lineups; Golden State general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr., however, reportedly wasn’t interested in the trade proposals that Phoenix and Sacramento had pitched the Warriors for Kuminga’s services.

The Warriors, in turn, have wanted to bring Kuminga back on a shorter, less lucrative pact: a reported two-year, $45 million standing offer with a team option on the second year that would require Kuminga to waive the de facto no-trade clause he’d receive as a player signing for one guaranteed season with a team that holds his Bird rights. That structure would allow Warriors brass to trade the 22-year-old forward at whatever time they deem most convenient and to the destination of their choosing — even if it’s not one that Kuminga would prefer to spend the next phase of his career.

A new week brings renewed hope, though. Jake Fischer reported last week that Kuminga was “strongly considering … accepting the $7.9 million qualifying offer” that would allow him to hit unrestricted free agency next summer — taking the same tack that fellow RFA Cam Thomas took in Brooklyn and introducing the threat of the Warriors losing him without receiving any players or draft compensation in return — and that “we could finally see some movement on the Kuminga front next week.” Sure enough: Anthony Slater and Shams Charania of ESPN reported Monday that Dunleavy and Co. have upped their offer to Kuminga — albeit in a context that still allows Golden State to retain as much control as possible over when and where to move the No. 7 pick in the 2021 NBA Draft:

Late last week, Dunleavy offered Kuminga a three-year, $75.2 million deal with a team option in the third season, sources told ESPN. That’s $48.3 million guaranteed in the first two seasons and basically the same per-year salary as fellow restricted free agent Josh Giddey, who re-signed with the Chicago Bulls for four years and $100 million. The difference: Half the length and a team-controlled third season and a subliminal understanding that the contract is more trade asset than commitment to a partnership.

Dunleavy and the Warriors are requesting the same structure as their previous proposal on the two-year, $45 million framework — a team option on the second season and a waiving of the inherent no-trade clause, sources said.

Kuminga, as you might expect, remains reluctant to assent to any resolution that grants Golden State that kind of control, given his well-publicized frustrations over what he sees as years of inconsistent opportunities and stunted growth under head coach Steve Kerr. Slater and Charania report that Kuminga and his agent, Aaron Turner, have responded to the Dubs’ latest pitch with one of their own, but that Dunleavy and owner Joe Lacob still haven’t taken their bats off their shoulders:

One of the latest counters, sources said, came in the past week: One year on a negotiable number, presented as a souped-up version of the qualifying offer, getting Kuminga a financial bump (up from $8 million) and unrestricted free agency next summer while wiping away the inherent no-trade clause and allowing the Warriors to use him as an expiring contract at the deadline. It would serve as a bridge deal that gives both sides the ability to examine another year together, but also a much more trade-friendly salary number as opposed to the qualifying offer, which has an Oct. 1 deadline. It is similar to a concept the Brooklyn Nets proposed to Cam Thomas.

Dunleavy declined the concept, sources said, and it is Lacob who is apparently against the balloon one-year offer, leaving the Warriors too vulnerable to losing Kuminga next summer for nothing.

Kuminga has proven capable of putting up numbers, averaging 15.8 points on 49.9% shooting and 4.7 rebounds in 25.6 minutes per game over the last two seasons. That production has increased when he’s gotten the opportunity to start: 17.1 points on 51.4% shooting to go with 5.1 rebounds, 2.7 assists and 1.4 combined steals-and-blocks in 28.8 minutes per game over 56 starts.

Only a handful of players Kuminga’s age have produced like that over the past couple of seasons: Alperen Şengün, Jalen Williams, Evan Mobley, Chet Holmgren and Jalen Johnson. All five of those guys havealreadysecuredmonsterbags; all five, though, have also shown themselves to be high-level defensive players, high-level playmakers, or both. Kuminga, on the other hand, owns a 1.3-to-1 career assist-to-turnover ratio and hasn’t developed into the kind of on-ball stopper that you’d hope for from a 6-foot-8, 210-pound über-athlete with a 6-foot-11 wingspan.

That’s a problem in Golden State, where the ecosystem that Kerr has built around Stephen Curry requires everybody else to move the ball and their bodies, knock down 3s off the catch, defend like demons, and generally fit into a defined role. The need to get in where you fit in became even more acute once the Warriors traded for Jimmy Butler: a high-efficiency, low-turnover defensive ace who plays Kuminga’s position. Warriors lineups featuring all three of Butler, Kuminga and Draymond Green got outscored by 36 points in 105 minutes last season, according to PBP Stats, scoring at a rate that would’ve ranked dead last in the NBA; lineups featuring Butler and Green without Kuminga, however, were +180 in 940 minutes, and scored at a top-five-caliber clip.

Time and again down the stretch last season, Kerr limited or eliminated Kuminga’s minutes, leaning into what worked best for Golden State in pursuit of playoff positioning and postseason success. Kerr only dusted Kuminga off when forced to after Curry injured his hamstring in Game 1 of the Warriors’ second-round series against the Rockets. Over the next four games, Kuminga averaged 31 minutes a night, averaging 24.3 points per game on 55/39/72 shooting splits; he also had five assists against eight turnovers over those four games; the Warriors lost his minutes by 28 points, lost all four games, and lost the series.

It’s the dilemma in a nutshell. The Warriors’ only chance of playing meaningful basketball come springtime lies in doing everything possible to optimize the roster around Curry. Kerr clearly feels that, for all Kuminga’s athleticism and gifts as a scorer, his specific shortcomings as a connective playmaker and defender make him an awkward fit next to Steph. That athleticism and those gifts are clear, though, and clearly have value; with Curry, Butler and Green all on the wrong side of 35, Dunleavy and Co. know that Kuminga, and whatever contract he winds up signing, likely represents the Warriors’ best trade chip to play in search of new sources of talent.

Kuminga and his reps know that, too, and want the deal to reflect that, in both length and dollars. But committing to a deal that pays Kuminga more money up front (potentially foiling the Warriors’ plans of filling out the roster with reportedly waiting vets like Al Horford, De’Anthony Melton, Gary Payton II and Seth Curry) and that stretches beyond the summer of 2027 (when Curry, Butler and Green are all slated to be off the books, giving the Warriors all the financial flexibility in the world if they want it) would complicate matters significantly for Golden State, now and in the future.

The staring contest, then, continues, for both the Warriors — who have effectively sat out the NBA’s offseason, standing as the only team in the league to make no signings, still featuring six open roster spots on the verge of camp, and seeing options like once-rumored target Malcolm Brogdon come off the board — and Kuminga, who enters his fifth pro season still looking to definitively carve out his niche. With camp a mere fortnight away and the Oct. 1 qualifying offer deadline just three weeks out, it’ll be awfully interesting to see who blinks first.

Warriors reportedly up offer to Jonathan Kuminga to three years, $75.2 million, but stalemate remains

Jonathan Kuminga wants to be somewhere he is given a legitimate chance to shine. Right now he’s a power forward on a team that already has Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler, a team coached by Steve Kerr, who has never fully trusted him. The Golden State Warriors want a Kuminga contract that is primarily a trade chip, with a team option on the final season. Kuminga doesn’t want to have his fate in the hands of a fickle trade market.

Which is why there remains a stalemate on a new Kuminga contract despite the Warriors increasing their offer to three years, $75.2 million, with a team option on the final year, reports Shams Charania and Anthony Slater at ESPN. That team option makes this a much more tradable contract. Even though the new offer would guarantee $48.3 million for Kuminga over the next two years — literally doubling how much money he has made in the NBA over his first four years — what Kuminga wants most is an opportunity. Something he has felt he never really got a fair chance at under Kerr. That’s why one of Kuminga’s counteroffers was the same contract, but with a player option in the final year.

All that boiled over and led to this exchange between Kuminga and Warriors owner Joe Lacob, ESPN reports.

But there was an underlying question from the Lacob side that felt most pressing. “Do you want to be here?”…

So Kuminga turned the question back on Lacob and the Warriors. “Do you even want me here?”

What Kuminga’s camp wanted was a sign-and-trade this summer, but the offers that came in were not enough for Golden State. For example, Sacramento reportedly offered Dario Saric, Devin Carter and a lottery-protected first-round pick (some rumors suggest Malik Monk was the player to go with the pick). Phoenix made an offer as well that didn’t include a first-rounder. What Kuminga liked about both of those situations was less about the money — which was close per year to what the Warriors just offered — and more that it was a three- or four-year contract with a player option, and both teams were going to make him their starting four.

Kuminga’s leverage in negotiations with the Warriors is that he could follow the route Cam Thomas took in Brooklyn, sign the one-year qualifying offer at $7.8 million, which gives him a no trade clause for this season (which he could waive for the right deal) and would make him an unrestricted free agent next summer when half-a-dozen teams or more will have cap space to sign free agents. Kuminga’s agent reportedly made a “souped-up” qualifying offer proposal, where Kuminga gets more than the $8 million but on a very tradable one-year contract. The Warriors don’t like that because of the risk he could walk away at the end of the season for nothing if no trade is found.

Kuminga, 22, averaged 15.3 points and 4.6 rebounds in 47 games last season (he missed time with an ankle injury).

The Warriors remain in a holding pattern while the Kuminga situation plays out. Golden State has agreements in place to sign Al Horford at the taxpayer mid-level exception, then sign some combination of De’Anthony Melton, Gary Payton II and Seth Curry at the veteran minimum. To do that, the Warriors (hard-capped at the second apron) can’t offer Kuminga more than $22.5 million for the first year of his contract. At that price, he’s not going to accept the team option on the final season.

So the Warriors remain stuck, trying to work out something with Kuminga before the Oct. 1 deadline when he would just take the qualifying offer.