Draymond Green previously said he'd be shocked if the Warriors made a trade before the NBA's Thursday deadline at noon PT. General manager Bob Myers made it clear he doesn't feel pressed to make a move, and Klay Thompson's only ask ahead of the deadline is maybe a new washing machine.
We don't quite know how Steve Kerr and Steph Curry feel about Golden State's washing machine situation. They did, however, make it fairly obvious Wednesday night after their 111-85 blowout loss to the Utah Jazz that they're on the same wavelength as Green and Myers when it comes to how the Warriors will treat the trade deadline.
"Yeah, I don't think anybody's expecting anything," Kerr said.
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Don't forget the catch, though. There's always a catch.
"You never say never," Kerr continued. "I've been around long enough to know that things can happen."
He went on to say that he never felt comfortable around the trade deadline as a player and understands if that's how some of the Warriors' players feel right now. Kerr was traded five times over his 15-year playing career.
Only one of those five trades happened during the season, when he was traded by the Cleveland Cavaliers to the Orlando Magic in December of 1992 for a future second-round draft pick.
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Juan Toscano-Anderson, who scored 11 points off the bench in the loss and has spent his entire NBA career with the Warriors, said he tries not to think about it but checks his phone whenever he gets an alert right now and wonders if he's being traded.
"At the end of the day, it's a business," he said. "There aren't too many guys who are 'safe.' It's natural. It's part of the business, it's part of the game, but I just focus on coming to work and enjoying basketball.
"Regardless of where I am, if I get to play basketball then I'm a lucky guy."
But Curry, like Kerr, expects this to be the Warriors' team when the deadline passes. He's one of the core players the front office would talk with if team was about make a move, and it sounds like Steph believes they'll stand pat.
"For the most part, yeah," Curry said when asked if he expects the Warriors to be quiet at the deadline. "That would be the expectation."
Why? Curry knows the Warriors haven't hit their peak, and there's no need to fix what isn't broken.
"Second in the West, a really good record," Curry said. "We've had some bad nights, we have some things we need to get better at -- we understand that we're not playing championship basketball every night.
"But we have shown and demonstrated that."
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Steph loved the vibe of a hungry locker room after the Warriors' nine-game win streak ended in Utah and their record dropped to 41-14. He expects his squad to bounce back Thursday night at home against the New York Knicks, and it sounds like these are the players he expects to ride with the rest of the season.
As Curry said, "We'll see how it goes tomorrow."