Sports
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Steve Kerr Believes Jonathan Kuminga Wants to Stay with the Warriors
The New York Times
January 21, 2026•1 day ago

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Jimmy Butler suffered a torn ACL and will miss the rest of the season, a significant blow to the Warriors' recent strong performance. Coach Steve Kerr expressed disappointment but believes the team has sufficient depth to continue competing. The article also addresses Jonathan Kuminga's potential return to the rotation amid trade demands, with Kerr stating he believes Kuminga still wants to play for the team.
SAN FRANCISCO — The Golden State Warriors announced Tuesday that Jimmy Butler has a torn ACL in his right knee and will miss the remainder of the season. Warriors coach Steve Kerr felt awful the 36-year-old former All-Star was going to miss the rest of a year in which he really started to help the Warriors find a rhythm.
“Most of all just disappointed for Jimmy,” Kerr said before Tuesday’s game against the Toronto Raptors. “He’s having a great year. I felt, like the last couple weeks, he was really at the top of his game. So, for him, and for us, obviously, but for him individually in the middle of a really great season with a lot of possibilities … I just feel terrible for him that he’s gonna miss the rest of the year. It’s part of the game. Injuries are part of it, but it hurts for sure.”
The Warriors said Butler will have surgery at a date to be determined. Butler suffered the injury with 7:41 left in the third quarter of Monday night’s win over the Miami Heat. He jumped up to catch a pass from Warriors guard Brandin Podziemski and fell awkwardly on his knee while trying to catch the ball over Heat guard Davion Mitchell.
Butler stayed down on the floor for a couple of minutes before slowly going back to the locker room with teammates Buddy Hield and Gary Payton II on each side of him. Butler put no weight on the knee, and his teammates immediately knew the severity of the injury. Warriors big man Quinten Post instantly put his hands over his head as he watched Butler roll around in agony on the floor after the fall.
Kerr said that, though he feels for Butler, he also feels the Warriors are “well equipped with our depth to continue to play at a high level” in his absence. Butler averaged 20 points, 5.6 rebounds and 4.9 assists in 38 games this season.
“I think we have enough now to compete,” Kerr said. “I think Al (Horford) and Melt (De’Anthony Melton) have given us a different dynamic. I think a lot of our young players — Quinten, Will Richard, those guys — are ready to contribute. They have contributed. We’ve got depth. So, we can keep this thing going. Obviously, we’ll miss Jimmy. He’s one of the best players in the league. You can’t minimize that, trivialize it, but you play with who you have, and I like who we have.”
Butler’s injury comes at the worst possible time for a Warriors team that comes into Tuesday’s game against the Raptors having won 12 of its last 16 games. Butler was in the midst of his best stretch of the season — averaging 21.9 points in January and providing a stabilizing force behind Warriors star guard Stephen Curry.
“You just look at it matter-of-factly,” Kerr said of the injury. “We get it. This is part of the NBA, part of sports. I’m not gonna spend a whole lot of time analyzing where we are in the food chain of the NBA. I’m gonna focus on what we can do to win tonight and win the next game. We have a good vibe going. We have a really good rhythm.”
As the Warriors prepare for life without Butler for the foreseeable future, the key question in the short term is what happens with 23-year-old forward Jonathan Kuminga? Kuminga hasn’t played since Dec. 18, and there remains frustration between the Warriors’ front office and Kuminga’s camp about his role. ESPN reported last week that Kuminga has demanded a trade — but with Butler out of the lineup, the Warriors could use Kuminga in his absence. Kerr was noncommittal when asked whether he expected Kuminga to be part of the rotation again.
“He could be, yeah,” Kerr said. “He obviously hasn’t played in a while, but at this point, we have to experiment a little bit with rotations, see where we are, and he’s definitely a part of that talk, that conversation.”
When asked about Kuminga’s recent trade demand, Warriors general manager Mike Dunleavy offered a telling response.
“As far as the demand, I’m aware of that,” Dunleavy said before Tuesday’s game. “In terms of demands, when there’s a demand, there needs to be a demand on the market. So we’ll see how that unfolds.”
Many in the Warriors organization were frustrated by the fact Kuminga didn’t play in a Jan. 2 game against the Oklahoma City Thunder after Kerr said earlier that day in a radio interview on 95.7 The Game in San Francisco that Kuminga would “for sure” play as the Warriors rested Curry, Butler and veteran leader Draymond Green. Kuminga popped up on the injury report about an hour before the game with what the team called lower back soreness and has not seen the floor since. The biggest question heading into Tuesday night’s game is whether Kuminga will reappear in the rotation when the team he doesn’t seem to want to be on anymore actually needs him.
When asked whether he thought Kuminga wanted to be part of the rotation again, Kerr was quick with his answer.
“Yeah,” Kerr said.
Does Kerr feel Kuminga still wants to play for the Warriors right now?
“I do,” Kerr said.
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