Warriors rumors: Ben Simmons, Seth Curry floated as potential free agent targets
With the NBA free agency period and the offseason long underway, the Golden State Warriors are the one team in the league that has yet to make any roster additions via free agency or trade. The lone move involving the Warriors so far has been Kevon Looney's departure to the New Orleans Pelicans in free agency. But the Warriors have been linked to several free agents in recent days, including Ben Simmons and Seth Curry, as per ClutchPoints NBA insider Brett Siegel.
While the Warriors have been mentioned as having free agent interest in players such as Gary Payton II, Malcolm Brogdan and Trey Lyles, Siegel notes that the team has shown recent interest in Ben Simmons and Seth Curry during the early days of summer league.
The Warriors have several roster spots open, however, it's unlikely they make any moves until the Jonathan Kuminga situation is resolved. Kuminga is a restricted free agent and has drawn interest from other teams via a potential sign-and-trade, but there's no indication that the Warriors are looking to move on from him just yet.
But when it comes to potential targets for the Warriors, Simmons and Curry would be pretty decent options for the team. Should the Warriors sign Curry, it would be the first time that he would play alongside his brother Stephen Curry on an NBA roster.
Curry is coming off a solid season with the Charlotte Hornets during which he appeared in 68 games, including 14 starts, at a little over 15 minutes per game. He averaged 6.5 points and 1.7 rebounds and shot 45.6 percent from the three-point line at close to three attempts per game.
For Simmons, following his buyout from the Brooklyn Nets, he signed with the LA Clippers and was rather solid overall in a reserve role. He's not going to be the No. 1 pick and All-Star he once was, but for a depth piece and rotation player, he can be a good pickup.
During the second half of the season, Simmons appeared in 18 games for the Clippers off the bench in a little over 16 minutes per game. He averaged 2.9 rebounds, 3.8 rebounds and 3.1 assists with splits of 43.4 percent shooting from the field and 85.7 percent shooting from the free-throw line.
Related: Warriors rumors: Dubs viewed as likely Al Horford, De'Anthony Melton landing spot
Related: 6 Kevin Durant decisions that tarnished his legacy, ranked

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Cubs reach multi-year extension with president Jed Hoyer
Jed Hoyer is sticking around in Chicago. The Cubs reached a multi-year extension with their president of baseball operations on Monday afternoon, the team announced. Specifics of his new deal are not yet known, though his current contract with the Cubs was set to expire after this season. "Jed and his baseball operations staff have built a healthy player development organization and put an exciting, playoff contending team on the field," chairman Tom Ricketts said in a statement. "We are looking forward to the rest of hte season and to working with Jed for years to come." Hoyer has been with the Cubs since 2011, which makes him one of the longest-tenured front office executives anywhere in the league. He joined the franchise alongside then-president Theo Epstein as their general manager, and helped orchestrate the team's World Series win in 2016. That snapped a championship drought that went on for well over a century. Hoyer then took over as the team's president after the 2020 campaign when Epstein stepped down, and he signed a new five-year deal at the time. Hoyer largely broke up the Cubs' World Series group during his first season at the helm, too, sending away Anthony Rizzo, Javier Báez and Kris Bryant in quick succession ahead of the 2021 trade deadline. But now several years later, the Cubs are back in the mix with several new young starts — including NL MVP candidate Pete Crow-Armstrong, who was part of those trades four years ago. Hoyer also hired manager Craig Counsell to take over in 2024. Though the Cubs haven't made the playoffs under Hoyer's leadership in the role yet, the team holds a 62-43 record entering Monday's game against the Milwaukee Brewers. They are tied for first in the NL Central race with the Brewers, too, which is something they haven't won since 2020. While they aren't quite back to where they were a decade ago, the Cubs clearly believe that Hoyer is the man to get them there once again.
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Astros' Jeremy Pena nears return in latest injury update
The Houston Astros have run into an injury bug while experiencing a midseason slump in the week of the MLB trade deadline. Key players who are currently rehabbing injuries on the injury list include outfielder Yordan Alvarez, third baseman Isaac Paredes, as well as pitchers Cristian Javier and shortstop Jeremy Pena. Heading into the Astros series against the Washington Nationals on Monday, Houston was able to give an update on Jeremy Pena, who's been rehabbing a small rib fracture he sustained after getting hit by a pitch against the Chicago Cubs on June 27. According to The Athletic's Chandler Rome, Pena hit against live pitching at the Astros' Florida Complex over the weekend and will be returning to practice in Houston before their series against the Nationals. This is great for the Astros as they haven't been able to find the same success in July as they did in previous months. They have a record of 10-12 this month. Before Jeremy Pena went down with the injury, he was having the best season of his young career. He was elected as a 2025 All-Star while posting a .322 batting average, .278 on-base percentage, .867 OPS, and 4.5 WAR, hitting 11 home runs and 40 RBI through 82 games this season. Houston hasn't made a set time for Pena to return to the lineup, but he's expected to come back before the end of the month.
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Luka Doncic: 'Just visually, I would say my whole body looks better'
Nothing motivates the greats quite like the quest to prove someone wrong. When the Dallas Mavericks shocked the NBA by trading Luka Doncic to the Lakers, it was followed up by spin out of Dallas about GM Nico Harrison and the franchise's concerns about Doncic's lack of commitment to conditioning, taking care of his body and defense. This summer, we have seen "skinny" Luka on social media as he works out to get in shape. Doncic spoke about that with Men's Health Magazine. " Just visually, I would say my whole body looks better... "Every summer I try my best to work on different things. Obviously, I'm very competitive. This summer was just a little bit different, you know. It kind of motivated me to be even better... "Obviously, be the best that I can be, take care of myself. This year, with my team, I think we did a huge step. But this is just the start, you know. I need to keep going. Can't stop." The Mavericks were not wrong to have concerns about Doncic's conditioning, it certainly has not been consistent throughout his career. (It's still a massive leap from having concerns to trading a top-five player in the world as he enters his prime because of it.) Doncic has improved his conditioning in the past, but due to injuries and other reasons, it has never stayed at the level Dallas' Harrison — a Kobe Bryant guy — expected. What should scare the Mavericks is that they have just become the motivation he needed to genuinely change. If the disrespect from Dallas, combined with being on a new team and watching LeBron James' commitment to his body and conditioning daily, changes Doncic's habits, then the Mavericks have unleashed a monster on the league. Doncic had spent the summer back in Europe with family and friends, but landed back in the United States in the last 48 hours for a Jordan Brand promotional shoe tour. After that tour, he returns to Slovenia to lead his national team in the EuroBasket that starts at the end of this month. Doncic is eligible for a contract extension this summer: On Aug. 2, the Lakers can offer him a four-year, $223 million extension. They will, and Doncic is expected to re-sign with the team, although most likely on a three-year, $165 million max contract (or three plus a player option) because in three years he will have reached 10 years of service in the league and then can sign for up to 35% of the salary cap (the most the Lakers could offer right now is 30%). Expect that deal to be finalized before the season starts (possibly this week, while he is in the USA on a shoe tour, or perhaps closer to Lakers training camp).