
The assumption that he will stay in Golden State is so strong that his own pending free agency has barely gotten attention while league observers obsesses over Durant’s decision. The Warriors don’t have to sell Thompson on anything. There is the clear benefit of playing alongside point guard Trae Young, who isn’t Curry but is an outstanding playmaker. They could show him that they have plenty of cap space to sign more good players, now and later. If the Hawks get a chance to pitch Thompson, they can try to convince him to join up with them and immediately accelerate their timeline. The Hawks obviously would be one of several teams pursuing Thompson, and plenty of playoff teams can easily create the cap space necessary to sign him. In either case, Thompson will be open to signing elsewhere. The Warriors could decide to offer Durant the max but not Thompson, or offer each free agent less than the max. Those are reasons Thompson isn’t likely to accept a “discount” to sign with the Warriors, like Durant did when he signed as a free agent in 2016.

He won’t get another chance to sign a maximum contract, unless he decides to sign a short deal and try again. As "repeat" tax payers in 2020-21 the Warriors would be hit with a $150 million tax bill for total salary costs exceeding $330 million - and that's with minimum-salary veterans and draft picks around Durant, Curry, Thompson and Draymond Green.ĭuring Thompson’s 10-year career he’s been underpaid relative to his value. Signing Durant and Thompson to maximum free-agent contracts would mean a luxury tax bill of more than $100 million in 2019-20. The Warriors have paid about $66 million in luxury taxes the past two seasons, largely because of the "supermax" contract Steph Curry signed in 2017.

The Warriors will have increased revenue streams in their new San Francisco arena next season, but keeping every key player from their championship runs also would mean massive payroll costs. It could come down to Golden State’s willingness to pay a steep luxury tax to keep Thompson and Durant. There’s a chance Schlenk will get his chance to court Thompson. Just getting a meeting with Thompson would burnish their reputation. Signing Thompson would signal that the Hawks are a serious franchise after years of top free agents barely giving them a look. Schlenk has boasted that players around the league have taken notice of the Hawks’ young talent and organizational culture.


In context, though, signing Thompson would pay dividends for the Hawks beyond his on-court value.
