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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Madeline Kenney

Warriors: Gary Payton II expected to miss at least a month

SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors’ lone trade deadline addition won’t be on the floor for at least another month.

Gary Payton II, whom the Warriors acquired in a four-team deal at last week’s trade deadline, is dealing with an abdominal injury discovered by the team’s medical staff during a routine physical and will be reevaluated in March.

Golden State initially put the trade, which shipped former lottery pick James Wiseman to Detroit, on hold after learning that Payton would miss significant time with the injury.

Warriors president of basketball operations and general manager Bob Myers on Monday couldn’t say whether the injury stemmed from Payton’s offseason surgery to repair his core muscle. But the hope is that he’ll be good to go in time for the playoffs.

“We need him,” Myers said. “Hopefully at some point, he comes back and can help us because I do believe if he does get back, there’s a role for him. I think coaches and players think that, too.”

The NBA has launched an investigation into whether the Portland Trail Blazers failed to disclose pertinent medical information during the trade discussions after the Warriors filed a complaint with the league office over the weekend.

Myers said he couldn’t go into detail about those allegations for legal reasons. It’s unclear how long the league’s review will take. If the Warriors’ concerns are vindicated, Portland could face penalties in the form of a fine or loss of draft picks.

“What do I want? Whatever the NBA says is fair, just whatever that is, just want a fair result,” Myers said.

Payton missed the first 35 games of the season, but played 14 of the last 16 games for the Trail Blazers, including 22 minutes in Portland’s win over Golden State the night before the Thursday trade deadline. That’s part of the reason the Warriors were so caught off guard by Payton’s failed physical.

Nevertheless, the Warriors ultimately concluded Sunday it was best to keep the trade intact, sending Wiseman to the Pistons, as forward Saddiq Bey went from Detroit to Atlanta. Former Piston Kevin Knox landed in Portland along with five second-round picks.

Parting ways with Wiseman, the Warriors’ highest draft pick since 1995 and a crown jewel of the team’s coveted two-timeline plan, was a difficult decision that the front office made after heavy internal debate. Myers said he still has faith Wiseman can develop into the player they thought he’d be when they picked him No. 2 overall in 2020. But with a logjam at his position and the Warriors prioritizing winning, he wasn’t afforded the in-game reps he needed to grow.

“We didn’t see a path even upon return,” Myers said of Wiseman. “He wasn’t playing at the time and additionally, our situation is a little different because of the amount of money each player costs and so if we’d seen a path for James upon return that had changed, we might’ve considered that.

“We’ve seen what Gary can do. And it’s not any kind of indictment of James, it’s a hard rotation to crack on this team. And so Gary seeing the fit, seeing the need, our defensive and things like that.”

Payton’s familiarity and proven track record of success within the Warriors’ system were among the several selling points. Another added bonus is that the Warriors will save roughly $37 million in luxury tax after moving from Wiseman’s growing salary.

While Payton will help the Warriors, especially on defense, the team knows he alone can’t be the saving grace to turn its underwhelming season around.

It doesn’t help that the Warriors have been plagued by injuries over the last few months. Stephen Curry (leg sprain) and Andre Iguodala (hip strain) are out indefinitely. Andrew Wiggins, who’s had a rough three-month stretch of injuries and sickness, is questionable for Monday night’s game against Washington with an ankle sprain. And now their newest piece, Payton, is sidelined, too.

The Warriors’ inconsistent play and amounting injuries have made Myers’ job of evaluating the team’s needs more challenging than previous years.

“It’s a moment in time where we realized we tried to get better this year and thought that that move helped us and still do,” Myers said. “Then you evaluate how this team finishes and move off that position.”

Golden State is expected to fill its 15th roster spot at some point by either snatching a player from the buyout market or converting one of their two-way players to a guaranteed deal. The Warriors could look to add a big now that Wiseman is out of the picture or they could opt for a versatile two-way wing which they seem to favor over size.

Regardless of which route they go, Myers said he and coach Steve Kerr will work together to find a solution.

“We hope that we have enough but we’ll look and see,” Myers said. “It’s also determinative of how the coaches will use that player. For us to say, ‘Here’s a big guy,’ and the coaching staff said, ‘We’re not playing that guy, doesn’t matter if he’s 7 feet tall or 8 feet tall.’ Any buyout conversation has to be done in collaboration with coaching staff. Because why bring a player in if they’re not going to use him. But if there’s a player that the coaching staff and the front office thinks can be helpful, absolutely.”

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