Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green is making “good progress” toward a return from the left calf strain he sustained Jan. 18 in a game against the Washington Wizards, the team announced Monday afternoon.
On the same day that the club dealt for defenseman Scott Perunovich from the St. Louis Blues to help with depth, the New York Islanders placed defenseman Ryan Pulock and goaltender Marcus Hogberg on injured reserve on Monday due to upper-body injuries.
While Kuminga is progressing in his recovery from a right ankle sprain and is expected to begin light individual workouts this week, the Warriors said he will be re-evaluated in two weeks.
The team announced injury updates to forwards Draymond Green and Jonathan Kuminga on Monday, with neither set to return imminently.
The Golden State Warriors are set to face their conference rivals Utah Jazz in the first game of a back-to-back on Tuesday.
Marc Stein: The Warriors announce that Jonathan Kuminga (ankle) is out for at least two more weeks while Draymond Green (calf) is now regarded as day-to-day.
Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga, who sustained a right ankle sprain on January 4 and has missed the past 11 games, will miss at least two more weeks, the team announced in a press release (Twitter link).
Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green is dealing with a strained calf and is considered day-to-day, which means he has the time to watch more basketball and be active on social media.
After a campaign that has been disjointed in concept and execution, the Warriors can make the case with wins on Tuesday and particularly Wednesday that they are, in fact, “figuring it out,” as Steph Curry implored fans (specifically “Twitter fingers”) to do two weeks back.
SAN FRANCISCO — Ice chips scattered around the floor of the Warriors’ home locker room were half melted 30 minutes after they put the finishing touches on a stunning win over the Oklahoma City Thunder. They showered their head coach, Steve Kerr, with ice water to celebrate, a euphoric cap to their best win since their 12-3 start.
Minnesota coach Chris Finch didn't see the end of his team's game in Phoenix on Wednesday night, but he certainly had to like what transpired after he was ejected.The Timberwolves, who trailed by t