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Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr reacts during a game as his future with the team remains unresolved following recent meetings with team leadership.
The Golden State Warriors and head coach Steve Kerr remain in a holding pattern after a pivotal meeting this week failed to produce clarity on his future.
Kerr met Monday with controlling owner Joe Lacob and general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr. for roughly two hours, according to ESPN, as both sides continue to evaluate whether continuing their long-standing partnership is the right path forward.
The meeting was described as productive, but it ended without resolution nearly two weeks after the Warriors’ season concluded. All parties are expected to reconvene next week as discussions continue.
Despite more than a decade of success, including four championships, Kerr’s future is no longer a given.
ESPN, citing league sources, reported that Kerr is “torn” about his next step as he weighs whether to continue coaching at age 60 after completing his 12th season with the franchise.
“I still love coaching, but I get it,” Kerr said following the team’s elimination. “These jobs all have an expiration date. There is a run that happens, and when the run ends, sometimes it’s time for new blood and new ideas.”
That internal reflection has aligned with a broader organizational evaluation. While there is still a belief that Kerr can lead a playoff-caliber team built around Stephen Curry and Draymond Green, there are questions about whether he is the right voice for a potential transition phase.
ESPN, citing team sources, added that the situation is being treated strictly as a “basketball decision,” not a contract dispute or organizational rift.
The conversations have centered on several key factors:
Notably, the Warriors have not initiated any coaching search, reinforcing the idea that Kerr’s decision will ultimately drive the outcome.
Timing is also a factor in the ongoing discussions.
The Warriors will enter the May 10 NBA Draft Lottery with the No. 11 odds, holding a 2.8% chance of jumping into the top four. That pick represents a critical asset as Golden State evaluates how to retool its roster in a competitive Western Conference.
The direction of that roster — whether it leans toward reloading around Curry or pivoting into a partial rebuild — could influence whether Kerr sees himself as part of the next phase.
For now, there is no urgency to finalize anything.
“It’s April,” one source told ESPN. “We don’t need to rush.”
Kerr’s tenure has been one of the defining coaching runs in modern NBA history. Since taking over in 2014, he has helped shape a dynasty built on pace, spacing and unselfish play, maximizing Curry’s unique skill set while establishing a championship culture.
But the current moment presents a different challenge.
Golden State is no longer the overwhelming favorite in the Western Conference, and the margin for error has narrowed as younger contenders continue to rise.
That reality has framed the current conversations not as a reaction to failure, but as a necessary evaluation of what comes next.
For now, the Warriors and Kerr remain aligned in approach — patient, deliberate and focused on finding the right long-term answer.
The next meeting may bring more clarity.
But for the moment, one of the NBA’s most successful partnerships is still weighing whether its next chapter should continue — or come to a natural close.
Alder Almo is a veteran NBA reporter for Heavy.com, covering the New York Knicks, Los Angeles Lakers and Golden State Warriors. He brings over 20 years of experience across local and international media, including broadcast, print and digital. He previously covered the Knicks for Empire Sports Media and the NBA for Off the Glass. Originally from the Philippines, he is now based in Jersey City, New Jersey. More about Alder Almo
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