Klay Thompson is just the first of many dominoes to fall for the Warriors

Kelley L Cox-USA TODAY Sports

As we’ve have indicated several times recently, it looks like All-Star guard Klay Thompson will return to the Golden State Warriors.

According to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, Golden State is expected to offer its injured star a full five-year, $190 million guaranteed contract once free agency opens up Sunday evening. Thompson will sign in short order.

This really isn’t much of a surprise. Short of the Warriors refusing to offer Thompson a max deal, there was no real reason to believe he’d leave Northern California.

For a Warriors team coming off a brutal NBA Finals loss, this will be the first of many dominoes to fall during what promises to be an active summer.

Klay Thompson: The injury timeline.

The Kevin Durant dynamic: Golden State has options here.

There’s layers to that view.

Other Durant options: Sign-and-trade, let him walk.

Sign-and-trade: The devil is always in the details.

Other moves: Now that Thompson is settled, things are taking shape.

What does that all mean? It’s not as simple as it seems.

Re-signing Durant and Looney would pretty much force the Warriors into vet-minimum players and the taxpayer mid-level exception. That’s going to impact the team’s bottom line with Durant out all of next season and Thompson expected to miss a majority of the campaign.

Though, Thompson’s injury opens up another avenue for a short-term fix. That comes in the form of the injured-player exception.

Given Thompson is expected to sign the max deal, Golden State would be able to add about $10 million in salary to its bloated payroll for next season in a trade.

The idea here would be to target teams looking to unload unfavorable contracts. Dion Waiters of the Miami Heat is the first player to come to mind.

A lot still needs to be done in San Francisco heading into free agency. But inking Thompson to said extension at the outset is only going to help.

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