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Reports: Jordan Poole agrees to 4-year extension with Warriors

The 3rd-year guard will remain with the defending-champion Warriors through the 2026-27 season.

Jordan Poole has emerged as an integral part of Golden State’s future.

Report: Wiggins, Warriors come to terms on extension

The Golden State Warriors and guard Jordan Poole have reportedly agreed to a multiyear extension, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski. The reported four-year deal is worth up to $140 million.

Poole is entering his fourth season with the Warriors and has seen his numbers improve each season. The shooting guard out of Michigan averaged 8.5 points on 33% shooting as a rookie, then averaged 12.0 points on 43% shooting in 2020-21 and increased his average again to 18.5 points on 45% shooting last season when he helped the Warriors win the NBA title.

Poole also made 211 3-pointers last season, the second-most on the Warriors behind all-time 3-point king Stephen Curry and tied for 15th-most in the NBA.

The extension will kick in for the 2023-24 season. Poole will make about $4 million this season.

Poole, a rising star, played a pivotal role in Golden State’s title run in 2022, averaging 17 points, 2.8 rebounds and 3.8 assists during the playoffs last season. He was fourth in the NBA’s Most Improved Player balloting last season.

The new deal also ends a tumultuous preseason for Poole and the Warriors.

Poole was punched by Warriors teammate Draymond Green during an altercation in practice on Oct. 5. Video of the incident was leaked to TMZ days later. Green took a few days away from the team and ultimately was fined, but returned to the club for the preseason finale and shared a pregame handshake with Poole before the last exhibition game on Friday night.

The Warriors didn’t hide their anger with Green when the story broke, and also didn’t hide their support for Poole — raving about what the 23-year-old has brought, and evidently will continue bringing, to the team.

“He’s someone we’re going to rely on for many years to come and that’s exciting,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said earlier this week. “We’ve got a lot of good young players, but Jordan is by far the most advanced.”

Poole stepped into the starting role for Curry — who was coming back from injury — for the first four games of last season’s playoffs and immediately impressed. Poole had 30, 29 and 27 points, respectively, in the first three games of the first-round matchup against the Denver Nuggets as the Warriors ran out to a 3-0 lead in that series.

Poole wound up averaging 17.0 points in the playoffs on 51% shooting. He was fourth in the NBA’s most improved player balloting last season.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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