AP Images/Ringer illustration Klay Thompson's free agency isn't general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr.'s only order of business this summer, but it is the most symbolic. Will the Warriors follow their core to the end, or will they pursue a more drastic offseason reset around Steph Curry? On Monday afternoon, Golden State Warriors general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr. stepped into an auxiliary room along the northern corridor of Chase Center equipped with the optimism necessary for this part of the NBA calendar. "This time of year is fun," he told reporters, as he sat on a makeshift stage, minutes into his predraft media availability. "You've got free agency, you've got trades, you've got the draft—all ways to improve your team." Dunleavy, in his second year as general manager, will need all the ingenuity he can summon, as the Warriors stand at their most consequential crossroads since Kevin Durant left in the summer of 2019. Last season, Golden State trotted out the league's most expensive—and fourth-oldest—roster and limped its way to 46 wins and an elimination at the hands of the Kings in the play-in tournament. The early exit thrust the Warriors into a pivotal offseason, in which...