Trade targets: All 30 teams (in progress)
Golden State Warriors
Record: 45-4
1st in West
Status: Buyers

It's hard to think of an organization more concerned with the present than a defending NBA championship team aspiring to break the all-time record for wins in a season..
Potential trade targets
Steve Blake
About the closest thing to a need for Golden State is a third point guard. The Warriors' offense has sputtered when Ian Clark has been forced to play the point, averaging just 104.5 points per 100 possessions, according to NBAwowy.com.
A veteran like Blake, who has been out of the Detroit Pistons' rotation since Brandon Jennings returned to action, could at least get Golden State into its sets. But it seems unlikely the Warriors would give up anyone on their 15-man roster to make such a deal.
Most trade value
1. Stephen Curry
Curry, the league's reigning MVP who is off to an even better start this year, will make $12.1 million in 2016-17, the final year of an extension that has proved an unprecedented bargain for the Warriors. He has as much trade value as anyone in the league.
2. Draymond Green
In hindsight, it's almost unthinkable that Green accepted less than the maximum salary to re-sign with Golden State last summer. He'll be making less than $20 million per year through 2019-20.
3. Klay Thompson
Thompson got slightly more per year than Green, and he will reach unrestricted free agency a year sooner, but he also accepted less than the max because his extension was for a preset value rather than the maximum possible percentage of the cap.
4. Harrison Barnes
Barnes, in the last season of his rookie contract, is sure to command a huge raise as a restricted free agent. In fact, the odds are good that Barnes will be the Warriors' highest-paid player in 2016-17 before Curry signs a new contract.
5. Festus Ezeli
Like Barnes, Ezeli is in the final season of his rookie deal, making just $2.0 million. He'll also be a restricted free agent this summer, but he's expected to miss at least six weeks after his arthroscopic surgery.
Most valuable draft pick
2022 first-rounder
Because the Warriors owe their 2017 first-round pick to the Utah Jazz from the cap-clearing deal that allowed them to sign Andre Iguodala, they can't trade a pick until 2019, at the earliest. That's fine, because Golden State's picks are unlikely to have much value as long as Curry, Green and Thompson are in their primes.
That makes the Warriors' best pick the furthest one out they can trade -- in 2022, by which point Curry will be 34 and both Green and Thompson will be 32.