This scenario describes a full “last dance” construction attempt by the Golden State Warriors, built around maximizing one final championship window for their veteran core while carefully managing assets and salary rules. The foundation of the plan starts with a massive trade for Anthony Davis. In this deal, Golden State would send out a package centered on Kristaps Porziņģis via sign-and-trade, Moses Moody as a young rotational piece, and Al Horford as salary filler. Additional first-round picks would be included, but the key strategic choice is that the Warriors attempt to avoid giving up the #11 pick, preserving it as either a developmental asset or a future trade chip. At the same time, the plan keeps flexibility by also protecting the idea of retaining Jimmy Butler as part of the win-now core. The intention is not to break the roster down completely, but to stack elite veterans together. To push the concept even further, the scenario includes the idea of LeBron James joining on a veteran minimum contract. This move would only make sense in a situation where winning immediately becomes the only priority, with financial sacrifice justified by chasing one final championship run. On the internal side, Draymond Green would also need to accept a reduced contract structure, allowing the team to remain functional under the extreme pressure of the second apron and luxury tax system. His role would remain essential as the defensive and emotional leader of the team. In parallel, Porziņģis could either be kept for at least one season as a high-level frontcourt piece or later flipped again depending on fit and team direction. Meanwhile, Horford’s contract would primarily serve as a short-term salary mechanism and would likely be waived or allowed to expire as part of roster flexibility management. The resulting team structure would theoretically allow the Warriors to field a core of Curry, Butler, Davis, and potentially LeBron, supported by elite veterans and minimum contracts. This would create one of the most experienced and talent-heavy lineups in modern NBA history, designed purely for immediate championship contention. However, the trade-off is extreme. The roster would operate under severe financial constraints, likely deep into luxury tax and second apron territory, limiting depth and long-term flexibility. The entire strategy depends on short-term health, chemistry, and execution. Ultimately, this is a pure “win-now or rebuild later” philosophy: sacrifice future certainty, keep selective assets like the #11 pick, and assemble a superteam built around experience, star power, and one final push for a championship.