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Draymond Green has built a Hall of Fame resume on being the connective tissue of the Golden State Warriors. The dirty work. The sacrifice. The voice. But in a season where the Warriors can’t seem to define themselves, Green now finds himself in an unfamiliar position—on the wrong side of a public endorsement from his own agent.

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“My conversation with Moses [Moody] was exactly this,” Klutch Sports CEO Rich Paul, who represents both Moody and Green, said on Game Over. “You should be looking to push Draymond out. Give them a reason to play you. We know you can shoot the three… Big, strong, going to defend everything. What’s the areas to get better?”

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This wasn’t Paul talking to his client behind closed doors about his development. He publicly stated his way of motivating Moody on the record, in a calm and deliberate manner.

What makes this quote all the more surprising is that Paul represents both Moody and Green through Klutch, which means this isn’t an outsider stirring the pot. It’s the same voice advising two players whose skill sets overlap on a roster, searching for clarity in rotations.

Once you strip away the shock value, the advice itself is fairly straightforward. Right now, Moody is the stereotypical 3-and-D wing, and Paul highlighted areas for improvement: rebounding, offensive initiation, running dribble handoffs, and guarding multiple positions.

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In other words, the idea is to become indispensable, but the undertone suggests more. Those responsibilities live in the space Green has operated in for more than a decade.

That’s where the tension starts to creep in, because the margins of the game are where Green thrives, not scoring. If Moody taps more into connective play, versatile defense and tempo control while also being a far superior scorer, the Warriors are faced with much tougher conversations.

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Not necessarily because Green isn’t good, but because their time to push for a championship is very limited.

Once you zoom out, the tension isn’t just Draymond-versus-Moody—it’s the broader pattern of influence that follows Klutch wherever it goes.

Klutch often represents multiple players on the same team (e.g., LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and others on the Lakers historically), leading to criticism of potential conflicts—especially when Paul publicly comments on team matters. Even recently, Paul’s podcast “Game Over,” where he suggested the Lakers trade fan-favorite Austin Reaves (not a Klutch client) for Jaren Jackson Jr. (a Klutch client).

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This drew backlash for potentially disrupting locker-room dynamics, with one NBA executive calling it “insane and fu—- up.” LeBron distanced himself, stating Paul’s views were independent, and Reaves’ agent confronted Paul courtside.

Critics, including analysts like Stephen A. Smith and Austin Rivers, argued that agents should stay in the background and that Paul’s platform creates conflicts tied to LeBron’s influence.

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The Question Isn’t Draymond Green’s Value, It’s the Warriors’ Margin for Error

The biggest takeaway from Rich Paul’s comments isn’t the quote itself, but the timing of it. The Warriors are far removed from comfortably stacking wins and managing egos.

Head coach Steve Kerr has already shuffled through 16 different starting lineups, and the internal rotations keep changing as the team searches for any possible advantage.

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Now, Paul’s words highlight and acknowledge that internal competition might matter more than preserving old roles. That’s where Green’s situation becomes more fragile.

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His value has dropped considerably: he’s turning the ball over more, his defense has taken a step back, and he’s regularly missing open looks, enough that Kerr has had to publicly defend him. If any of the teammates, Moody or otherwise, can start filling in those gaps, that’s a new and better option for the team to go to.

For Moody, the opportunity is double-edged. More responsibility elevates him to essential rotation piece, and places pressure on a young wing to solve problems veterans can automatically handle.

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If he succeeds, his value explodes. If he fails, he’s risking being labeled someone who’s trying to do too much.

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