The Warriors have already accomplished their top offseason objective: keep their core players together. Within the first 24 hours of free agency, Golden State agreed to bring back Stephen Curry on a record-setting five-year, $201 million deal, Shaun Livingston on a three-year, $24 million contract and Andre Iguodala on a three-year, $48 million deal. Some of the Warriors' final four spots will be used on players Golden State fans know well. Odds are that Clark and McGee, both of whom figure to warrant far more than a minimum deal, will parlay productive seasons into sizable contracts with other clubs. Barnes and McAdoo could probably be brought back on minimum contracts, but would re-signing them be the best use of two of the Warriors' final roster spots? McAdoo's best asset is his defensive versatility, a trait that rookie Jordan Bell — the former Oregon forward Golden State paid $3.5 million for the draft rights to — largely duplicates. Barnes, who was signed in March to help the Warriors weather Durant's knee injury, only totaled 61 minutes in the playoffs. The prohibitive favorite to win an NBA title, Golden State will entice another crop of established players...