OAKLAND — The Warriors have 10 free agents this summer. Two of them are superstars: Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant.

Durant technically could pick up his player option and avoid the open market. But he won’t. It doesn’t make sense financially. So both Durant and Curry have the unrestricted ability to leave the Warriors.

For Curry, it’ll be his first dip into these waters. He went from his rookie deal into an extension before he hit restricted free agency years back, signing a deal — four years, $44 million — that would prove to be far under his value.

This time around, he’s eligible for a mega max that’ll put his starting salary around an estimated $35.3 million and would net him around $205 million over five years — including an astounding $46.7 million in the final year — if he stays with the Warriors. But if he had any desire to go elsewhere, his max deal would only be an estimated four-year, $130.3 contract from other suitors.

So there are no financial or competitive reasons for him to leave the defending champions. And in his interview on Wednesday, he sounded as if he wouldn’t even look around.

“What we’ve built here is truly special, unique, something you don’t want to see end at all,” Curry said.

Would Curry consider taking a paycut?

“As we go into talks and this whole process — which is obviously new for me — I will approach it as getting the most as I can as an individual, as a player, something I’ve been working for for a very long time,” Curry said. “In the context of keeping the team together, if there are decisions that need to be made, we’ll talk about it for sure.”

For Durant, it’s a bit more complicated. He’s eligible for the same mega max contract as Curry, but the Warriors don’t have his bird rights. So to give him it, they’d have to renounce their rights to Andre Iguodala and Shaun Livingston, which would strip them of their ability to go over the cap to re-sign those important pieces.

But if Durant instead opts to take a 20 percent raise from his contract this past season — planting him at a $31.8 million salary next season instead of the estimated $35.3 on the mega max — it would allow the Warriors to retain the rights of Iguodala and Livingston and pay them closer to what they’d obtain elsewhere.

ESPN reported last month that Durant was willing to take that paycut. On Wednesday, he said he had “thought about it” in the past couple days.

“I feel as though I am going to be back here — no question,” Durant said. “We’ll all figure something out, work something out. I want to be here. We just won a championship, man. Let’s see if we can do it again. Feels weird saying that. But winning a championship is the ultimate goal. But it’s easy for me to say that now. Hopefully we get it done.” Related Articles Kevin Durant on Stephen Curry: ‘You better respect that man’

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Iguodala has cryptically and not-so-cryptically indicated his desire to return to the Warriors throughout the season, even mentioning during The Finals that he’d be talking to the media again in early July at a press conference with Curry and Durant, announcing extensions.

But Iguodala didn’t meet with the media on Wednesday. Livingston did. The veteran point guard was the fourth pick overall back in 2004, destined for a big career. But a devastating knee injury in his early years sent it on a completely different path.

Livingston had to work his way back to an NBA level, which took him a few years. He’s only made a total of just under $42 million in 14 seasons. He could search for a final bigger payday elsewhere in a larger. But he sounds like he’d prefer to stay on the Warriors, if possible.

“We all would love to keep the group together,” Livingston said. “You see what we’re able to accomplish together. We’ll see what happens when that time comes. There’s obviously a domino effect, guys have decisions to make. But it’s about enjoying this journey, this moment that we’re on right now.”

Which seems to be the message from these Warriors, who enter the offseason with surprisingly little drama despite 10 of their 15 players heading for free agency. Warriors newsletter Subscribe to DubsDaily, our best Warriors news sent to your inbox. Sign UpIt’s free!

“All the pieces that we have are important to the equation to win a championship,” Curry said. “It is a business. There are decisions that need to be made every year. Got to assess the situation as it is. Me and KD had a conversation, along with Draymond and Klay and Andre last year before he even showed up that that was kind of the identity of who we are as a team. We understand how important it is that the guys who are here, you don’t want anyone to sacrifice in that sense, force anyone to take that approach. But at the end of the day we know what’s best for us as a group and we want to do everything we can to keep this team together. I’ll have that mindset, KD will have that mindset, I know Andre, Shaun, all the guys up to renegotiate new contracts — we’ll see what happens — but it’s the beauty of what I know of this team. We all want to provide for our families, we all want to get all that we can out of this game while we still have the legs to do it, but there are no egos when it comes to that side of the equation as a professional athlete.”