The Warriors walked out of Capital One Arena late Monday night with their three most available and desirable trade assets still on the roster. The head count included Alec Burks, Glenn Robinson III and D’Angelo Russell.

With the Warriors in pursuit of attractive draft picks, that could change before tipoff against the Nets on Wednesday in Brooklyn.

[RELATED: Burks, GR III intensify trade deadline buzz around Warriors]

It most assuredly will change before the NBA trade deadline strikes at noon Thursday -- barring a last-minute case of second thought by the Warriors are their trade partners.

Here, in an effort to answer pertinent questions, is a closer look at Burks, Robinson and Russell.

Alec Burks

Age: 28. Turns 29 in July.

Height/weight: 6-foot-6, 214.

Position: Shooting guard, can also play at small forward.

Contract status: One year at the veteran’s minimum, $2.32 million. Becomes an unrestricted free agent in July.

Stats this season: 16.1 points per game (second among active Warriors), 4.7 rebounds, 3.1 assists. Scoring and assist numbers are career highs. Shooting 40.6 percent from the field, including 37.5 percent from deep, and 89.7 percent from the line.

What he brings: Nicknamed “Bucket,” Burks is a very good offensive player capable of scoring at all three levels. He can create offense out of isolation, either by dribbling into the paint, pulling up for a midrange jumper or finding a teammate. He has a very respectable 3-point shot. He’s prone to hot streaks (he shot at least 50 percent in 13 games) and cold spells (he shot 35 percent or lower in 15 games).

He is a solid but unexceptional defender. He takes a professional, low-maintenance approach into the locker room.

Teams known or speculated to have interest: Lakers, Rockets, Grizzlies.

Playoff-quality teams that have a need (in no particular order): Lakers, Thunder, Magic, Celtics, Grizzlies, 76ers, Rockets, Mavericks.

Chance he is traded: 95 percent.

Glenn Robinson III

Age: Turned 26 in January.

Height/weight: 6-6, 222.

Position: Small forward.

Contract status: One year at the veteran’s minimum, $1.89 million. Becomes an unrestricted free agent in July.

Stats this season: 12.9 points per game (fourth among active Warriors), 4.7 rebounds and 1.8 assists. All three numbers are career highs. Shooting 48.1 percent from the field, 40.0 percent from distance, 85.1 percent from the line.

What he brings: Robinson is a competent two-way player fitting the profile of a 3-and-D wing. An explosive leaper who is better playing within the team framework than in isolation. More of a shooter, as his stats indicate, than a scorer. Averaging 16.7 points on 60.0-percent shooting over the past three weeks.

Generally given the defensive assignment against the most dangerous big guard or small forward.

Teams known or speculated to have interest: Magic, 76ers.

Playoff-quality teams that have a need (in no particular order): Magic, Raptors, 76ers, Pelicans, Lakers, Pacers, Thunder.

Chance he is traded: 85 percent.

D’Angelo Russell

Age: Turns 24 on Feb. 23.

Height/weight: 6-4, 198.

Position: Combo guard, most comfortable at the point.

Contract status: Four years, $117.3 million, $27.3 million this season, rising to $31.4 million in 2022-23. Becomes an unrestricted free agent in July 2023.

Stats this season: 23.8 points per game (No. 1 among active Warriors), 6.3 assists, 3.7 rebounds. Scoring average is a career high. Shooting 43.3 percent from the field, 38.3 percent from distance and 78.0 percent from the line.

What he brings: Russell is a superior scorer with the ability to produce at all three levels, from floaters in the paint to midrange jumpers to pull-up 3-pointers. He is particularly effective working out of pick-and-roll actions, where his ballhandling and scoring/passing potential often puts defenders on their heels.

He came to the Warriors with a reputation for poor defense and has done nothing to dispute that. In an ideal world, on a superior team, D-Lo would be a Sixth Man in the mold of Clippers ace Lou Williams.

Teams known or speculated to have interest: Timberwolves, Knicks.

Playoff-quality teams that have a need: No playoff team is known to or expected to make such a major move at the deadline. Salary is a factor.

Chance he is traded: 40 percent (and rising).

Programming Note: The "2020 NBA Trade Deadline Show" is coming your way this Thursday at 11:30am on the MyTeams app and on NBCSportsBayArea.com! Our NBA Insiders will analyze all of the news and rumors that could impact the Warriors heading into the Noon deadline. Don’t miss it!