A dynastic five-year run at Oracle Arena spearheaded the way for a much-awaited move to the grand opening to the state of the art Chase Center in San Francisco, the Golden State Warriors' new home. The move is expected to generate enough to pay the contracts of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson, Draymond Green, and D'Angelo Russell, but the annual revenue will also be high and above what teams like the Los Angeles Lakers and the New York Knicks will make in a year.

“Starting this inaugural Chase season, it’s estimated that the Warriors will take in about $700 million in annual revenue for the foreseeable future,” wrote Tim Kawakami of The Athletic.

“This [is] about $250-300 million more than the Knicks or Lakers, the next-highest NBA teams, and possibly more than even any NFL team, “except maybe the Cowboys,” one source said. Actually, in 2018, Forbes estimated that the Cowboys took in about $950 million in annual revenue, so the Warriors aren’t there.”

The Warriors move to San Francisco was more than giving the team a new arena with more commodities, but a way to make this into the cash cow it could really become with on-court attractions like Curry and Thompson, but also off-the-court glamour and a series of activities and tourist attractions that make San Francisco such a destination.

Owners Joe Lacob and Peter Guber are both savvy enough on the workings of the Silicon Valley, and if they've learned something in their years of investments — location, is indeed everything.