Tag Archives: Steph

Steph Curry can’t stack up to Magic Johnson – Deadspin

  1. Steph Curry can’t stack up to Magic Johnson Deadspin
  2. Michael Jordan Texted Stephen A. Smith at 5:54 AM to Tell Him Who’s the NBA’s Best Point Guard of All-Time Sports Illustrated
  3. Michael Jordan disagreed with Stephen Curry as the GOAT PG so much he sent Stephen A. Smith a 146-word text at 5:54 a.m. Yahoo Sports
  4. Warriors’ Steph Curry says he’s greatest PG of all time. He’s earned it San Francisco Chronicle
  5. “Shaquille O’Neal Was a Clear Unanimous MVP Pick!”: Stephen Curry Gave His Flowers to His 7ft 1″ ‘Superfan’, Picks Accomplishment Over 3-Point Record The Sportsrush
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Steph Curry rocks out to ‘Misery Business’ with Paramore onstage: See epic video – GMA

  1. Steph Curry rocks out to ‘Misery Business’ with Paramore onstage: See epic video GMA
  2. Stephen Curry surprises fans at Paramore concert, performs ‘Misery Business’ on stage Yahoo Sports
  3. Steph Curry surprises crowd by singing with Paramore KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  4. Paramore singer calls out incel culture at San Francisco concert SFGATE
  5. “From the moment that Steph gets the mic, this is no longer a Paramore show, this is a Steph Curry show”: watch NBA superstar Stephen Curry sing Misery Business with Paramore in San Francisco Louder
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Watch NBA star Steph Curry join Paramore for a performance of ‘Misery Business’ – NME

  1. Watch NBA star Steph Curry join Paramore for a performance of ‘Misery Business’ NME
  2. “From the moment that Steph gets the mic, this is no longer a Paramore show, this is a Steph Curry show”: watch NBA superstar Stephen Curry sing Misery Business with Paramore in San Francisco Louder
  3. Stephen Curry Belts Out ‘Misery Business’ Onstage At Paramore Concert TMZ
  4. Surprise: Steph Curry takes stage at Chase Center, performs with Paramore San Francisco Chronicle
  5. ‘This is a Steph Curry show’: Warriors star takes over Paramore show SFGATE
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Surprise: Steph Curry takes stage at Chase Center, performs with Paramore – San Francisco Chronicle

  1. Surprise: Steph Curry takes stage at Chase Center, performs with Paramore San Francisco Chronicle
  2. “From the moment that Steph gets the mic, this is no longer a Paramore show, this is a Steph Curry show”: watch NBA superstar Stephen Curry sing Misery Business with Paramore in San Francisco Louder
  3. Watch NBA star Steph Curry join Paramore for a performance of ‘Misery Business’ NME
  4. Steph Curry surprises crowd by singing with Paramore KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  5. Paramore concert: Stephen Curry performs ‘Misery Business’ with the rock band Hindustan Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Chiefs’ Travis Kelce divulges alcoholic consumption plan for the Match vs. Steph Curry, Warriors – SB Nation

  1. Chiefs’ Travis Kelce divulges alcoholic consumption plan for the Match vs. Steph Curry, Warriors SB Nation
  2. Investigating the bizarre link between golf and the greatest NBA shooters in history – ESPN ESPN
  3. The Match 2023: How to watch, stream Patrick Mahomes vs. Steph Curry USA TODAY
  4. Patrick Mahomes shares what made him ‘most nervous I’ve ever been in a sporting event’ Kansas City Star
  5. The Match 2023 live coverage: Scores, updates for Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce vs. Steph Curry, Klay Thompson CBS Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Steph Curry, Klay Thompson make it rain in Warriors’ win vs. Thunder

Steve Kerr said he didn’t have flashbacks watching Steph Curry and Klay Thompson drain 3-pointers at Paycom Center on Monday night in the Warriors’ 128-120 win against the Oklahoma City Thunder, but it was hard not to think of the past when watching the Splash Brothers shine against their old rivals. 

Gone are the days of Curry, Thompson, Draymond Green, Andre Iguodala, Harrison Barnes and Andrew Bogut battling the likes of Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook, Serge Ibaka, Andre Roberson and Steven Adams. The Thunder are young, fun and building their next core of stars.

A new rivalry could one day spark against Thunder stars such as Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Josh Giddey, Jalen Williams and Jaylin Williams, a healthy Lou Dort and after Chet Holmgren makes his NBA debut. 

For the Warriors, Jordan Poole, Andrew Wiggins, Jonathan Kuminga, Patrick Baldwin Jr., James Wiseman, Moses Moody and the rest of the young Dubs might be leading the way. But on Monday night in OKC, it was time for Steph and Klay to make it rain on the Thunder once more. 

The two combined to score 66 points. They made 53.7 percent of their 41 shots, 50 percent of their 28 3-pointers and all eight of their free throws went down. Curry led the way with a game-high 38 points, going 12-for-20 from the field, 8-for-14 from deep and 6-for-6 at the free-throw line. Thompson added 28 points as he went 10-for-21 overall, 6-for-14 beyond the arc and 2-for-2 on free throws. 

 

Both sharpshooters set the tone from the start. 

Curry scored 13 points in the first quarter and was a plus-18 in plus/minus as the Warriors entered the second up 38-20. He made five of his seven shots and three of his four tries from long distance. Thompson was going shot for shot with him, scoring 10 while going 4-for-5 from the field and 2-for-3 on threes. 

“You got to play the full 48,” Steve Kerr said to reporters after the win. “The start that we got off to, though, set the tone for the game. We played a great first quarter and they had to swim upstream the entire final three quarters. Even though they got close, we were able to hold them off.” 

In that first quarter, the Warriors made 15 shots and all 15 were assisted. Their first 18 made shots were off assists. The streak ended when Jordan Poole dribbled past and around four different players on the Thunder before finishing off a fancy finger roll. 

One game after the Warriors handed out a season-high 40 assists in a win over the Toronto Raptors, they totaled 37 assists Monday against the Thunder. Curry on Friday dished 11 assists. This time, he one-upped himself. 

He and Draymond Green each topped all players with 12 assists apiece. 

“Oh that first quarter was beautiful,” Thompson said. “I think the ball was humming around.” 

The latter half of Curry’s 12 made shots were the most important. After dropping 18 points in the first half, he scored 20 in the second half. But the one with the longest meaning was his seventh made field goal of the night, a strong finish at the rim.

That gave him 7,217 made field goals for his career, passing the all-time great Wilt Chamberlain for the most in Warriors franchise history. 

“What a legendary accomplishment,” Thompson said. “I mean, Wilt Chamberlain is one of the greatest athletes to ever walk this earth. The fact that Steph was able to do that a foot shorter than him, that’s special.”

Down the stretch, the Warriors received contributions from a handful of players in the win. Thompson scored the most out of the eight players who saw action in the fourth quarter, with nine points, three made shots, two free throws and one emphatic dunk. 

RELATED: Why Warriors’ game vs. Thunder in OKC starts important stretch

The Warriors finished January with a 7-6 record. Thompson played 10 of those 13 games and put together his best month yet this season. He averaged 27 points on 45.9 percent shooting, 43.1 percent on 3-pointers and 90.9 percent on free throws. 

Returning from his left shoulder injury on Jan. 10, Curry put an exclamation mark on the month as the Warriors won their third straight game and earned their first win streak on the road this season. In nine games this month, he averaged 29.1 points and 5.8 assists, shooting 47.8 percent from the field and 40.8 percent from downtown. 

What was a slow start to the month was about as good of a finish as Curry and the Warriors could have hoped for.

 

“Just really smooth with the ball, running off the ball — off screens — playing good defense, rebounding,” Kerr said of Curry. “He was just quick to the ball and looked fantastic out there.”

The rivalry between the Warriors and Thunder is long gone, for now. Nights of Steph and Klay lighting it up still are very much here to stay.

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After Steph Curry’s shoulder injury, what’s next for struggling Warriors?

INDIANAPOLIS — About 30 minutes after the Warriors dropped to 2-13 on the road, Steph Curry sat at his Indianapolis locker with his left arm dangling to his side in an immobile position. The training staff wrapped a huge ice pack around the top and back side of his injured shoulder. An already shaky state of affairs for the Warriors had hit an even bigger patch of turbulence.

Curry had 38 points on 19 shots late in the third quarter against the Pacers, expending so much energy that he delayed his return to the locker room at halftime to catch his breath. He had 27 points, but his team was down 20.

Curry was part of a rapid third-quarter comeback. The Warriors started Jonathan Kuminga in Kevon Looney’s place, shifting to a smaller, faster, more spread attack that cut the Pacers lead from 20 to five in under six minutes. Curry had 11 in the quarter and 38 for the game when he reached in on a Jalen Smith drive, grabbing all ball while inadvertently sending this Warriors season on another sketchy detour.

Curry felt immediate pain in his left shoulder. He grabbed at it, crumpled away from the play, stumbled to the scorer’s table and eventually the bench after the Warriors called timeout. After a brief conversation with Drew Yoder, the team’s director of medical services, confirmed the concerning discomfort, Curry walked to the locker room with Rick Celebrini, their lead medical decision-maker.

Here’s that moment.

In that clip, you can see Curry keeping his left arm stationary. It still hung like that after the game while Curry wandered around the locker room, before and after he iced it. He is scheduled for an MRI on Thursday and plans to travel with the team to Philadelphia. Testing will give them a firmer idea of a possible timeline, but the postgame sense from those around the team was that the injury would force some sort of a multi-game absence that would presumably extend through the rest of the road trip.

“Maybe it’s going to get a little tougher if Steph’s out for a while,” Steve Kerr said. “I mean, if he’s out, it will for sure get tougher. But we just have to persevere. You just keep playing and keep fighting.”

It wasn’t a despondent postgame locker room. Besides the added discomfort and treatment, Curry was in a normal mood. Assuming tests don’t reveal more substantial damage than initially expected, this could prove to be only a speed bump. But the 14-15 Warriors already faced a stiffening challenge before their best player went down. The near term just got a whole lot trickier.

So what’s next?

This will be an important stretch for Jordan Poole

When Curry went down in March with a foot sprain, Jordan Poole ascended to an entirely different level. He led the NBA in made 3s in March and April, averaging 24.7 points on 47.3 percent overall and 41.9 percent from deep.

They don’t necessarily need him to reach that zenith, but they’ll need Poole to be more efficient and protective with the ball than he’s been lately. Poole went 8-of-22 shooting and committed four turnovers against the Pacers. He went 6-of-17 with four turnovers to open the trip in Milwaukee. He’s made only five of his last 23 attempted 3s.

“The biggest thing with Jordan we’ve been trying to work on is to slow down,” Kerr said. “He just gets in a rush. He has so much ability. I think sometimes it’s the guys with the most ability when they’re young who make the most mistakes because they’re trying to learn what they can and can’t do. He’s so gifted, so fast, so shifty that he’s frequently getting himself in trouble.”

Do we see more of Moses Moody?

Despite the absence of Andrew Wiggins and Klay Thompson, the Warriors didn’t go to Moses Moody for the first 18 minutes against the Pacers. Kerr had two-way player Ty Jerome ahead of Moody in the initial rotation.

But the Warriors struggled with Jerome, Anthony Lamb and JaMychal Green on the court together. They were a minus-17 in Jerome’s first nine minutes. That pushed Kerr to throw Moody out there. He hit a corner 3 and snuck in a layup his first few minutes on the court. Down 20 at halftime, Kerr rearranged his third-quarter rotation and Moody was the first sub off the bench.

Moody finished with 13 points on 5-of-6 shooting, three assists and several other helpful plays within the margins. Both Moody and Kuminga, who started the second half, were key in maintaining the game’s competitiveness, nearly stealing away a late win. Green and Donte DiVincenzo also played big roles.

“I’m really pleased with his play,” Kerr said when asked if Moody had earned more run. “He’s got his opportunities and made the most of them. Every game is different. What’s made this year tricky is you’ve had different guys out, different combinations and a lot of new people. So we’re trying to find the right combinations. But Moses has done a great job and I imagine he’ll be out there next game.”

Thompson will be back Friday against the Sixers. Wiggins is getting a re-evaluation Thursday and his return is pending. So it may be difficult to find Moody a ton of minutes on the wing, but it’s hard to imagine he hasn’t earned a higher place in the pecking order than Jerome.

So what’s the non-Curry rotation?

If Wiggins can return soon, it’d be a Poole, Thompson, Wiggins, Draymond Green, Looney starting lineup. Kuminga continues to force his way into a bigger piece of the rotation pie, and Kerr showed Wednesday that Kuminga is an option for the starters if they decide a faster style and different look is needed.

After Kuminga, DiVincenzo is emerging as the most reliable option off the bench. He started in Thompson’s place Wednesday night and had 15 points and eight rebounds, making a pair of essential 3s to keep the Warriors close down the stretch. They were a plus-19 in DiVincenzo’s 38 minutes and a minus-24 in his 10 minutes on the bench.

“My focus isn’t on the offensive end,” he said. “It comes to me. But when I put pressure on the rim, good things happen. When I can get downhill, I can get other people shots, the defense is scrambling and the ball can find me again. When you’re playing basketball the right way — and that’s the right way, in my opinion, drive, kick and swing, all that movement — that’s when guys get good shots.”

He has also become one of the quiet leaders in the locker room.

“We needed more energy,” DiVincenzo said. “When things aren’t going our way, when calls aren’t going our way, there’s a standard playing for the Golden State Warriors. I think the biggest message is we have to play like freaking Warriors. That’s the biggest thing. We have to have that energy.”

How does the schedule look?

The Warriors, who are 2-13 on the road, finish this longest trip of the season with these four games: at Sixers, Raptors, Knicks, Nets. Those final two are on a back-to-back next week, Tuesday and Wednesday. They then have an extended break before beginning an eight-game homestand on Christmas against the Grizzlies.

(Photo of Steph Curry grabbing his shoulder in the second half Wednesday night against the Pacers: Trevor Ruszkowski / USA Today)



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Mark Jackson takes subtle jab at Steph Curry after NBA Finals MVP nod

Mark Jackson watched the Warriors flourish throughout the 2021-22 NBA season, into the postseason and through the NBA Finals.

And when Golden State was crowned champions, again, on Thursday night following a Game 6 win over the Boston Celtics at TD Garden, Jackson couldn’t help but take a jab at his former team. 

Steph Curry was named the unanimous Finals MVP after leading his team to their fourth title in eight years, thanking his family, coaches and teammates for their support along the way. 

But Jackson, who was one of the 11 media members to vote for Curry as Finals MVP, believes the now four-time NBA champ should extend his gratitude elsewhere. 

“If I was Steph Curry I would thank Boston’s defense for the MVP,” Jackson said. 

Curry averaged 31.2 points over six games against the best defense in the league. That sounds pretty deserving of a Finals MVP, which was Curry’s first. 

It wasn’t the only time Jackson shaded the Warriors this series, and likely won’t be the last time he takes aim at Golden State. 

RELATED: Klay’s ‘holy cannoli’ comment perfectly sums up Dubs’ title

But right now, the Warriors are just focused on enjoying their fourth title in eight years. And no one, not even their former coach, can take that away.

 

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NBA Finals: Led by MVP Steph Curry, Golden State Warriors win championship with Game 6 victory over Boston Celtics

The victory gives the trio of Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green their fourth title together — all under head coach Steve Kerr — adding to their championships from 2015, 2017 and 2018. They’ve won 21 NBA Finals games together, having recently passed Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili (19) for the most NBA Finals wins by a trio over the last 30 years.

Curry, who was in tears on the court after the final whistle, won NBA Finals MVP honors for the first time in his career.

“This is what it’s all about, playing for a championship and what we’ve been through the last three years,” he said. “Beginning of the season, nobody thought we’d be here except everybody on this court right now, and it’s amazing. Very surreal, though.

“You never take this for granted because you never know when you’re going to be back here. And to get back here and get it done, it means the world,” he said.

Kerr said Curry reminded him of Duncan, the Hall of Fame center who played his entire career for the San Antonio Spurs. “Totally different players. But from a humanity standpoint, talent standpoint, humility, confidence, this wonderful combination that just makes everybody want to win for him,” he said.

This title ends a blip for the Warriors, as they were marred by injuries for a couple of years and were back in the postseason for the first time since 2019.

The way Game 6 unfolded at TD Garden in Boston didn’t initially look like it would be a surefire win for Golden State. Boston was up 14-2 to start the game. But the Warriors didn’t just claw back — they hit the gas pedal.

Golden State went on a 52-25 run to end the first half. That included a 21-0 run — the longest scoring run in an NBA Finals game in the last 50 years.

The Celtics cut the Warriors’ lead to single digits late in the third quarter and again in the fourth quarter but could get no closer.

Boston, which made the Finals for the first time since the 2009-10 season, had previously excelled in do-or-die games in this year’s playoff run.

Until their Game 5 loss in these Finals, they were unbeaten in postseason games following a defeat. They have been victorious in two win-or-go-home games against the Milwaukee Bucks and a Game 7 against the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference Finals.

Yet the Celtics were up 2-1 in the series before losing three straight to Golden State, including Games 4 and 6 in Boston.

“There are a lot of guys in there, very emotional right now,” Celtics head coach Ime Udoka said after the game.

“The message was we thanked them for the effort and the growth and everything they allowed us to do coaching-wise this year. The biggest message was ‘Learn from this, grow from it, take this experience and see there is another level to get to,'” Udoka said. “A team like Golden State who has been there, done that, it was evident in a lot of ways.”

This is the Warriors’ seventh league title in franchise history — two of which were won as the Philadelphia Warriors in 1947 and 1956.

NBA commissioner Adam Silver, who normally presents the Larry O’Brien Trophy to the NBA champion, did not attend Games 5 or 6 due to the NBA’s health and safety protocols.

Correction: A previous version of this story said the game was broadcast on ESPN. It was broadcast on ABC

CNN’s Jill Martin and Ben Morse contributed to this report.

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Boston bar continues lame feud with Steph and Ayesha Curry

The battle between a Boston bar and the Curry family continued this week heading into Game 6 of the NBA Finals.

Game On! outside Fenway Park doubled down on its stupid joke about Ayesha Curry after it improbably got a response from her husband earlier this week. 

The bar put up a new sign with an all-caps “STILL” to its message that “Ayesha Curry can’t cook” and attached a couple packets of instant ramen, perhaps implying that’s all the cookbook author and restaurateur can actually prepare.

This feud initially picked up right before the Warriors’ 107-97 Game 4 win over the Celtics in Boston, when the bar posted a sign that simply said, “Ayesha Curry can’t cook,” in chalk on a sandwich board. The Golden State point guard then fired back with a shirt that read, “Ayesha Curry CAN Cook,” which he wore after his team’s Game 5 win against the Celtics on Tuesday.

“I’m the petty king, so I know all about everything,” Curry said Wednesday. And he really did mean EVERYTHING.


It’s hard to see where Steph goes from here in this feud, which has devolved into two sides doing a yes-she-can-no-she-can’t back-and-forth. Does he break out another shirt that simply changes this sign’s “can’t” to a “can” again? Does he eat his wife’s food while doing his postgame press conference? Does he simply come out and say that the chef at the bar taunting his wife’s cooking prowess is the real one who can’t cook? Who knows? Neither side is exactly expending a whole lot of creativity, that’s reserved for the Dubs fans review-bombing the restaurant on Yelp.

One thing that’s for certain: The Warriors can close out the NBA Finals on Thursday with a Game 6 win in Boston and haven’t lost since this feud caught the attention of Warriors fans. Maybe the bar owners just want this series to be over sooner rather than later.

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