Stephen Curry as religious experience

By Jay Croucher / Expert

Basketball, like all sports, is a series of equations. It is a game of angles, of timing, of mass and acceleration.

The motion of shooting a basketball is the game’s purest and most tantalising equation. It looks so simple.

When you look at the mechanics of Stephen Curry’s jump-shot it looks so uncomplicated and effortless that it’s not difficult to think that you could recreate the motion yourself. But perfection is not replicable.

Curry has solved the equation of how to shoot the basketball. That’s over, and it has been for some time. He’s the greatest shooter we’ve ever seen, but we’ve known that for a while now.

What Curry has done over the past year goes beyond shooting – it’s starting to look like he’s solved basketball. He’s reduced the game to ‘one’, a step-back three at a time.

Last week Kevin Garnett compared Curry to Michael Jordan and nobody batted an eye-lid, which is basketball’s greatest compliment. Curry’s numbers are preposterous, the most absurd the game has seen since Wilt Chamberlain, but the box-score doesn’t begin to do justice to his nightly performance theatre.

I wasn’t around for Jordan, but I’ve been here for LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Tim Duncan, Allen Iverson, Steve Nash and Dirk Nowitzki. Curry is playing offensive basketball right now at a higher level than any of those players have ever reached, and the first guy on that list might eventually go down as the greatest basketball player of all-time.

Curry is basketball’s answer to Lionel Messi and Roger Federer. He is a beautiful assassin, someone who only needs a quarter of a second and the faintest opening of space to end your life. He is the most uniquely unguardable player in history.

You couldn’t guard Jordan or peak LeBron either, but there were methods you could use to delay your own death. There is no lesser evil with Curry. He is a choose your own ending children’s novel where you die quickly every time.

The moment he crosses half-court he is a threat.

If you cramp his space his handle is so pristine, his understanding of movement so immaculate, and his sleight of hand so delicate, that he will make a fool of you and create space for himself. If you give him a driving lane he is one of the game’s best finishers at the rim.

Double-teaming him is the only real option, which would be fine if he wasn’t one of the best passers in the league. There is no way to stop Curry. There is only the hope that his genius will confuse itself for a night.

LeBron and Kobe were Curry’s predecessors in basketball transcendence, but both had their drawbacks. Kobe’s shortcomings are just as well detailed as his strengths – he was always a character clouded by ambiguous intentions.

LeBron’s basketball genius rivals Curry’s, and his passing is even better. But James’s devastation at his peak came through athletic mayhem – he was so imposing and intimidating that he was almost extra-terrestrial.

There was always an element of unfairness in LeBron’s domination – as though, through no fault of his own, he was a 21-year-old playing against 12-year-olds. Watching Curry, all 84 kilograms of him, destroy the league with skill, timing and artful deception instead of a heavenly physique is somehow infinitely more special.

Curry is a playground jazz musician, dancing around the court with contagious energy, sprinting around screens with an infectious smile on his face, as though he knows what’s coming next (and he does).

When the great ones get in the zone, they start to swagger around the court – there is a hop to their step, a glimmer in their eyes, and an ever-widening grin on their face. Steph Curry is always in the zone. He is swagger in perpetuity.

But there is not a slither of arrogance in his brilliance. There is no bravado, no posturing and no proud demonstrations of faux alpha masculinity. There is only joy. Curry is the manifestation of Michael Jordan’s shrug, only if the shrug was sympathetic and had nothing to prove.

With the golden era of television seeing some of its finest programs reach their finales, Curry is prolonging the glory. He is a mad man breaking the league with the ball on an elastic wire, bringing a zombie apocalypse to opposition stadiums on a nightly basis.

Simply put, Curry has lost his freaking mind. He is hitting threes when the ball is getting knocked out of his grip mid-release, making buckets as he falls over and hitting shots from Nashville when he’s playing in Memphis.

“Good if it goes, and of course it does,” mutters the commentator on the final shot, a phrase which may go on Curry’s headstone. And by the way, Curry hit those last two shots within two and a half minutes of each other. We have never seen anything like this before.

Curry is appointment television every single time Golden State takes the court because, like all the great ones before him, every night there is the very real chance that he’s going to do something that no-one in history has ever done before. Perhaps that has been the greatest consequence of Curry’s incandescent start to the season – that he makes history seem so insignificant and unthreatening, and so easily overcome.

***

For the past decade the debate in the football world has been ‘Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo?’. To me it’s never been a question, because despite Ronaldo’s athletic transcendence there has always been an intangible magic that has eluded him yet found Messi so naturally.

Before Novak Djokovic came along to crush and complicate the party, tennis had its own magnificent aesthetic versus athletic dichotomy of Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. Like Ronaldo, Nadal was more athletically remarkable, more powerful and more aggressive, and yet undeniably always less enchanting than Federer.

There is a type of person who values the athletic supremacy of Ronaldo, Nadal and LeBron James above everything, and there is little argument against them. These athletes represent the peak of human physical capability.

But Messi, Federer and Curry exist in the abstract, forming a different argument – they teach us that physical capability is diverse and beautifully unknowable, and that it has no peak; it is boundless.

If we’re lucky, an artist like Federer comes along once a generation. But then sport gave us Messi, and now it has given us Curry. Greatness fades however, and while transcendence is eternal in our memories, it is finite in reality.

Federer’s dominance has been gracefully blunted by age, and approaching 30, Messi’s majesty is succumbing to injuries for the first time. Right now though, Curry is succumbing to nothing.

An athlete’s peak is always special, and even more so when it cannot be quantified. In so many ways, Curry is unquantifiable right now – there is no metric for flames – and what he’s doing is a gift that should be savoured.

Almost a decade ago, David Foster Wallace described in vivid detail the experience of seeing Roger Federer at Wimbledon. He spoke of the inspiration Federer provided Wimbledon’s juniors and how the poetry in his game – the drop volleys, mixed spins and off-speed serves – was becoming wonderfully evident in their games.

Most memorably, Wallace wrote that to see, close up, power and aggression made vulnerable to beauty is to feel inspired and, in a fleeting, mortal way, reconciled.

While Wallace wrote those words about a shy bloke from Basel, he might as well have been writing them about a 5″7″ Argentinian or a stick figure with an impossibly quick release plying his trade in the Bay Area. Federer, Messi and Curry – the sports are different, the religion is the same.

The Crowd Says:

2015-11-23T23:42:02+00:00

pete bloor

Guest


"Former NBA players all say the same thing" well you just outdid the article on the hyperbole.

2015-11-20T08:35:15+00:00

Nate

Guest


Another 40 today. I watched Jordan in his prime and I find it hard to believe anyone else will reach that level consistently, but Curry is certainly making it look easy and if he can keep this up for a few years then he will certainly be ranked up there as one of the all time greats - especially as a pure shooter.

2015-11-20T03:32:11+00:00

stan

Guest


Former NBA players all say the same thing -- "Steph Curry is the only player I'd pay money to watch play." The whole point of the article was not stats. It was the artistry with which Steph plays. It's the incredible range on his shots. He does stuff no one else has ever done -- shoot incredible percentages from incredible distance; break the ankles of really, really good defenders with remarkable ballhandling. It's about beauty and uniqueness.

2015-11-19T06:22:13+00:00

bigmick01

Guest


"I wasn’t around for Jordan" "We have never seen anything like this before." That's the problem with the article, right there.

2015-11-19T03:00:28+00:00

pete bloor

Guest


So a guy with whose got a career winning percentage of 70% and who has seen his team outscore the other guys by 9 points per 100 possessions whilst he's on the floor hasn't been able to use his statistical production to help his team win? Okay good to know.

2015-11-19T02:38:12+00:00

Swampy

Guest


Love the article. We are seeing the unveiling of someone special in Curry. The signs were there right from the start too (though not for David Kahn). His NCAA performances were ridiculous - he basically got a team of mates from the Y to the 3rd round of March Madness. Jay - you may not have seen MJ live but surely there is enough footage and games around to watch and understand that he was the GOAT and no one will ever take that mantle. Not. Ever. For those that bring up the scoring stats for the MVP numbers, just remember that GS won 67 games last season. Many of which were locked away by the end of the 3rd. Look at Curry's minutes per game versus MJ's and Kobe's and Lebron's. Curry also had very good team mates last season and the Warriors distribute the load. By plucking the stats above you'd also say Tim Duncan wasn't a very deserving MVP. I doubt anyone would suggest that. By the same token, we don't really know how Curry would fare if he was on a team with lesser team mates. GS are loaded with talent. Klay Thompson seems to have gone into hiding this season and they haven't missed a beat. It would be an interesting experiment to see what Curry could do with say Brooklyn. Though I refer you back to his NCAA days at Davison. Regardless of Curry's final position in the ranking of great ballers at the end of his career - I know this - when someone sends me a text message saying 'are you watching?' only 2 sportsman curently invoke that message repeatedly with a need to be watching, Stephen Curry & AB De Villiers.

2015-11-19T02:19:53+00:00

Steele

Guest


He's definitely prime time. He seems to have gone up several notches since winning the title last year. He definitely postures though? As would I if I could hit threes from just about anywhere! He's a freak shooter, but Lebron was the dominant player in last years playoffs. He was a one man team. And don't forget how dominant a fit K.D is. It feels like a golden era currently.

2015-11-19T02:07:29+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


Some strange comments there, I have to say. LeBron doesn't elevate his teammates? Really?! He's one of the best passers of all time, and lifts ordinary players to great heights. What's your definition of elevating teammates? LeBron doesn't fill up the win column? He's been to 6 NBA Finals, and apart from his rookie season, his teams have regularly been amongst the best regular season records. And the Lakers did win the game in which Kobe dropped 81. They beat the Raptors 122-104.

2015-11-19T01:32:27+00:00

brad

Guest


Just goes to show how good Dellevadova's defensive effort was to slow Curry for the first 3 games of last years NBA Finals

2015-11-19T01:16:20+00:00

Ryan

Guest


Well I agree and said above I think Curry is "great". I think he rightfully deserves praise but I just think the general hyperbole can be toned down a bit. For example "Curry is playing offensive basketball right now at a higher level than any of those players have ever reached". Curry's MVP year was 24/8 at 50%. Kobe has averaged 25/5 at 45% over 19 seasons. Lebron has gone 27/7 at 50% over 12 seasons. Heck, Nash went basically 15/10 for 3 straight 50-40-90 years. I think Curry is playing some very, very pretty basketball. His ability to shoot off the dribble and as a spot up shooter is amazing. His release is just so quick. But I fundamentally disagree he some sort of basketball immortal that is unguardable and unplayable. Curry will be 28 this year, his rise to "comparable to Jordan" has coincided with the arrival of Kerr. The team is playing beautifully, and Curry is profiting from a system which allows him to just play with complete freedom. He has had a truly great 18 months, but he has along way to go.

2015-11-19T00:34:53+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


I think he's well on his way, Ryan. Anytime you can 'change' the game, I think you're worthy of extreme praise.

2015-11-18T23:59:10+00:00

Swearindarrin

Guest


Kobe and Lebron are all time greats. You'll get no arguments here or anywhere else...But, there's something those two don't do, elevate their teammates. When Kobe scored 81 the lakers still lost. Lebron can fill up a stat sheet but not the win column. Curry has the same ability that Jordan and Bird had. It's something that doesn't show up in the stats but you know when a player has it and Curry definitely has it.

2015-11-18T23:18:52+00:00

astro

Guest


Great article Jay...really well written and great to read. Curry is playing out of his mind right now, no doubt. But I think we need a sample size of more than 12 games before we put him up there with Lebron and Kobe, and especially MJ. I'm not discounting his last couple of season, where he's been amazing, but fact is, in his MVP season Steph averaged 24ppg and 8assists on 50% shooting...great numbers for sure, but we've seen better (eg. Lebron's second MVP season of 8.6 assists with 30ppg and 7rbs on 50% shooting, or Jordan's second MVP season with 32ppg on 54% shooting, 8rbs and 5 assists) and more sustained greatness from the other guys you're comparing him to. For the record, I believe in Steph as much as you do. I think the guy is a freak and easily one of the most entertaining players ever to take the court. But we need more than a few great seasons to elevate him into the conversation of the best the game has seen. We marveled at Federer when he won Wimbledon back-to-back, but to go on and win another 5 times puts him in a class beyond others. And that's the big hurdle for Steph...can he keep this up? He's won his first MVP and title, but can he sustain is greatness to reach that next stage? I want to believe he can, but we've never seen a guy who relies so much on shooting 3s keep this up. And the league will eventually figure him out or at least find out how to make him less comfortable out there. That's part of what makes sustaining greatness so tough. The more time at the top, the more you opponents take aim at you. But again, great stuff Jay!

2015-11-18T20:49:04+00:00

Ryan

Guest


I think we all need to just calm down. Curry is great, but geez his a long long way from the player you just described. To place him in the conversation with Lebron, Kobe and the Messi and Federers of the sporting world is the definition of getting caught up in the moment. There really isn't much else to say, he just ain't THAT good.

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