Steph Curry Appreciation .... Greatest All Time Shooter When he's Done

Quoted so you can't edit.




"When he's done"...
and this is based off of what..... like i said a knee jerk media hyped recent playoff game (not for all but most ppl) Has he even had a 90/50/45 season yet... um ok? (the answer is no...ill save you the google search) Um has a nash/stockton/price has...um yes. Seeing that he hasnt even done this yet. It has to be riding the recent jock raid. If not tell me and explain outside of recent events why you think he could be goat?

Exactly....
 
I just don't get why he panics when the defender doesn't fall for his pump fakes and then throws a fastball at the backboard with his left hand when the shot clock is about to expire.

edit: He's a great shooter and may become the best ever but he's got a lot of work to do before he becomes a great player. Kobe and Lebron and others went through it too and made it, but not everyone makes it to that next level.
 
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Whats crazy about Steph is when he goes off the dribble and pops the tre in front of his defender, he dont even look at the basket. When he starts to feel it, **** gets ridiculous quick :smokin
 
I'm done replying to shoelyesses. I dont know how many times you, me or others have to explicitly state that this claim about Curry's shooting has to do with PROJECTING where he will be when his career is over.  Yet he keeps stating that people are crowning him now.  Not once has that happened.  But he cant seem to differentiate between the two.
who says it...um its in the title of the thread.......... Where in the title does it say PROJECTED? exactly...it says he has already become the goat. How am i claiming accusing or saying that this thread says he is the goat... It says it again in the title. Show me where it says PROJECTED. Of course you cant. Basically ppl was caught with their mouthfull, i called them out on it and now ppl are back peddling/moonwalking and trying to justify the jock riding.

Lol at i cant see the difference.... um duh the thread says already he is goat...not PROJECTED to be goat. I like how you said i claim ppl/thread says he is the goat, as if the title of the thread doesnt say goat.
Jesus........ This has got to be a troll.

When hes done? Thats not future tense? Are you being serious? I've seen you post man I know you're a smart dude, I'm not buying this at all.
WHO SAID THIS? No one said it.
Its implied by saying one he is the best shooter in the game..and that he will be greatest of all time. You cant evaluate a body of work...until um duh...they have a body of work to evaluate. Like i said this has been done a thousand times over ala dwight will be greatest center....revis will be better then deion...and again (you can just look on the first page of the sports forum) lin will be an allstar top 10 player.

End of the day media most ppl etc... are taking media recent coverage of this guy and like sheeps going overboard and ick riding dude and overhyping. I know you are a fan of him...but lets not act like whoever made this thread had some epiphany and just made this thread and it didnt have anything to do with recent hype/media\/coverage etc....
As I said earlier, if this kind of thinking wasnt allowed, then the majority of sports discussion wouldnt happen. So much of it is based of speculations and projections. Picking the teams that are going to make the playoffs, who will win MVP, who will win the chip. These are all things that happen every year, and are all based off speculation.
 
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[h1]CourtVision: Just How Good Are Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson?[/h1]
profile : Goldsberry_Kirk profile is nulltrueBy Kirk Goldsberry on
May 2, 2013 1:35 PM ET
i
Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images
The first reason I like Steph Curry is that he's a relatively normally sized human being who has figured out a way to become an NBA superstar. When you look at guys like Dwight Howard, LeBron James, or Dirk Nowitzki, it’s easy to see why they might be incredible basketball players. Stephen Curry doesn't look like those guys; someone with his exact figure could walk into any pickup gym in America and few people would notice. Curry is skinny and shortish by NBA standards, but pound-for-pound he is probably the best scorer the league has seen since Allen Iverson.

It’s Curry’s tiny frame and the current NBA injury plague that make what happened the other night in Denver more bothersome. Kenneth “Manimal” Faried stuck out his foot, in what was possibly an attempt to trip Curry, who could easily be nicknamed “beanpole.” I love Faried as much as anyone but was repulsed to see him resort to that. To me it seemed out of character and dickish (or malicious), which is a word I would never use to describe Faried or his game. Why would he resort to tripping? Those saying fouls like that are part of the game neglect to mention that this exact move could easily start a fight at any level of basketball. Tripping is never part of the game and it never should be.

A lot of people have argued, “Well, this is playoff basketball and hard fouls are the norm.” They cite the Pistons beating up Michael Jordan as an example. They imply that there’s some old-school cred associated with this stuff. There’s not, and thank god the days of clotheslining are bygone. Hurting dudes who make the NBA fun to watch is not cool now, and it never really was. If you want to watch big guys fight each other, there’s a sport for you, but it’s not basketball. There is no dignity in “touching up”; there should be no pride in substituting brutality for skill. And though it’s an argument for another time, you’ll find many of the same people who embrace the notion of hard gymnasium fouls on Friday preaching about the importance of player safety in other sports on Sundays.
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Imagine a parallel world in which Curry had fallen down and hurt one of his fragile ankles — I don't think that’s an implausible scenario. Imagine the backlash at Faried. Imagine the PTI segment; Kornheiser would be aghast. Imagine the First Take segments; Bayless would be apoplectic. My argument is that once Faried stuck that big yellow Adidas out in front of Curry, he chose to enter a realm where such an injury became a realistic possibility. He didn't know the outcome of his action, but he certainly knew the possibilities, and it's not a stretch to suggest he knows Curry's injury history as well.

On the long list of people who are thankful that Curry didn’t get hurt, Kenneth Faried should be very close to the top.

There's another reason I like Steph Curry: He’s an incredible shooter. In fact he may be the best in the world at converting jump shot opportunities into points. To borrow a concept from the legendary Bob Ryan, if the aliens came down and challenged humanity with a winner-take-all game of H-O-R-S-E, of all the current NBA players I would definitely nominate Stephen Curry to be our representative in that game. Curry’s shot chart reflects this greatness; he puts up stellar numbers virtually everywhere along the perimeter.
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Kirk Goldsberry/Grantland
Unsurprisingly, Curry outperforms NBA averages at every spot beyond the arc. He’s incredibly effective in the corners and along the right wing (graphic left); it’s probably safe to say that he’s the best 3-point shooter in the league. After all, he did break Ray Allen’s record for 3-point field goals made in a season this year. However, relative to league averages, Curry’s efficiency drops the closer he gets to the rim. That’s not to say he’s not very good in the midrange — he is, but he’s definitely not the best midrange shooter in the league. He hits long 2s at a lower rate than bigger guys like Chris Bosh. Both Bosh and Curry take about five shots between 16 and 23 feet each game, but Bosh makes 52 percent while Curry makes only 44 percent. Curry has a bit of trouble scoring around bigger defenders, and it’s this effect that exposes the biggest shortcoming in Curry’s offensive game.

If there’s a clear weakness in Curry’s offensive portfolio it’s scoring the basketball down low in the land of giants. In the era of so-called “attack guards” or “power guards,” Curry doesn’t quite fit in. He doesn’t get to the rim as much as the league’s other All-Star guards. With the exception of the pure point guard Chris Paul, all nine All-Star guards this year attempted at least four shots per game at the rim. Stephen Curry attempted only 2.1 shots per game at the rim. Relative to his elite peer group — which includes guys like James Harden and Russell Westbrook — he lacks the size and the power to effectively attack the basket. That said, he’s not Austin Rivers, and when he gets to the basket he’s not terrible. Regardless, nobody watches Steph Curry to see him attack; we watch him because he is one of the top jump shooters the league has ever seen, a fact not lost on Mark Jackson.
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Kirk Goldsberry/Grantland
Last week, after the Warriors hung 131 points on the Nuggets in Game 2, shooting 65 percent from the floor, Jackson hyped the shooting prowess of his backcourt. He went so far as to say his team possessed the best shooting backcourt ever. That’s obviously a bold claim, but might not be so outlandish. Together with Klay Thompson, the Warriors decorate the perimeter with a terrifying amount of efficiency. Although Thompson isn’t on the same level as Curry, he provides a suitable Robin to Curry’s Batman.
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Kirk Goldsberry/Grantland
Like Curry, Thompson is particularly good from the right corner, where he made more than 50 percent of his shots this year. However, away from the right corner, Thompson is a run-of-the-mill good 3-point shooter; he ranked 31st in 3-point shooting efficiency this season behind players like Nate Robinson, Randy Foye, and LeBron James. Don't get me wrong, he’s good, but he’s not Steph Curry. Either way, Jackson’s quote about his backcourt is emblematic of a larger problem in contemporary basketball discourse. Too often we let the “best ever” be the enemy of the “great” — there’s no question that along with Jarrett Jack, Thompson and Curry are freakishly great at shooting the basketball. However, when we throw around “best ever” — and we do a lot these days — we immediately provoke an argument. Instead of simply appreciating these guys for being great, we are thrust into pointless debates about Gail Goodrich, Jerry West, Raja Bell, and Steve Nash. Next thing you know we’re not appreciating greatness anymore and we find ourselves deep down in the Gail Goodrich YouTube rabbit hole. Don’t do it, you guys.

Digressions aside, the Warriors are really fun to watch, especially on offense, where Curry has evolved into the kind of elite scoring talent that many scouts doubted he could become. Further, the coaching staff has created sets that effectively provide their excellent shooting guards with excellent opportunities. Their "elevator doors" play for Curry is probably the best example of this, and a thrilling bit of playbook craftiness. Going forward, helping Curry get shots and keeping him healthy remain key to the Warriors' success. If the last few weeks of basketball have taught us anything, keeping guys healthy and on the floor is hard enough in this league, and the last thing we need are dirty little plays that only elevate the risk of losing another superstar.

http://www.grantland.com/blog/the-t...-how-good-are-stephen-curry-and-klay-thompson
 
How dudes jumping the gun and he been doing this his whole life?

The jumper is that serious.
 
22 points 4-8 from 3, 8 assists. He wasnt perfect but  in the closeout game, he came to play and was the deciding factor.
 
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22 points 4-8 from 3, 8 assists. He wasnt perfect but  in the closeout game, he came to play and was the deciding factor.


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I'd say Bogut and Green were more a deciding factor then steph. You steph fans really need to chill with giving him all this credit when dude didn't do a damn thing in the first half and pretty much the whole 4th. He's seriously lucky he has a good group to back him up. I'm not sure what other team would be only down 2 when their best player doesn't do jack the first half.
 
^ Appreciate your love fer Steph but he was not the deciding factor in this closeout game. Draymond Green bailed us out in the 4th quarter when everyone was trying to give the game away. And Bogut came to ****** play tonight :smokin


EDIT: OneTrust beat me to the punch.
 
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Steph Curry came out during the third and got them the lead when the game was looking like it was going to go Denvers way. Dont get me wrong, Draymond and Bogut deserve a TON of credit, Draymond especially because I dont expect that kind of play from him at all, but if Steph didnt come out like he did in the third then we would be talking about a game 7 in Denver. When your best player is playing well, it opens the door for everyone else.
If Steph didn't set the tone in the third...game 7 in Denver. 
If Bogut didnt set the tone in the first half and Draymond wasnt the only one playing in the 4th, game 7 in Denver
Touche. All three of them deserve 30% of the credit.
 
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[COLOR=#red]Actually all of you are right. The WARRIORS won because the WARRIORS came to play primarily buoyed by the efforts of Bogut, Curry, and Green... even with their effort the game was close. It's just that Curry will get the attention because his style of play is exhilarating when he gets going and he's the face of the org...and rightfully so I might add. Cause let's face it had the WARRIORS lost this series after going up 3-1 then the criticism and blame would have been attributed squarely to Curry...and rightfully so. If you are the star you will either be the hero, or you'll be the goat.[/COLOR]
 
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Curry played great, so did Draymond Green & Andrew Bogut. Lee coming back (even if he barely played) sparked a lot of energy as well. Can't forget Barnes' clutch FT's. Nice overall team win in a closeout game from the Warriors
 
Steph Curry came out during the third and got them the lead when the game was looking like it was going to go Denvers way. Dont get me wrong, Draymond and Bogut deserve a TON of credit, Draymond especially because I dont expect that kind of play from him at all, but if Steph didnt come out like he did in the third then we would be talking about a game 7 in Denver. When your best player is playing well, it opens the door for everyone else.

Touche. All three of them deserve 30% of the credit.
just curious what do you think bout a spurs vs warriors matchup
 
just curious what do you think bout a spurs vs warriors matchup

[COLOR=#red]The Spurs are too much...the Warriors may possibly win one game, but I wouldn't be shocked at a sweep. If I'm wrong I'll man up and eat crow, but on paper the Spurs have this.

You see an "appreciater" of Curry can still be rational. Warrior fans I mean no disrespect and good luck to your team.[/COLOR]
 
Steph Curry came out during the third and got them the lead when the game was looking like it was going to go Denvers way. Dont get me wrong, Draymond and Bogut deserve a TON of credit, Draymond especially because I dont expect that kind of play from him at all, but if Steph didnt come out like he did in the third then we would be talking about a game 7 in Denver. When your best player is playing well, it opens the door for everyone else.

Touche. All three of them deserve 30% of the credit.
just curious what do you think bout a spurs vs warriors matchup
Spurs will win in 5. With no David Lee, the defensive schemes become that much easier, and apparently no one knows how to come to the ball when Steph is being double teamed. It wont be a massacre or anything like that, their offense is too good.
 
The Spurs are too much...the Warriors may possibly win one game, but I wouldn't be shocked at a sweep. If I'm wrong I'll man up and eat crow, but on paper the Spurs have this.

You see an "appreciater" of Curry can still be rational. Warrior fans I mean no disrespect and good luck to your team.
i think the warriors can take two. the only thing gets me is they havent won in san antonio since before tim duncan....lol I would be shocked at a sweep they came to far to not win one.
 
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