Steph’s ‘greatest show in basketball’
JJ Redick knew how to shoot a basketball. He made 2,000 3-pointers in his NBA career. But Redick doesn’t know how Steph Curry shoots it.
“He’s tapped into a higher level of consciousness,” Redick said of Curry. “Right now, Steph’s the greatest show in basketball.”
Redick was speaking Tuesday night on Scott Van Pelt’s ESPN show. Curry had scored 37, made nine 3-pointers in a Warriors romp over the Nets.
He got 40 on Thursday night when the Warriors, once trailing by 13, outscored Cleveland by a remarkable 36-8 in the fourth quarter to defeat the Cavaliers, 104-89.
The Warriors have been stopped only twice in 15 games.
The question asked of Redick, who in September retired after 14 seasons in the NBA, was how do you stop Curry?
Basically, you don’t.
“He’s gotten stronger,” said Redick. “He can shoot every which way. And he’s not just a shooter. He’s got imagination, daring. He can go right, left, dribble right, left. He can play physical, off the ball.
“He’s like no other player of my generation.”
A generation that for the 37-year-old Redick includes LeBron James, arguably the best in the NBA.
When Michael Jordan was the man of the game and the time, he virtually owned every arena he entered, from New York to L.A.
The people might have been Knicks fans or Lakers fans — or Warriors fans — but most of all they were MJ fans.
Now? “It’s him and LeBron,” Redick, a Duke grad who should know better, said ungrammatically about Curry and James.
We’ve heard it. We’ve seen it. When Curry’s lighting them up, hitting from the corners, from way beyond the arc, the crowd becomes as much of the story as the shots.
Dunks are thrilling, but except for a rare few of us, unattainable. “But we’ve all shot a basketball,” said Van Pelt. We can identify with Curry’s accomplishment.
If really all we can do is marvel at it.
Redick was one of the sport’s top long-distance shooters. Which makes him appreciate Curry’s brilliance.
Curry again had nine 3-pointers on Thursday, the 38th time he’s made nine or more in a game. “You know how many times I had nine?” Redick said as a matter of comparison. “One.”
When he played, beginning at Duke, Redick was feisty, combative — and unpopular, the focus of booing and derision.
But what the public thought of Redick is not reflected in what he thinks of other players. There is no jealousy, just honesty.
“He plays with joy,” said Redick. “It’s infectious to everyone in the arena except the opposing team.”
They used to say that about Magic Johnson who, while others scowled or frowned or gasped, played with a smile, as if he were happy to be there.
Curry is living the good life, off court as well as on. He has a great family. He’s at the forefront in support of various charitable programs.
He’s been on three NBA championship teams, and it’s beginning to look like he may well be part of another.
“You see the way his teammates respond when he’s going well,” said Redick. “I never got to play with him, but I assume it must be a lot of fun.”
It is, for teammates, spectators, and the community.
Redick alluded to a popular tavern game. “Watching him,” said Redick, “is like having a perfect buzz and making the last shot in beer pong.”
He remembered a few seasons back when Klay Thompson was in the Warriors’ lineup, and he or Curry or both were unguarded and making one three after another.
Thompson, injured since the playoffs of 2019, finally is supposed to return in a month or two.
“Back two, three years ago,” Redick reminded, “they had the most open looks on threes in the NBA. The scary thing is when Klay comes back, they’ll have more.
“Shooting begets shooting.”
As only a shooter would know.