The problem is that we grade defense on "lockdown" ability. Curry is not a lockdown guy. He is a system defender—smart, physical, disruptive. He is the point guard version of a safety in football. He breaks up plays before they happen.
Calling Stephen Curry "underrated" in 2024 isn't about his stats—it's about the fact that we still struggle to wrap our heads around how a 6'2" guard conquered a league of giants. Stephen Curry- Underrated
For seventy years, basketball orthodoxy dictated that "jump shooting teams can’t win championships." The logic was that jumpers are volatile; they come and go. You need size, low-post dominance, and rim pressure to win in the playoffs. Curry didn’t just break that rule; he nuked it from orbit. He revealed that a player who operates mostly beyond the arc can generate offense so efficient that it breaks the mathematical model of the game. The problem is that we grade defense on "lockdown" ability
When discussing the NBA’s pantheon of legends—names like Michael Jordan, LeBron James, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar—Stephen Curry’s inclusion is now undeniable. He has four championships, two MVP awards (including the only unanimous selection in history), and is widely regarded as the greatest shooter the sport has ever seen. He is the point guard version of a safety in football
He didn’t need the system. He was the system.
Curry's ability to make shots off the dribble is unmatched. He can create shots for himself off the dribble, often from well beyond the three-point line, and make them at an incredibly high rate. This skill is extremely difficult to defend and has forced defenses to adapt and change the way they guard him.
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