Stephen Curry- Underrated Official

We confuse noise for dominance . Russell Westbrook screaming and rebounding his own miss looks like dominance. Giannis Antetokounmpo bulldozing three defenders looks like dominance. Curry’s dominance is quiet. It is a subtle jog around a screen. It is a relocation three seconds before the ball arrives. It is the opposing center stepping up to the free-throw line, terrified, leaving the rim wide open for a layup.

It was not an outlier. It was a revolution. Stephen Curry- Underrated

If you aggregate the major media rankings from ESPN, The Athletic, or CBS, you will find Stephen Curry nestled somewhere between the 10th and 14th greatest player of all time. He is usually flanked by Hakeem Olajuwon and Kevin Durant, trailing the titans: Jordan, LeBron, Kareem, Magic, Bird, Duncan, Shaq, Kobe, and Russell. We confuse noise for dominance

That is the "Curry Gravity"—a phenomenon that has no statistical box. It is the panic in a defense’s eyes. Because it is invisible to the standard box score, we chronically undervalue it. For the first half of his career, a loud contingent argued that Curry was a product of the "Warriors system." The discourse went like this: Put him on the Charlotte Bobcats and he’s just a rich man’s J.J. Redick. Curry’s dominance is quiet

When he retires, the analytics community will scream from the rooftops that he is top-5 all-time. He will likely be voted into the top-10 by conventional media. But the gap between those two numbers—between the 5th best player and the 10th best player—is the story of Stephen Curry.

But look deeper. In 2015, Andre Iguodala won the award. A worthy defender, yes. But Curry averaged 26 points, 6 assists, and 5 rebounds. More importantly, the entire Cavaliers defensive game plan was "Stop Curry." They doubled and trapped him 35 feet from the hoop. That chaotic defensive attention allowed Iguodala to run free in 4-on-3 situations. Curry was the reason for the FMVP, but he didn't get the trophy.