My buddies are texting me about a Bleacher Report article that apparently features someone out there with the absolutely unmitigated gall to call Stephen Curry the greatest #2 option in franchise history.
My buddies are texting me about a Bleacher Report article that apparently features someone out there with the absolutely unmitigated gall to call Stephen Curry the greatest #2 option in franchise history.
Here’s the big quote:
No. 2 option behind: Kevin Durant
Yeah, it sounds insane—Steph Curry a second option?
But in the Warriors’ Kevin Durant years, that’s exactly what he was. The most dangerous shooter in history willingly bent his game to let Durant cook. Most superstars in that position would’ve bristled, demanding the ball. Curry did the opposite.
And I’m sitting here like… wait… is this rage bait? The comments are hella funny. But also I think there’s something else here under the very human immediate instinct to flip a table and scream, “HOW DARE YOU CALL THE UNANIMOUS MVP A SIDE DISH?”.
C’mon, how offended could I really be that somebody is pointing out the fact that Stephen Curry encouraged megastar Kevin Durant to take on a healthy share of dynasty-forging responsibilities in the Bay?
We know Steph is the same monster who once looked off both Durant and LeBron in the Olympics because he just wanted to put entire nation of France to sleep.
We’re aware has no problem getting it out the mud with whoever the Warriors put a jersey on, and there’s something mystically old school and Michael Jordanian about him leading his teammates for so long.
So Steph totally accepted Durant’s help and in all his benevolent sorcery, bent the geometry of his own game so a seven-foot flamethrower could drop nuclear heat on Cleveland. Is that… bad?
Because to me, that sounds like Tuesday. That sounds like exactly how the dynasty worked. Durant didn’t materialize out of thin air people, the man clearly loved the idea of playing with Steph and the Dubs so much he looked at the great GSW–CLE rivalry and said, “Yeah, I’ll help make sure LeBron never sees another parade in Cleveland again.” And then they did exactly that. Twice. With confetti, choreography, and cruelty.
Now, I do understand why anyone with two eyes and a casual relationship with a basketball sees the blasphemy of prime Curry being referred to as anything remotely approaching a “second fiddle” with the Warriors. He revolutionized the sport, how could that guy ever be framed as something other than the first option?
In response to that, I’d remind the people that part of how Curry’s greatness changed the sport upside down is his selflessness. That’s the only way the Warriors are accomplishing what they are doing under Curry’s intentional, God-given inspiration.
But in the spirit of the levity of my group chat, let’s get even more absurd. Why not call him the franchise’s all-time third option?
Don’t forget Klay Thompson once scored the most points in a single quarter like he was speedrunning a video game. The same Klay that
That’s the part I hope we don’t miss. When we look at Curry’s magnetic generosity and feel his fiendish competitiveness? That is what rocket boosted the Warriors to become one of the greatest franchises sports has ever seen. If the worst thing anybody can say about your superstar is that he was so gravitationally powerful, so unselfish, so team-first that a super chill top-15 all-time hooper slid through to join forces with him and take some shine?… that’s not slander. That’s ruining the league!
Lmk if you’ll second that. HAPPY HOLIDAYS EVERYBODY!
Cleveland Browns receiver Jerry Jeudy and rookie quarterback Shedeur Sanders got into a heated verbal spat on the sideline during a 26-8 loss to the San Francisco 49ers.
Sanders and Jeudy were reviewing a play on the sideline tablet and disagreed on what should have happened. An
It wasn’t the only not-so-great interception between Jeudy and his rookie quarterback. Sanders missed on a deep throw to Jeudy early in the wind but it was just out of his reach. Jeudy retreated to the sideline,
Jeudy finished the game with three catches for 26 yards. Sander completed 16-of-25 passes for 149 yards with a touchdown. He finished with a QB rating of 93.6.
Sanders said after the game that he’s still looking to find his comfort level with his receivers — Jeudy included.
“When we got in certain passing situations and field position, everything like that, it wasn’t the best,”
Sanders also spoke specifically about his relationship with Jeudy and alluded to a lack of trust.
“You want to be able to get (Jeudy) the ball, but you’ve got to understand it’s going to take time. I’m more of a trust person and that’s just what it boils down to,” Sanders said. “So we have to spend time on task, with all those guys, and be able to trust and be able to see things at the same lens.”
It’s been a rough year for Jeudy after a Pro Bowl campaign. He has just 35 catches for 421 yards and one touchdown this season. He also
“I just keep being me — I can’t control nothing but myself. I just keep running routes and getting open,” Jeudy said. “That’s all I can do. I can’t control anything else.”
As for Sanders, Jeudy expressed a similar sentiment to his QB.
“We’ve got to keep doing what we’ve been doing in practice. Get consistent reps and be on the same page,” Jeudy said. “Just keep working on that chemistry and building. Speaking on what I see and what he sees out there. Just doing what the coaches ask.”
Sanders, Jeudy, and the Browns have a chance to get on track next week as they host the Tennessee Titans.