Golden State's Stephen Curry is doing his part for the community
The Warriors will attempt to set a new NBA record of 73 wins in a season this Wednesday
For years, Stephen Curry watched his dad, Dell, do his part in the community. Curry was often among those children in Charlotte treated to special appearances from star athletes and still cherishes those sweet memories.
"That's how I grew up," Curry said. "I was blessed to see my dad and how he interacted with kids my age at the time. He was going to youth camps and different school events. I know how happy me and my friends were at that age to see somebody we looked up to come and spend some time. I don't want to take those opportunities for granted, no matter what the schedule is, or what's going on outside of that event. That's a time for them."
Part of the job
Even in the middle of Golden State's special season and quest for the NBA wins record, which Curry and the Warriors (72-9) will try to accomplish in the regular-season finale Wednesday night against Memphis by topping the 72-win Chicago Bulls of 1995-96.
So, on a rainy Tuesday last month when he had the day off, Curry spent several hours at Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School. He spoke to the kids about the importance of drinking water, maintaining a healthy lifestyle, making the right choices and going to college.
This is normal for Curry, even a day after becoming the first player in NBA history to make 300 3-pointers in a season and less than 24 hours after defending champion Golden State set yet another record in a season full of them — this time for the best regular-season home winning streak ever at 45 games. In the middle of playing five games in seven days, no less.
Curry won the NBA "Seasonlong Community Assist Award" for 2013-14 and is a regular participant for the Make-A-Wish Foundation. Not to mention that for every 3-pointer he makes Curry donates three bed nets to fight Malaria through Nothing But Nets. He has an NBA-record 392 3s so far this season.
'Be like Steph'
Hat on backward and wearing a big smile that afternoon in inner-city Oakland, the reigning NBA MVP — likely headed for another such honour — pumped his right fist when someone gave a good answer to a trivia question, he waved and high-fived while making his entrance, and even chanted along when appropriate.
Sometimes, the Warriors worry just a bit about their do-everything point guard overextending himself.
"It doesn't surprise me," coach Steve Kerr said. "He genuinely cares. Sometimes he does too much stuff, we try to pull him back, pull the reins back because everyone wants a piece of him and he has a hard time saying no."
Among giggling, giddy children, Curry is clearly in his other element, off the basketball floor where he is the most dynamic player now and in recent memory.
Even if all those old greats out there want to knock him down a notch, knock his game, or the overall style of play of the Warriors and others in this era of the NBA.
The scrutiny is part of it, Curry insists. It means he's doing something special.
It's helpful to remember how I felt as a kid and the stuff my dad taught me, and be reminded the importance of the stage and the platform we have- Stephen Curry
"When it's talking just about basketball, I know any time there's a successful player or team, they're going to have more of a spotlight, and people are going to ask questions about whoever it is," Curry said. "This day and age, you say something controversial and it's going to hit the airways pretty quick. When there are legends and people that I looked up to as a player — as a young kid, as a basketball player — Hall of Famers and guys that talk about our team, it means that obviously we're doing something good so we keep doing it. I take it with a grain of salt. Unless they're in the room with me and we're talking back and forth about what's going on, then I don't put too much weight into it."
Especially considering everybody wants to be like Steph. Remember when it was "Be Like Mike?" (Michael Jordan, that is).
"It's so interesting when they talk about creating a simulator to duplicate what Steph Curry does on the court and the simulator can't measure up because it just doesn't look real," Hall of Famer Julius Erving said. "That's what he's been doing on the court, things that really don't look real to the normal eye, and you have to give him kudos for that."
Sure, Curry sometimes gets tired from all of the fanfare and the NBA grind. Not to mention the typical lack of sleep for a father with two young girls.
"The schedule's crazy and obviously we're right in the middle of the season, so there are times where you might wake up and not want to get out of bed or whatever, but it is helpful to remember how I felt as a kid and the stuff my dad taught me, and be reminded the importance of the stage and the platform we have," he said. "I want to use it."