Cavs vs Warriors Part II - it's on

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Stephen Curry says he is the world's best basketball player




New York (AFP) - Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry raised the tension levels for his Christmas showdown with Cleveland's LeBron James, saying he considers himself the world's best basketball player.

In an interview published Wednesday, the reigning NBA Most Valuable Player told Time magazine that in the next year, "you should expect me to keep getting better."

That's a bold statement from a player on pace to shatter his own one-season NBA record for 3-pointers, who had the Warriors off to a record 24-0 start, and looks set to smash the record for the best season in NBA history, the 72-10 mark by Chicago in 1995-96.

Curry leads the NBA with 31.8 points a game and his Warriors will face four-time NBA MVP James and Cleveland on Friday for the first time since beating them in the NBA Finals last June.

James, 30, has long been considered the world's best player, but Curry said he sees himself in that role now.

"In my mind, yes. That's how I have confidence out there that I can play at a high level every night," said Curry, 27.

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Reigning NBA Most Valuable Player Stephen Curry tells Time magazine that in the next year, "you …
"I don't get into debates, arguing with people about why I am versus somebody else. I feel like anybody who's at the level I'm trying to be at, if you don't think that when you’re on the floor, then you're doing yourself a disservice."

Curry, whose father Dell was also an NBA long-range sharpshooter, says he embraces his growing role as what teammate Draymond Green calls "the face of the NBA."

"You've got to be a winner and have all the right trajectory as a player and as a team to back that up," said Curry.

"The way I try to represent my family and coaches I think all are characteristics the league aspires to portray. That's just who I am. It's not changing anything about me to fulfill that role."

- Golf with Obama -

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Stephen Curry (C) of the Golden State Warriors leads the NBA with 31.8 points a game (AFP Photo/Mike …
Curry said the athlete he most admires is Jordan Spieth, this year's Masters and US Open golf champion.

"His maturity, the way he handles himself, his vision as a 22-year-old, is unbelievable," Curry said. "How composed he is, whether he played well or not, is unbelievable."

Curry played golf last summer with US President Barack Obama, his father and NBA legend Ray Allen, and said he was more nervous than when he was playing for the NBA crown.

"I feel comfortable on the court," Curry said. "There on the first tee, it was the president, my dad, Ray Allen, and 40 people in the clubhouse yelling Obama's name the whole time.

"I'm just trying to make sure I get it in the air. I sprayed it a good 40-50 yards right. But we played the breakfast ball rule. I got to re-tee it. I hit a decent one the next time. I birdied the first two holes."

Back in the NBA, Curry picked out Los Angeles Clippers' Chris Paul for special praise.

"The whole team aspect, the history between our two teams but also our history individually. I used to work out with him before my rookie year," said Curry.

"As you go through the league, you start to try to get to where somebody else is, try to stay there, and the whole competitive environment. But yeah, there are certain guys that drive you because of their success.

"He's one of them."
 
The NBA’s Most Unlikely Rivalry: LeBron and Curry


From size to style of play to sneaker brand, the two stars have almost nothing in common—except their ability to dominate everyone else

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Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry and Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James during last season’s NBA Finals. PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS





By
BEN COHEN
Dec. 23, 2015 12:11 p.m. ET
15 COMMENTS



One of the more incredible moments of Stephen Curry’s basketball career—and a preview of the NBA’s future—came at the end of a 2008 college game that most people have no reason to remember.

It was late in the second half and the shot clock was winding down when a Davidson teammate snatched an offensive rebound and immediately passed to Curry. The only problem was that Curry was 30 feet from the basket. But he didn’t have time to consider the limits of his own range, because as soon as the ball touched his hands, it was already back in the air on the way to yet another swish.

That wasn’t unexpected. But what came next was. Curry strutted across the court, searching for a spectator sitting courtside, until he had eye contact and could stare down the most intimidating basketball player on the planet: LeBron James. He looked like a cockapoo winking at a crocodile.

Stephen Curry stares down LeBron James after hitting a big shot for Davidson in 2008 (7:01).
But it has become clear since then, especially in the last year, that this was the birth of the NBA’s unlikeliest individual rivalry. James, the best player in the world, and Curry, the reigning Most Valuable Player and champion whose team could have the best season in NBA history, finally play for the first time since last year’s Finals in a hugely anticipated Christmas Day game. This entire season, though, has seen the Cleveland Cavaliers and Golden State Warriors circling each other from afar—almost as if they sense they’re going to play in this year’s Finals, too.

People have tried to anoint James a proper rival for as long as he has been in the NBA. But no one imagined that this player could be someone who is close to his exact opposite. James makes the extraordinary look ordinary. Curry makes the ordinary look extraordinary. And that puts them at the poles in a generational shift of what make a professional basketball player popular.

Casual fans can act like Steph,” said Turner Sports analyst Reggie Miller. “They can’t act like LeBron.”

By almost any measure, though, Curry and James are the NBA players with the widest appeal. They ranked No. 1 and No. 2 last season in All-Star Game votes and jersey sales. They’re also television catnip at a time when the NBA is losing cable viewers: Golden State and Cleveland have played in 10 of the 11 most-watched games on ESPN and TNT, according to Nielsen


The problem with comparing Curry and James is that they aren’t so much apples and oranges as they areApple Inc. and Orangina. Among their many differences: their experience (Curry is in his 7th season, James his 13th), their pedigree (recruited only by a teeny school, most hyped prospect ever) and their positions (guard, whatever he wants).

Even when they’re on the same court they rarely guard each other. But when they did match up in last year’s Finals, one player was clearly better than the other, according to Vantage Sports. Curry made 6 of 10 shots with James on him. James took 9 shots with Curry defending him and made none.

There are times since then that James seems like he’s suffered from Curry envy. The Warriors and Cavaliers have veered strategically in everything from their pace of play to pacing their players for the season—and no one is more aware of that than James. He has copped to watching Golden State games late at night, a sickness that has afflicted basketball junkies across the East Coast, while criticizing the Cavaliers for their complacency compared to what he was seeing out West. It’s as if James is personally scouting Curry.

The sport’s two biggest names even find themselves competing on another front: basketball’s new sneaker battle. Nike’s sales dwarf Under Armour’s, but Curry’s sponsor has come a long way since 2013, when Under Armour executives pitched him at a Ritz-Carlton room in his hometown. The apparel company was a rookie in the basketball world and selling itself to a player who wasn’t yet an All-Star. Not even Under Armour expected Curry to become a global sensation in such a short amount of time.

“He was somebody who was really, really fun to watch play,” said Kris Stone, the company’s director of basketball marketing. “But you never foresee this coming. You can’t.”

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ENLARGE
Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James reaches for a loose ball against Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry during Game 4 of the NBA Finals. PHOTO: BOB DONNAN/REUTERS
James, meanwhile, has become so synonymous with Nike over his NBA career that the company announced in the middle of Golden State’s season-opening, 24-game winning streak that it had signed James to a lifetime deal. His thoughts about Under Armour became apparent a week later when he was asked about one of the Nike challenger’s recent commercials. “Who?” he joked. “I don’t know who Under Armour is.”

If there is anyone who could’ve predicted Curry’s unthinkable rise, however, it may be the very person breathing the same rarified air. When he watched him in 2008, James was on the way to winning his first MVP in a season that remains the single most efficient of his career, while Curry was still playing for a school that took a risk on recruiting him. It was a statement then that James would deign to watch a college player. “I’m very good at noticing talent,” James said last season. “I thought he was special then, and obviously he is now.”

That one day turned out to be a glimpse at the future of a league in the middle of a fundamental shift. Curry came into the NBA when the odds of superstardom were more in his favor than ever before—all because of the way the 3-pointer revolutionized basketball. No one personifies the radical change more than Curry, who has as many 35-footers as slam dunks this season, according to NBA Savant.

But that would’ve been obvious to anyone who watched him in college. Bob McKillop, the Davidson coach, said earlier this year that he remembers exactly where James sat the day he came for the Curry spectacle, since he looked right at him when Curry spotted him in the crowd and pointed his way. “They show the benches in the NBA when a guy dunks,” McKillop said. “LeBron had that same reaction when Steph made that three.”
 
Steph is an excellent shooter, with a very In sync team. I guess he could be a good leader to get your team that good. Idk bout the best player, if you moved him to another team, will he still have the same wins like lebron does? I don't think so, but he has the best team
 
agreed. It's close though. Hopefully both team are healthy and we get a rematch.
Cavs will def be in the finals but Golden State may not make it back. I think in the West it's either gonna be the Warriors or Spurs. Either one of those teams would be an interesting matchup going against a LeBron team since he lost to the Spurs his last year in Miami and lost to Golden State last year.
 
3rd to me is kawhi Leonard


it no secret that i ride with LBJ.
for me Leonard's effort is above Leborn…nightly we kno what he going to give

the way he plays reminds me of the game where MJ scored 63, it was read react instantly (pass, shoot or drive…) wasn't much wasted energy no extra stuff, that force bad shots…
 
it no secret that i ride with LBJ.
for me Leonard's effort is above Leborn…nightly we kno what he going to give

the way he plays reminds me of the game where MJ scored 63, it was read react instantly (pass, shoot or drive…) wasn't much wasted energy no extra stuff, that force bad shots…
Yep Kawhi is a complete player he does not take plays off and he always give LeBron problems when they face each other.
 
i'll think most would get close to this agreement but the bigger question is who's 3rd if Curry & James holds 1 & 1a slot

Just going on this season... Still Durant with PG-13 on his heels. I think Paul needs to get that FG% up to a respectable 46% and snag a few more boards to overtake Durant. As good as Steph is... Id still take Westbrook over him.
 
it no secret that i ride with LBJ.
for me Leonard's effort is above Leborn…nightly we kno what he going to give

the way he plays reminds me of the game where MJ scored 63, it was read react instantly (pass, shoot or drive…) wasn't much wasted energy no extra stuff, that force bad shots…


Coaching right there. Thats how Pops squads are always in the mix. Fuck the AAU shit. Basketball the way its supposed to be played.
 
Well he won the MVP and title last year and about to win MVP again and his team is the best in the NBA so yeah nobody should have a problem with him saying that
 
he at least has an argument whether you agree or not. the NBA is full of watered down one dimensional dudes these days so it's not like there is a whole lot of competition for best in the league. I'd go with Lebron as the best right now, though thats not saying much as a whole. I wouldnt even say Steph is the best offensive player. i'd go with Durant. He's the best shooter though.
 
yes but scorinf like,he does opens up different facetz to the game that you cant account for

Thats true. But in the NBA aside from his lights out ability to shoot, there nothing that Steph does that others dont... Which is score. Regardless of how it gets done 34 points is 34 points. But can he get his man in foul trouble while getting there??? Can he lock his man down??? Not get off ball steals to make the stats look good. Can he grab a clutch rebound??? Can he even change the shot of the guy hes guarding??? All of this goes into "Best player," not just great offensive player. Steph doesnt do any of that but score really well, and other guys are as effective at that, while being better at the other stuff.
 
lebron must have like 23 different bgol acounts lol

No doubt... Dudes come in with fire shooting out of their mouths... Bet not EVER... EVER EVER EVER Talk about Da Kang!

Da Fuck is Curry suppose to say 'I am a decent player but LeBron is the best?!?!' What kind of bitch ass logic is that! FOH!! :lol:
 
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