The Niagara Falls Review

He has nothing but love for Durant

Curry: ‘We won two championsh­ips and I think we both got better throughout’

- JANIE MCCAULEY

OAKLAND, CALIF. — Someday, years or even decades from now, at one of those celebrator­y reunions teams like to do, Stephen Curry knows he and Kevin Durant will reminisce with fondness about their three insanely successful years together on the Golden State Warriors.

They will reflect on the greatness, the fun, all they learned from each other shooting side by side, day after day: two championsh­ips, a pair of National Basketball Associatio­n Finals MVP awards for Durant. “I’ll always remember the three years we had. We’ll probably be back here down the road celebratin­g those like they did the ’74-75 team,” Curry said, nodding in the direction of the Warriors’ recent championsh­ip banners. “It’ll be cool when that happens.”

For now, Curry is embracing new beginnings as the oldest player on a Golden State roster that will look far different come training camp next month — and that also was the theme he shared with girls attending his Warriors camp this week. Durant, recovering from surgery to repair a ruptured right Achilles tendon, has departed to join the Brooklyn Nets.

“We won two championsh­ips and I think we both got better throughout the process as basketball players and as people,” Curry said. “With the demand every single night to be great and just all that that comes with, in terms of the media attention, the scrutiny, the criticism, the praise even, it’s a lot to handle. And I think me and him especially on that level could connect. Him going to Brooklyn, you’re just trying to make sure he’s happy and going to a place where he feels like he needs to be. At the end of the day, you’ve got to be happy about that for him.”

Also gone are veterans Andre Iguodala and Shaun Livingston, guard Quinn Cook and big man DeMarcus Cousins. Meanwhile, the Warriors have added a handful of new faces like D’Angelo Russell, Willie Cauley-Stein and Glenn Robinson III. Draymond Green got a new four-year deal earlier this month worth close to US$100 million. Kevon Looney re-signed, too.

As Klay Thompson works back this season from surgery for a torn ACL in his left knee that he injured in the deciding Game 6 loss of the Finals to the Toronto Raptors, Curry’s backcourt mate will be Russell.

At 31, Curry doesn’t mind that he will be the quote-unquote old guy entering his 11th National Basketball Associatio­n season. A two-time NBA MVP, he has reached five straight NBA Finals.

“Has it sunk in? No. Have people been reminding me? Yes, any time they bring up our team looking forward,” he said with a smile. “It’s cool though, hopefully I’m wise beyond my years but still youthful in what I can do on the floor. It’s just a change in dynamic all the way around. We’re excited about the opportunit­ies, the challenges for the whole roster, because we’ve got a lot of guys that have the opportunit­y to really prove themselves and make a difference in our team. Obviously our core, till Klay gets back, we know how to win and we know how to play. We’re just going to do it a little differentl­y.”

Curry is unconcerne­d at this stage about outside expectatio­ns regarding how good this group might be and speculatio­n that these Warriors may not be a championsh­ip contender.

“I know the reality of the situation in terms of we lost a guy like Kevin Durant, who’s an all-time great basketball player,” Curry said.

“We lost two veteran high-IQ guys in Shaun and Andre that really were like the cogs in the wheel that kept us going and you could rely on them every single game,” he added.

“So, the look is different but nobody really has a sustained run like we did where every year you’re expected to be the greatest. It’s just a matter of now we have to, I wouldn’t even say prove people wrong, but we have to kind of galvanize the new roster and do the exact same thing.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Kevin Durant, left, and Stephen Curry won two National Basketball Associatio­n championsh­ips in three years together with the Golden State Warriors. Durant joined the Brooklyn Nets this off-season as a free agent.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Kevin Durant, left, and Stephen Curry won two National Basketball Associatio­n championsh­ips in three years together with the Golden State Warriors. Durant joined the Brooklyn Nets this off-season as a free agent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada