San Antonio Express-News

Curry closes in on career 3-point mark

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SAN FRANCISCO — Ray Allen fondly remembers when a young Stephen Curry and his little brother, Seth, used to tag along with father Dell and take part in Bucks shootaroun­ds.

“They’d come and we’d go through drills and they’d be right there with us, and they’d hold their own,” said Allen, a teammate of Dell Curry in Milwaukee at the time who considered Dell the best shooter he had been around so far as a third-year guard. That was years before Allen would make his own enduring mark as a shooter.

Now, Stephen Curry is that guy for Golden State — and the two-time MVP is on the brink of breaking Allen’s career 3-point record. His next chance comes Saturday night at Philadelph­ia, where the Warriors (21-4) are embarking on a fivegame road trip.

Seth Curry will be on the other side with the Sixers, determined to hold his brother in check.

The Warriors star needs nine 3-pointers to match Allen’s record of 2,973 regular-season 3s and 10 to top him. Allen accomplish­ed the feat over 18 seasons from 1996-2014.

“His journey was interestin­g because he was such an athlete,” Curry said. “He’d dunk on you, he’d drive, he could shoot the 3 but from what I remember it wasn’t a huge part of his game, because he could do so many other things. As it evolved, he adapted and made it more of a feature.”

Curry called Allen’s work ethic “a common theme” for the two shooting stars, recalling how Allen arrived at the arena three hours before games to shoot when nobody was inside to watch. That’s a stark difference from the pregame show Curry puts on for the masses night after night, thousands holding up their phones to shoot video and capture a glimpse of one of the greatest NBA performers ever.

“He had a very specific routine that he stuck to,” Curry said. “I learned a lot from that.”

At 33, reigning NBA scoring champion Curry continues to let it fly from every spot on the court, recently knocking down half-court shots in consecutiv­e games.

“I work hard to try to put myself in position to have success, and confidence in my game and how I play, and all that goes into it,” Curry said. “With that confidence does come creativity and ability to go out and stretch your imaginatio­n for what’s possible out there and honestly, I just love what I do. So, there’s always joy that comes with it.”

Curry went a quiet 6 of 17 from beyond the arc in Wednesday’s 104-94 win against Portland. Some thought he might somehow break the record against the Trail Blazers.

While he would have preferred to become the 3point leader in front of the raucous home crowd, Curry acknowledg­ed: “It is the weirdest thing to be picky about breaking a record like that. … I feel like it will be special no matter what because I’ll make it special and it will be an amazing experience for me and my teammates.”

Pacers’ Carlisle out with COVID

Indiana Pacers coach Rick Carlisle missed Friday night’s game against Dallas after testing positive for COVID-19. Assistant coach Lloyd Pierce will take over in Carlisle’s absence.

It was unclear how many games Carlisle will miss but the Pacers expect it to be more than one.

League fines Kuzma, Brooks

The NBA fined Washington Wizards forward Kyle Kuzma $15,000 for directing an obscene gesture toward a fan and Memphis Grizzlies guard-forward Dillon Brooks $25,000 for aggressive­ly confrontin­g a game official and failing to leave the court in a timely manner upon his ejection.

 ?? Jeff Chiu / Associated Press ?? The Warriors’ Steph Curry needs only 10 3-pointers to break Ray Allen’s career mark of 2,973. Allen accomplish­ed the feat over 18 seasons from 1996-2014.
Jeff Chiu / Associated Press The Warriors’ Steph Curry needs only 10 3-pointers to break Ray Allen’s career mark of 2,973. Allen accomplish­ed the feat over 18 seasons from 1996-2014.

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