Chicago Sun-Times

Curry will return in Game 4, but will he really be back?

Warriors star’s game hinges on playing freely

- Sam Amick sramick@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports FOLLOW NBA COLUMNIST SAM AMICK @sam_amick for breaking news and insight from the court.

“The only thing I need to be sure about is the stability of (the ankle).” Warriors’ Stephen Curry

The question surroundin­g Stephen Curry changed Saturday, when the Golden State Warriors star announced that his return from a twogame absence would come in Sunday’s Game 4 against the Houston Rockets.

The ailing right ankle, for all intents and purposes, is back to normal.

But now, after the Warriors have given a seemingly lifeless Rockets bunch hope with a Game 3 loss that cut their series edge to 2-1, the real crux of the Curry issue is this: Will he really be back? It’s one thing to be back in body alone. But Curry, who has admitted that the endless ankle issues of yesteryear crept into his psyche this week as he recovered from this injury, will need to be there with a free spirit as well.

It is, and always has been, the key to his playing style.

“The only thing I need to be sure about (Sunday) is the stability of (the ankle) — when I need to call on a certain move or a certain pivot or plant, change of direction, change of speeds, that my ankle will be underneath me,” said Curry, who suffered the injury in Game 1 on April 16. “And I feel that I’m at that point right now. I can deal with a little bit of pain and discomfort — not pain ( but) discomfort — that comes along with it as long as I can feel stable. I don’t foresee that being an issue.”

But he doesn’t truly know because, well, there’s simply no way he could. The mere presence of pain — or discomfort, as Curry tried to qualify it — means there will be an unwelcome mental component to his performanc­e. And for the overmatche­d Rockets, who could apply so much pressure to the defending champions if they win at home again to tie up the series, that shred of uncertaint­y is enough to give them a chance.

From the surreal shooting to the playmaking and every other skill set Curry has mastered, none of it works if he’s stuck in his own head. He liked what he heard from those voices in his head during the battery of tests, from the three-on-three work he completed successful­ly Friday and the five-on-five scrimmage he took part in a day later. But what matters most, of course, is what they’re saying in those opening minutes of play Sunday.

“You’ve kind of got to force yourself (into playing freely) at this point,” Curry said. “I don’t know how it will be tomorrow, when I get out there in a game situation and I don’t know where my mind will be. I know I have confidence with what I’ve been doing the last couple of days to kind of prove I can do what I need to do, whatever move I need to try to do execute.

“Like you say, play free with that creativity. I feel like I can do that in this setting, and hopefully that translates to a clear mind and confidence in myself tomorrow.”

If Curry is really back, then the Rockets will be grounded soon enough.

But if not? Stranger things have happened in the NBA.

 ?? TROY TAORMINA, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “You’ve kind of got to force yourself (into playing freely) at this point,” Warriors guard Stephen Curry says.
TROY TAORMINA, USA TODAY SPORTS “You’ve kind of got to force yourself (into playing freely) at this point,” Warriors guard Stephen Curry says.
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