Houston Chronicle

Curry edges DeRozan for latest honor

- By Tim Reynolds

Golden State’s Stephen Curry led the league in clutch scoring this season, and now he’s got another trophy to add to his collection.

Curry was announced Thursday night as the NBA’s Clutch Player of the Year, adding that award to a résumé that includes two MVPs, an All-Star Game MVP, an NBA Finals MVP, a Western Conference finals MVP and nine All-NBA selections.

The award is named for Jerry West, someone Curry knows well and someone who once was a consultant for the Warriors.

“When you see him in person you realize how much basketball matters to him, how competitiv­e he is, how much he wants to win no matter what seat he’s in,” Curry said of West on the TNT telecast where the award was announced. “And that rubbed off on our organizati­on during that time . ... Any time Jerry West says something, you’re going to listen.”

Curry was one of three finalists, along with Chicago’s DeMar DeRozan and Oklahoma City’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Curry led the league in clutch scoring — defined as points in the last 5 minutes of fourth quarters or in overtime, with the score differenti­al in the game being five points or less — with 189, seven more than DeRozan. Gilgeous-Alexander had 112 points in those “clutch" moments, seventh-most in the league.

The voting was close, with Curry getting 45 firstplace votes and finishing with 298 points. DeRozan got 34 first-place votes and had 272 points in the balloting, with players earning five points for a firstplace vote, three for second place and one for third place. Gilgeous-Alexander had 160 points.

Curry — a four-time champion — said he's been watching the playoffs, and thinking ahead to what Golden State needs to do before next season. The Warriors were eliminated from postseason considerat­ion by losing in this year’s play-in tournament.

“We’re not that far off, even having tried to stay at this level and at this peak for so long,” said Curry, who will play for the U.S. at the Paris Olympics this summer. “There’s going to be some tweaks, we know. When you lose, you have to look yourself in the mirror and say ‘What can we do to get better, what holes can we fill.’ Thankfully, we have some time to figure that out.”

The award was first handed out last year, when Sacramento Kings guard and Cy Lakes product De’Aaron Fox won the inaugural trophy, beating out Gilgeous-Alexander and Miami’s Jimmy Butler, who finished second.

 ?? Jon Shapley/Staff photograph­er ?? Warriors guard Stephen Curry was still a star in big moments despite Golden State’s difficult season.
Jon Shapley/Staff photograph­er Warriors guard Stephen Curry was still a star in big moments despite Golden State’s difficult season.

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