The Guardian (USA)

‘It was perfect’: Curry edges out Ionescu in NBA v WNBA three-point contest

- Associated Press

Stephen Curry was on a roll – and it was barely enough to beat Sabrina Ionescu. Fittingly, he won by three.The Golden State star and NBA’s all-time three-point king beat Ionescu 29-26 in the Steph v Sabrina competitio­n at AllStar Saturday night, the first of what may become a regular fixture at the league’s showcase weekend.

“For us to deliver a show like that, it was perfect,” Curry said. “As much excitement as you can build in that short amount of time with two great shooters going at it. This is something we’ll remember for a long time.”

Ionescu won the WNBA’s threepoint shootout at its All-Star weekend last year with a record 37 points, smashing Curry’s NBA shootout mark of 31 points. From there, a challenge was thrown down and the plan was concocted for them to meet at All-Star weekend. “Hopefully, this isn’t the last time we do this,” Ionescu said.

Curry and Ionescu talked afterward about adding partners to the mix next year when All-Star weekend is in San Francisco, the area where he plays and she calls home.

Ionescu went first and made 18 of 27 shots – starting seven for seven. Some of them were worth one point, some worth two, giving her a total of 26 points.She shot from the NBA threepoint line, which is roughly 12 to 18 inches farther from the basket than the WNBA line, depending on the area of the floor. Ionescu used a WNBA ball, which is slightly smaller than the NBA ball Curry used.Curry had to rally at the end, making nine of his last 10 to finish off the win.Combined, they shot 39 for 54 (72%) in a contest with unconventi­onal elements like a lime-green glass floor.“This was so authentic for the both of us to be able to be here, finally not in a closed gym, shooting in front of everyone watching and understand­ing what it means for ourselves but also

the bigger picture,” said Ionescu, who has beaten Curry in a H-O-R-S-E competitio­n before without millions of people watching on television. “This is where I wanted to be ... It’s changed the landscape of how people view what we’re doing.” There’s no rivalry between the two, even though Curry heckled Ionescu during her rehearsal shooting session on Friday. He was booing her as she shot. “Trying to apply some pressure, for sure,” Curry said.The reality is he has been inspiring Ionescu for more than half her life. Ionescu’s family had season tickets to Warriors games. He gave her a high-five once when he was in the tunnel connecting the locker room and the court. She had a photo of him as her screensave­r. Years later, when Ionescu was starring at Oregon, she was the one high-fiving Curry’s daughters, who are fans of her. And on Saturday, Ionescu said the experience taught her a lesson. “To just keep believing in myself,” she said. “You know, 10 years ago, I never would have thought this was possible. And so being able to be up here ... it’s a blessing and an opportunit­y to even be in the same conversati­on as Steph and to be able to see how much he’s respected me as a player and a basketball player and a person to want to come out here and do this.” The competitio­n raised money for each of their charitable foundation­s, and when it was over, Curry left with the belt – but they both left more than happy. “I don’t know what’s going to come out of it, but me and Sabrina talked about how cool of an opportunit­y it is to do something that’s never been done before in our game,” Curry said. “And for her to have a presence on this stage is going to do a lot to inspire the next generation of young boys and girls that want to compete and see themselves in either one of us. Wherever it goes from there, we know we can kind of plant our flag as doing something really special.”

 ?? Photograph: Kyle Terada/USA Today Sports ?? Stephen Curry and Sabrina Ionescu after their three-point contest on Saturday night.
Photograph: Kyle Terada/USA Today Sports Stephen Curry and Sabrina Ionescu after their three-point contest on Saturday night.

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