Golden State Warriors (2009–present) Early years (2009–2012) in 2009 On June 25, 2009, his father's 45th birthday, Curry was selected as the seventh overall pick in the
2009 NBA draft by the
Golden State Warriors. The day of the draft, Curry's father Dell, who wished for his son to be drafted with the eighth pick by the
New York Knicks, called teams with higher picks and urged them not to draft his son. The
Minnesota Timberwolves agreed not to draft Curry, and subsequently drafted two other point guards with the fifth and sixth picks. Warriors head coach
Don Nelson chose to disregard Dell's wishes and drafted him anyway, one pick before the Knicks would have the opportunity to. Although the Warriors already had another lean, 6-foot-3, offensive-minded guard in
Monta Ellis, Nelson had a penchant for using small lineups in his
Nellie Ball system, and had warmed to the idea of selecting Curry. However, Ellis announced at a media session that he and Curry were too small to play together. His second half of the season vaulted him into the rookie of the year race. He was named Western Conference Rookie of the Month for January, March, and April, finishing as the only Western Conference rookie to win the award three times. and registered 13 points, eight assists, and six rebounds in 28 minutes as a member of the Sophomore squad in the
Rookie Challenge. and underwent surgery on his right ankle. In the
lockout-shortened
2011–12 season, Curry appeared in 26 games (23 starts), averaging 14.7 points, 3.4 rebounds, 5.3 assists, and 1.50 steals in 28.2 minutes per contest. He missed 40 games due to right ankle and foot injuries, In 2012, Golden State included Curry in a trade offer to the
Milwaukee Bucks for
Andrew Bogut, which the Bucks rejected due to Curry's history with bad ankles. Ellis was traded instead. According to then- Warriors general manager
Larry Riley, they offered Curry with the intention of steering the deal to Ellis.
First All-Star and playoff appearances (2012–2014) Prior to the start of the
2012–13 season, Curry signed a four-year, $44 million contract extension with the Warriors. At the time, many basketball writers considered the move risky for Golden State because of Curry's injury history. Over the course of the year, Curry and backcourt teammate
Klay Thompson gained a reputation for their perimeter scoring, earning them the nickname the "
Splash Brothers". In 2012–13, Curry appeared in 78 games (all starts), averaging then- career-high 22.9 points (seventh in NBA), 6.9 assists, 4.0 rebounds, and 1.6 steals in 38.2 minutes. The game is cited as the "breakthrough" performance and one of the most notable games in Curry's career. On April 12, he scored 47 points in a 118–116 loss to the
Los Angeles Lakers. In
2013, Curry appeared in the playoffs for the first time in his career, with the Warriors earning the sixth seed in the Western Conference. In 12 playoff games (all starts), he averaged 23.4 points, 8.1 assists, and 3.8 rebounds. He set a new franchise record with 42 playoff three-pointers, eclipsing the Warriors' career playoff mark of 29 previously held by
Jason Richardson, giving him a total of 314 three-pointers for the season to become the first player in NBA history to make at least 300 three-pointers in a single season. In February, he made his first
All-Star appearance, becoming the Warriors' first All-Star starter since
Latrell Sprewell in 1995.
NBA championship and MVP (2014–2015) and
Nenê. Curry averaged 7.7 assists per game during the 2014–15 regular season, the sixth-highest in the league. Prior to the start of the
2014–15 season, the Warriors hired former NBA player and general manager
Steve Kerr as their new head coach. Kerr implemented significant changes to Golden State's schemes, including playing at a faster pace and giving Curry more freedom to shoot, helping the team evolve into a title contender. On February 4, Curry scored a season-high 51 points in a win over the
Dallas Mavericks. He was the leading vote-getter for the
All-Star Game and won the
Three-Point Contest on All-Star Saturday night. On April 9, he broke his own league record for three-pointers made in a season during a game against the
Portland Trail Blazers. The Warriors finished the year with 67 wins and Curry was voted the
NBA Most Valuable Player after posting averages of 23.8 points, 7.7 assists, and 2 steals per game. In Game 5 of the conference semifinals against the
Memphis Grizzlies, Curry became the first player in league history to register six three-pointers and six steals in a game. In Game 6, he made a playoff career-high 8 three-pointers en route to a series-clinching victory. In Game 3 of the conference finals against the
Houston Rockets, he broke the NBA record for most three-pointers made in a single postseason. The Warriors went on to defeat the Rockets to earn a Finals matchup with the
Cleveland Cavaliers, where Curry struggled to start the series, converting on only 22 percent of his field goals in Game 2. In Game 5, he scored 37 points, and in Game 6, Golden State closed out the series to win their first championship in 40 years. For the Finals, Curry averaged 26 points and 6.3 assists per game. including a season-high 53 points against the
New Orleans Pelicans in the third game. The Warriors made NBA history on November 24 when they became the first team ever to start 16–0 with a win over the
Los Angeles Lakers, before improving to 24–0 on December 11 with a double-overtime win over the
Boston Celtics. Their streak was broken the following day against the
Milwaukee Bucks. On December 28, Curry recorded his sixth career triple-double with 23 points, a career-high 14 rebounds, and 10 assists in a 122–103 win over the
Sacramento Kings. During the game, Curry was guarded by his brother
Seth for the first time in their NBA careers. On January 22, he recorded his second triple-double of the season with 39 points, 12 assists, and 10 rebounds in a 122–110 win over the
Indiana Pacers. He made eight three-pointers in the game to reach 200 for the season, becoming the first player in NBA history to make 200 three-pointers in four straight seasons. On February 3, he made 11 three-pointers (including seven in the first quarter) and scored 51 points (including a career-high 36 points in the first half) to lead the Warriors past the
Washington Wizards 134–121. His 51 points tied
Gilbert Arenas and Michael Jordan for the
Verizon Center record. During the 2016 NBA All-Star Weekend, Curry competed in his third straight All-Star game for the West, and competed in the Three-Point Contest, where he lost in the final round to teammate Klay Thompson. At 48–4, the Warriors entered the All-Star break with the best record through 52 games in NBA history, one win better than the
1995–96 Chicago Bulls and
1966–67 Philadelphia 76ers. On February 25, Curry scored 51 points and made 10 three-pointers to lead the Warriors past the
Orlando Magic 130–114, becoming the first player to record at least three 50-point games since
LeBron James and
Dwyane Wade in 2008–09. He also became the first player in NBA history to score at least 50 points in a game with only one free throw attempted. Curry surpassed
Kyle Korver's record of 127 consecutive games with a made three-pointer. In the following game, two days later, Curry scored 46 points and made a 38-foot game-winning jump shot with 0.6 seconds remaining, to lead the Warriors past the
Oklahoma City Thunder in overtime 121–118. He tied the then- single-game three-point scoring record (12) held by
Kobe Bryant and
Donyell Marshall and broke his own NBA record for made three-pointers in a season, setting a new mark at 288. He also became the first player in NBA history with at least 10 made three-pointers in consecutive games. Dubbed the "Double Bang" by play-by-play broadcaster
Mike Breen, the shot is regarded among the most memorable basketball calls of all time. In February 2016, Curry averaged over 35 points per game, while shooting at least 50 percent from both the field and three-point range, becoming the first player in NBA history to achieve this feat in a calendar month. On March 7, in a win over the Magic, Curry scored 41 points and became the first player in NBA history to make 300 regular-season three-pointers. On April 1, Curry missed a three-pointer to tie the game against the Celtics with 5.3 seconds left, as the Warriors suffered their first home defeat since January 27, 2015, snapping an NBA-record 54-game winning streak in the regular season at
Oracle Arena. On April 7, Curry scored 27 points to help the Warriors become the second team in NBA history to win 70 games in a season with a 112–101 win over the
San Antonio Spurs. Three days later in a rematch against the Spurs, Curry scored 37 points in a 92–86 win, not only tying the 1996 Bulls, but snapping San Antonio's undefeated home streak and also ending a long losing streak in AT&T Center. In the Warriors' regular-season finale on April 13 against the
Memphis Grizzlies, Curry scored 46 points with 10 made three-pointers, finishing with a record 402 three-pointers on the season. With a 125–104 win over the Grizzlies, the Warriors became the first 73-win team in NBA history, surpassing the
1995–96 Chicago Bulls' 72–10 record to finish the 2015–16 season with just nine losses. With the conclusion of the regular season, Curry became the seventh player in NBA history to join the
50–40–90 club and the first to achieve this feat while averaging over 30 points per game. Curry led the league in
scoring (30.1 points per game),
steals (2.14), and
free throw percentage (.908), becoming the first player to lead all three statistics in a season. For his record-breaking season, Curry was named the league's first ever unanimous
MVP, becoming the 11th player in history to win the award in consecutive seasons and the first guard to do so since
Steve Nash in 2004–05 and 2005–06. His scoring average increase of 6.3 is the largest ever by a reigning MVP. A right
MCL injury kept him out of the first three games of the second round. In Game 4 of the second-round series against the
Portland Trail Blazers, Curry came off the bench to score 40 points in a 132–125 overtime win; 17 of those points came in the extra period, a then NBA record for points scored by an individual in overtime. Curry led the Warriors to a 4–1 victory over the Trail Blazers, as they moved on to the Western Conference finals to face the Oklahoma City Thunder. After going down 3–1, he helped the Warriors rally to win the series 4–3 and advance to their second straight
NBA Finals. In the Finals, Curry's play relative to his regular season performance remained inconsistent, as it had been since he returned from injury against Portland; still, he broke
Danny Green's record of 27 three-pointers made in a Finals. Despite being up 3–1 in the series, the Warriors were defeated by the
Cleveland Cavaliers in seven games and became the first team in NBA Finals history to lose a series after leading 3–1. In the game seven loss, Curry scored 17 points on 6-of-19 shooting.
Back-to-back championships (2016–2018) in February 2017 On October 28, 2016, Curry hit four three-pointers against the
New Orleans Pelicans to reach 1,600 for his career, becoming the 19th player to do so, as well as the fastest to reach the mark. On November 4, Curry's NBA-record streak of 157 straight games with at least one made three-pointer was snapped during the Warriors' 117–97 loss to the
Los Angeles Lakers after he went 0-of-10 from three-point range. He had hit a three-pointer in every regular-season game since November 11, 2014. Three days later, he hit 13 three-pointers against New Orleans, becoming the first player in NBA history to make as many three-pointers in a regular-season game. Curry shot 16-of-26 overall against the Pelicans for his first 40-point game of the season, finishing with 46 in a 116–106 win. On December 11, Curry hit 2 three-pointers against the
Minnesota Timberwolves to pass
Steve Nash for 17th on the NBA's career three-pointers list. With 14 points against the
Dallas Mavericks on December 30, Curry (11,903) passed
Purvis Short (11,894) for seventh place on the Warriors' all-time scoring list. In a loss to the
Memphis Grizzlies on January 6, 2017, Curry had his second 40-point game of the season and reached the 12,000-point threshold, becoming the seventh player in Warriors franchise history to score 12,000 career points. On January 19, Curry was named a starter on the Western Conference All-Star team for the
2017 NBA All-Star Game. On February 2, he hit his 200th three-pointer of the season in the Warriors' 133–120 win over the
Los Angeles Clippers, making him the first player in NBA history to have 200 or more three-pointers in five consecutive seasons. On March 5, he scored 31 points and moved into the top 10 on the NBA's career three-point list in a 112–105 win over the
New York Knicks. Curry hit 5 three-pointers, passing
Chauncey Billups for 10th place. Curry helped the Warriors sweep through the first two rounds of the playoffs. In Game 1 of the Western Conference finals against the
San Antonio Spurs, Curry scored 40 points and hit a tying three-pointer with 1:48 remaining to help the Warriors rally from a 25-point deficit to win 113–111; the Warriors overcame their largest halftime deficit ever in the postseason at 20 points. This was the second time in the season that the Warriors came back from a 20-point deficit against the Spurs. In a 120–108 Game 3 win, Curry scored 21 points and became the franchise leader in postseason points, passing
Rick Barry. They went up 3–0 in the series, becoming the third team in NBA history to win their first 11 playoff games. His 36 points in Game 4 led to a 129–115 victory that saw the Warriors advance to the NBA Finals for a third straight year while becoming the first team in league history to start the playoffs 12–0. In Game 2 of the
2017 NBA Finals against the
Cleveland Cavaliers, Curry recorded his first career postseason triple-double with 32 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds to help the Warriors go up 2–0 in the series with a 132–113 win. Curry helped the Warriors clinch the series and the championship in Game 5 with 34 points, 10 assists, and six rebounds, as Golden State claimed its second title in three years. On July 1, 2017, Curry agreed to a five-year, $201 million extension with the Warriors, becoming the first NBA player to sign a
supermax contract worth over $200 million. He officially signed the contract on July 25. On December 1, he scored 23 points and passed
Jason Kidd for eighth place on the career three-pointers made list in a 133–112 win over the
Orlando Magic. On December 4, in a 125–115 win over the
New Orleans Pelicans, Curry hit 5 three-pointers to become the fastest player in NBA history to eclipse 2,000 career three-pointers, achieving the mark in just 597 games, 227 less than the previous fastest player to do so,
Ray Allen. In that same game, Curry injured his right ankle and subsequently missed 11 games, returning to action on December 30 and scoring 38 points with a season-high 10 three-pointers in a 141–128 win over the
Memphis Grizzlies. Curry shot 13 of 17 and 10 of 13 from deep in 26 minutes for his ninth 30-point game of the season. It also marked Curry's ninth career game with 10 or more 3s, the most by any player in NBA history. On January 6, in a 121–105 win over the
Los Angeles Clippers, Curry scored 45 points in three quarters. On January 25, he scored 25 points in a 126–113 win over the
Minnesota Timberwolves. Curry became the fifth player in Warriors franchise history to score 14,000 points, ending the game with 14,023 and joining
Wilt Chamberlain (17,783),
Rick Barry (16,447),
Paul Arizin (16,266), and
Chris Mullin (16,235) on the franchise list. On January 27, he scored 49 points—with 13 of those over the final 1:42—and hit 8 three-pointers, lifting the Warriors past the
Boston Celtics 109–105. On February 22, he had a 44-point effort with 8 three-pointers in a 134–127 win over the
Los Angeles Clippers. It was his third 40-point game of the season. On March 2, in a 114–109 win over the
Atlanta Hawks, Curry made his 200th three-point field goal of the season, becoming the first player in NBA history with at least 200 three-pointers in six seasons, having reached the mark in every season since 2012–13. Four days later, in a 114–101 win over the Nets, Curry became the seventh player in Warriors franchise history to make 5,000 career field goals, joining Chamberlain, Barry, Mullin, Arizin,
Jeff Mullins, and
Nate Thurmond. On March 23, against the Hawks, Curry suffered a Grade 2
medial collateral ligament (MCL) sprain to his left knee. He subsequently missed nearly six weeks, returning to action in Game 2 of the Warriors' second-round playoff series against the Pelicans. He came off the bench to score 28 points in a 121–116 win. In Game 3 of the Western Conference finals, Curry scored 35 points with 5 three-pointers in a 126–85 win over the
Houston Rockets. The 41-point victory was the largest in franchise history during the postseason. In Game 6, Curry scored 29 points with 5 three-pointers, as the Warriors rallied from an early 17-point deficit to stave off elimination with a 115–86 victory over the Rockets. In Game 7, Curry recorded 27 points, 10 assists, and nine rebounds, as the Warriors earned a fourth straight trip to the NBA Finals by beating the Rockets 101–92. In Game 2 of the
NBA Finals, Curry hit a Finals-record 9 three-pointers and scored 33 points in a 122–103 win over the Cavaliers. In Game 4, Curry led all scorers with 37 points in a 108–85 win that helped the Warriors clinch their second straight championship with a series sweep over the Cavaliers. Many felt that he should have won
Finals MVP. In response, Curry stated: "At the end of the day, I'm not going to let a [Finals] MVP trophy define my career. Three titles ... Wherever that puts us in the conversation in the history of the NBA ... I'm a three-time champ." Rohan Nadkarni of
Sports Illustrated argued that "the Golden State dynasty started with Stephen Curry. He, for numerous reasons stretching from his incredible talent to his previous ankle injuries, put the Warriors in place to win their third championship in four seasons."
Fifth consecutive NBA Finals (2018–2019) On October 21, 2018, Curry had 30 points and 6 three-pointers in a 100–98 loss to the
Denver Nuggets, thus moving past
Paul Pierce for sixth place on the NBA's career three-point list. Three days later, he scored 51 points with 11 three-pointers in only three quarters in a 144–122 win over the
Washington Wizards. He scored 31 in the first half and finished with his sixth career 50-point game and made 10 or more 3s for the 10th time. Curry's third three-pointer of the night moved him past
Jamal Crawford (2,153) for fifth place on the NBA's career three-point list. On October 28, he made seven three-pointers and finished with 35 points in a 120–114 win over the
Brooklyn Nets. Over the first seven games of the season, he made at least 5 three-pointers in all seven games, breaking
George McCloud's record of six games in a row during the 1995–96 season. and the Warriors were unable to recover in a 134–111 loss. Without Curry, the Warriors dropped to 12–7 on November 21 after enduring their first four-game losing streak since March 2013. The Warriors ended November with a 15–8 record, with Curry's strained left groin sidelining him for 11 straight games. Despite Curry's 27 points in his return to the line-up on December 1, the Warriors were defeated 111–102 by the
Detroit Pistons. On December 17, he scored 20 points in a 110–93 win over the
Memphis Grizzlies, becoming just the fifth player in Warriors franchise history to score 15,000 points during the regular season, joining
Wilt Chamberlain (17,783),
Rick Barry (16,447),
Paul Arizin (16,266), and
Chris Mullin (16,235). On December 23, he scored 42 points and made a layup with 0.5 seconds left to lift the Warriors to a 129–127 win over the
Los Angeles Clippers. On January 5, he had 10 three-pointers and scored 20 of his 42 points in the fourth quarter of the Warriors' 127–123 win over the
Sacramento Kings. On January 11, in a 146–109 win over the
Chicago Bulls, Curry made 5 three-pointers to surpass
Jason Terry (2,282) and move into third place all-time in NBA history behind
Ray Allen (2,973) and
Reggie Miller (2,560). Two days later, he scored 48 points and hit a season high-tying 11 three-pointers in a 119–114 win over the
Dallas Mavericks. On January 16, he scored 41 points with 9 three-pointers to become the first player in NBA history to make eight or more 3s in three straight games, as the Warriors defeated the
New Orleans Pelicans 147–140. On January 31, he scored 41 points with 10 three-pointers in a 113–104 loss to the
Philadelphia 76ers. On February 21, he scored 36 points with 10 three-pointers in a 125–123 win over the Kings. On March 16 against the
Oklahoma City Thunder, Curry reached 16,000 career points. On March 29, he made 11 three-pointers and scored 37 points in a 131–130 overtime loss to the
Minnesota Timberwolves. On April 2, in a 116–102 win over the Nuggets, Curry made 5 or more three-pointers in a career-best nine straight games and moved past Mullin for fourth place on the Warriors all-time points list. On April 5, he scored 40 points in a 120–114 win over the
Cleveland Cavaliers, thus moving past Arizin for third place on the Warriors all-time points list. versus the Toronto Raptors The Warriors entered the playoffs as the first seed in the Western Conference with a 57–25 record. In Game 1 of the Warriors' first-round playoff series against the Clippers, Curry scored 38 points and made 8 three-pointers to give him the most in postseason history, passing Ray Allen (385). He also had a postseason career-high 15 rebounds and seven assists in a 121–104 win. In Game 6 of the second round, Curry bounced back from the first scoreless first half of his playoff career to score 33 points in the last two quarters to help the Warriors eliminate the
Houston Rockets with a 118–113 win and advance to the Western Conference finals. In Game 1 of the conference finals, Curry matched his postseason career high with 9 three-pointers to finish with 36 points in a 116–94 win over the
Portland Trail Blazers. Curry faced his brother Seth in that Finals series, making them the first set of brothers to face each other in an NBA playoff series. He averaged a series career-high 36.5 points to help the Warriors sweep the Trail Blazers. It was the highest average by a player in a four-game sweep in NBA history. Curry became the sixth player in NBA history to score 35 or more in the first four games of a series. In Game 4, he had 37 points, 12 rebounds, and 11 assists in a 119–117 overtime win, as he and
Draymond Green became the first teammates in league history to have a triple-double in the same playoff game. In Game 3 of the
2019 Finals, Curry scored a playoff career-high 47 points to go with eight rebounds and seven assists in a 123–109 loss to the
Toronto Raptors. In Game 5, he helped the Warriors stave off elimination with 31 points in a 106–105 win, cutting the Raptors' series lead to 3–2. In Game 6, Curry scored 21 points, but shot just 6 for 17 and went 3 of 11 on three-pointers, including missing a contested three-pointer in the waning moments, as the Warriors lost the game and the series with a 114–110 defeat.
Injury and comeback (2019–2021) Curry was expected to take on a greater offensive load in the
2019–20 season with Thompson out injured and
Kevin Durant having left the Warriors as a free agent. On October 30, 2019, against the
Phoenix Suns in the fourth game of the season, Curry drove to the basket and collided with the Suns'
Aron Baynes, who was trying to take a
charge. Baynes fell on Curry's left hand, which required surgery to repair his broken
second metacarpal. He was expected to be out at least three months. On March 5, 2020, Curry returned against the
Toronto Raptors and recorded 23 points, six rebounds and seven assists in a 121–113 Warriors' loss. On December 27, 2020, Curry put up 36 points in a 129–128 win over the
Chicago Bulls, becoming the fastest player in NBA history to reach 2,500 career three-pointers. On January 3, 2021, Curry scored a career-high 62 points on 18-of-31 shooting in a 137–122 win against the
Portland Trail Blazers. On January 4, he was named the
Player of the Week for the Western Conference. On January 23, in a game against the
Utah Jazz, Curry hit 5 three-pointers, moving his career total up to 2,562, passing Miller to move up to second in the NBA's career three-pointers list, trailing only Allen. At the
2021 All-Star Game, he won his second Three-Point Contest after making his last shot in the final round to edge
Mike Conley Jr. 28–27. On March 15, against the
Los Angeles Lakers, Curry passed
Guy Rodgers (4,855) as the franchise's leader in career assists. On April 12, Curry scored 53 points in a 116–107 win against the
Denver Nuggets, and he surpassed
Wilt Chamberlain (17,783) to become the franchise's all-time scoring leader. It was part of an 11-game stretch in April in which Curry scored at least 30 points in each game, surpassing
Kobe Bryant's previous record (10) for a player age 33 or older. He also made 78 three-pointers during that span, the most in NBA history over 11 regular season games. Curry's play sparked media discussions about his candidacy for the
league MVP award, and went on to become a finalist for the award for the third time in his career. He was named the Western Conference Player of the Month for April after averaging 37.3 points on .518 shooting and scoring 30 or more points in 13 of his 15 games played. He became the first NBA player to average at least 35 points per game and shoot 50–45–90 in a calendar month and set an NBA record for made three-pointers in a month with 96, breaking
James Harden's mark of 82 set in November 2019. He scored 46 points in the regular-season finale against the
Memphis Grizzlies, finishing the season with a scoring average of 32.0 and holding off
Bradley Beal to secure his second
scoring title. He joined
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
Michael Jordan, and Wilt Chamberlain as the fourth player in NBA history to win multiple
championships, league MVP awards, and scoring titles in a career.
All-time 3-point scoring record, fourth championship and Finals MVP (2021–2022) . On August 6, 2021, Curry signed a four-year, $215 million extension which would keep him under contract through the 2025–26 season and made him the first player to earn $50 million in a single season as well the first to sign multiple contracts of over $200 million. On October 19, in the Warriors' season-opener, Curry recorded his eighth career triple-double with 21 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists in a 121–114 win against the
Los Angeles Lakers. On November 8, Curry scored 50 points, with 10 assists on nine three-pointers made, in a 127–113 win over the
Atlanta Hawks. Curry recorded 50 points and 10 assists in the same game for the first time in his career and surpassed Chamberlain as the oldest player in history to achieve this feat. On November 12 against the
Chicago Bulls, Curry became the NBA's career leader for three-pointers in both regular season and playoffs with 3,366, passing
Ray Allen (3,358). On December 14 at
Madison Square Garden against the
New York Knicks, Curry made his 2,974th career three-pointer to pass
Ray Allen and become the
NBA's all-time three-point scoring leader. On January 21, 2022, Curry hit his first career
buzzer-beating game-winner in a 105–103 win over the
Houston Rockets, on a night where he put up 22 points and 12 assists. On January 31, Curry scored 40 points, 21 of which in the fourth quarter, behind seven three-pointers and dished out nine assists to lead Golden State to a 122–108 victory over the
Houston Rockets. His 21 fourth-quarter points were the highest of his career until February 2024. In the
2022 NBA All-Star Game held on February 20, Curry's Team LeBron defeated Team Durant 163–160. Curry scored 50 points (just 2 points shy of the All-Star Game record set by
Anthony Davis in
2017); he also set the record for most three-pointers made in an All-Star quarter (6), half (8), and game (16), and was named the
All-Star Game MVP. On February 24, Curry had a season-high 14 assists with 18 points in a 132–95 blowout win over the
Portland Trail Blazers. On March 10, Curry scored 34 points in a 113–102 win over the
Denver Nuggets. He became the 49th player in NBA history to rack up 20,000 points. On March 14, his 34th birthday, Curry scored 47 points in a 126–112 win over the
Washington Wizards. On March 16, in a 110–88 loss to the
Boston Celtics, Curry suffered a sprained ligament in his left foot after having it rolled over by a diving
Marcus Smart and was ruled out indefinitely. On April 1, he was ruled out for the remainder of the regular season. On May 9, in Game 4 of the
Western Conference semifinals against the
Memphis Grizzlies, Curry became the first player in NBA history to make 500 career playoff three-pointers. During the Western Conference finals against the
Dallas Mavericks, he averaged 23.8 points, 6.6 rebounds and 7.4 assists per game. After the Warriors won the series in five games, Curry was named the unanimous and inaugural winner of the
Western Conference finals MVP award. On June 10, in Game 4 of the
NBA Finals, Curry logged 43 points, 10 rebounds, and four assists in a 107–97 victory over the
Boston Celtics to even the series at 2–2. He became the first player in Finals history to make 5+ three-pointers in four consecutive games. Curry (at age 34 years, 88 days) also became the second-oldest player in NBA Finals history to record a 40-point, 10-rebound game behind only
LeBron James in 2020 (at age 35 years, 284 days). In Game 5 of the Finals, Curry passed Boston Celtics legend
John Havlicek for 10th on the all-time Finals assists list. In Game 6 of the Finals, Curry scored 34 points along with seven rebounds, seven assists, and led the Warriors to a 103–90 victory over the Celtics. He was named the
Finals MVP unanimously after averaging 31.2 points, 6.0 rebounds, 5.0 assists, and 2.0 steals per game. He became the first player in Finals history to average at least 30 points, 5 rebounds, 5 assists, and 5 made three-pointers per game in a series.
Back-to-back chase (2022–2023) On November 2, 2022, Curry logged his 10th career triple-double with 23 points, 13 rebounds and 13 assists in a 116–109 loss against the
Miami Heat. On November 7, Curry recorded 47 points, eight rebounds, eight assists, and zero turnovers as the Golden State Warriors beat the
Sacramento Kings 116–113 to snap a five-game losing streak. On November 11, Curry scored 40 points on 15–23 shooting from the field in a 106–101 win over the
Cleveland Cavaliers. He became the first player in NBA history to record at least 40 points, 5 made three-pointers, and shoot over .650 from the field in consecutive games. On November 20, Curry posted a season-high 15 assists along with 33 points on 7-of-14 shooting from three-point range in a 127–120 win over the
Houston Rockets. Curry,
Klay Thompson, and
Andrew Wiggins combined for 23 made three-pointers, the most three-pointers made in a game by a trio in NBA history. On December 10, in a rematch of the
2022 NBA Finals, Curry recorded 32 points, six rebounds, and seven assists in a 123–107 win over the
Boston Celtics. On January 25, 2023, in a 122–120 victory against the
Memphis Grizzlies, Curry was ejected with 1:14 remaining in the fourth quarter for throwing a mouthpiece on the ground, marking the third time that Curry was ejected during his career. Curry left the game with a game-high 34 points. The next day, Curry was named a
Western Conference starter for the
2023 NBA All-Star Game, marking his ninth overall selection. On January 30, Curry put up 38 points on 12-of-20 shooting from the field, alongside eight rebounds and 12 assists in a 128–120 win over the
Oklahoma City Thunder. He also surpassed
Wilt Chamberlain (7,216) for the most field goals made in Warriors franchise history with 7,222. On March 15, Curry scored 50 points on 8-of-14 shooting from three-point range in a 134–126 loss to the
Los Angeles Clippers. He became the first player in NBA history to score at least 10,000 career points off of three-pointers. Curry also surpassed
Michael Jordan for the most 50-point games at age 30 or older, tying Chamberlain's then-record of 7 games. In Game 7 of the Warriors'
first round playoff series against the
Sacramento Kings, Curry scored a playoff career-high 50 points in a 120–100 win. He became the first player to score 50 points in a Game 7 and tied
Karl Malone for the most points in a playoff game at age 35 or older. He also became the first player in playoff history to score at least 20 points from behind the arc and in the paint in the same game. Following the series' completion, Curry joined Jordan as the only players in playoff history to record at least 200 points in a series at age 35 or older. In Game 4 of the
Western Conference semifinals against the Lakers, Curry logged his third postseason career triple-double with 31 points, 10 rebounds, 14 assists, and three steals in a 104–101 loss. The Warriors were eliminated in six games, despite Curry's 32-point outing in a 122–101 closeout loss in Game 6.
Clutch Player of the Year (2023–2024) Following the retirement of
Udonis Haslem of the Miami Heat, Curry became the longest tenured NBA player with their current team. On November 1, 2023, Curry became the first player in NBA history to make a three-pointer in 250 consecutive regular season games. On November 3, he scored a game-winning layup in a 141–139 win against the
Oklahoma City Thunder. On December 16, Curry scored 37 points on 14-of-22 shooting, including 6-of-8 from beyond the arc in a 124–120 victory over the
Brooklyn Nets, becoming the first player in NBA history to eclipse 3,500 career three-pointers. On January 27, 2024, Curry recorded 46 points and nine made three-pointers, in a 145–144 double-overtime loss to the
Los Angeles Lakers. On February 1, Curry was named to his tenth
All-Star Game and his first as a reserve. On February 3, Curry scored a season-high 60 points on 22-of-38 shooting from the field with 10 three-pointers made in a 141–134 overtime loss to the
Atlanta Hawks, setting several NBA records; he joined
Kobe Bryant as the only players in history to record a 60-point game at age 35 or older; he became the second player after
Rick Barry to score at least 60 points with at most six free throws attempted; he joined
Damian Lillard and
Karl-Anthony Towns as the only players to record at least 60 points and 10 made three-pointers in a regular season game; he became the first player in history to average over 40 points per game on 50–40–100 splits in a four-game span. He also surpassed
Wilt Chamberlain for the most 50-point games by a player age 30 or older (8). On February 8, Curry scored 42 points on 15-of-22 shooting from the field, including a season-high 11-of-16 shooting from three, in a 131–109 win over the
Indiana Pacers. On February 10, Curry recorded 30 points, nine rebounds, six assists, and 9-of-16 shooting from beyond the arc, including a game-winning three-pointer, in a 113–112 win over the
Phoenix Suns. On April 25, Curry was named the
NBA Clutch Player of the Year after leading the league in clutch points (189), made field goals (59), and made three-pointers (32) during the regular season.
Second All-Star Game MVP and 4K 3-point club (2024–2025) On August 30, 2024, Curry signed a one-year, $62.6 million contract extension with the Warriors throughout the 2026–27 season, becoming the first NBA player to earn $60 million in a single season. He also joined
LeBron James and
Kevin Durant as the only players in history to amass $500 million in career earnings. On November 11, Curry dropped 36 points and seven assists in a 127–116 road victory over the
Oklahoma City Thunder. Two days later, he recorded 37 points, nine assists, six rebounds, and the Warriors' final 12 points to secure a 120–117 win over the
Dallas Mavericks. The game marked
Klay Thompson's first return to the Bay Area after leaving for Dallas in a sign-and-trade during the off-season. On December 25, 2024, Curry dropped 38 points and six assists in a 115–113 loss to the
Los Angeles Lakers. He shot 8-of-15 from three-point range, tying a
Christmas day game record for the most in history. On January 2, 2025, Curry dropped 30 points, 10 assists, and a career-first 8-of-8 shooting from beyond the arc in a 139–105 win over the
Philadelphia 76ers, becoming the first player in NBA history to achieve this stat line. He also surpassed
Michael Jordan for the most 30-point games by a guard at age 35 or older. On January 25, Curry was named a
Western Conference starter for the
2025 NBA All-Star Game, marking his eleventh overall selection and his tenth selection as a starter. On February 8, Curry recorded 34 points, six assists, and eight made three-pointers in a 132–111 road win over the
Chicago Bulls. He scored 24 points in the third quarter, marking his 41st career 20-point quarter—the most by any player since the NBA began tracking play-by-play data in 1997–98. Two days later, in his 1,000th regular season game, Curry tied his season-high of 38 points and grabbed six rebounds in a 125–111 road win over the
Milwaukee Bucks. He joined LeBron James, Michael Jordan, and
Karl Malone as the only players in history to record four consecutive 30-point games at age 36 or older. On February 16, Curry won his second
All-Star MVP award after scoring 20 points and six three-pointers combined in the two games of the exhibition's revamped mini-tournament format. He joined LeBron James,
Magic Johnson, and Michael Jordan as the only players in history to win at least two
league MVP awards, two All-Star MVP awards, and a
Finals MVP award in a career. On February 27, Curry put up 56 points on 16-of-25 shooting, including 12 made three-pointers, in a 121–115 road win over the
Orlando Magic. He outscored the Magic 22–21 in the third quarter and notched his third 50-point game after turning 35 years old, the most in NBA history. He also tied Thompson's then-record for the most career games (3) with at least 12 made three-pointers. On March 6, Curry recorded 40 points and seven made three-pointers, including a fadeaway buzzer-beater from the half court logo, in a 121–119 road win over the
Brooklyn Nets. Two days later, he scored 32 points in a 115–110 win over the
Detroit Pistons and eclipsed 25,000 career points, becoming the 26th player in NBA history to do so. On March 13, Curry eclipsed 4,000 career three-pointers in a 130–104 win over the
Sacramento Kings, becoming the first player in NBA history to start the 4K club. On April 1, Curry put up 52 points, 10 rebounds, eight assists, five steals, and 12 made three-pointers in a 134–125 road win over the
Memphis Grizzlies. He became the first player in NBA history to register at least 50 points, 10 made three-pointers, and five steals in a single game and passed
Jerry West on the all-time scoring list. On April 3, Curry recorded 37 points and six assists in a 123–116 road win over the Los Angeles Lakers. The next day, he scored 36 points, five assists, and seven made three-pointers in a 118–104 win over the
Denver Nuggets, securing the Warriors' first victory over the Nuggets since March 2022. On April 13, Curry recorded 36 points, six assists, and seven made three-pointers in a 124–119 overtime loss to the
Los Angeles Clippers in the regular-season finale. He finished the season as the
league leader in free throw percentage for the fifth time in his career, tying
Reggie Miller for the third-most in NBA history. On April 29, Curry was named the
Twyman–Stokes Teammate of the Year for his commitment to team excellence and leadership as a mentor to other NBA players. In Game 3 of the Warriors'
first round playoff series against the
Houston Rockets, Curry recorded 36 points, nine assists, and seven rebounds in a 104–93 win and passed
Tony Parker for 10th on the NBA's all-time playoff scoring list. In Game 7 of the first round, Curry scored 22 points, along with a team-leading 10 rebounds, seven assists, two steals, and two blocks, to help the Warriors eliminate the Rockets with a 103–89 road win and advance to the Western Conference semifinals. In Game 1 of the conference semifinals against the
Minnesota Timberwolves, Curry suffered a strained hamstring in the second quarter and was sidelined for the rest of the game, which the Warriors went on to win—their only victory in the series. In his absence, the Warriors were eliminated in five games.
(2025–2026) On November 12, 2025, Curry scored 46 points in a 125–120 win over the
San Antonio Spurs, leading the Warriors to a 16-point comeback victory. Two nights later, on November 14, Curry recorded a season-high 49 points, making nine three-pointers and converting the game-winning free throws with 6.4 seconds remaining in a 109–108 win, also against the Spurs. The two performances combined for 95 points, the highest two-game scoring total of his career. With the achievement, Curry joined
Michael Jordan as the only players age 37 or older in NBA history to record consecutive 45-point games, and he tied Jordan for the most 40-point games after turning 30 (44). On December 12, Curry recorded 39 points, five rebounds, and five assists in a 127–120 loss to the
Minnesota Timberwolves. He surpassed Michael Jordan for the most 35-point games in NBA history after his 30th birthday (94). On December 14, Curry scored 48 points and a season-high 12 three-pointers in a 136–131 loss to the
Portland Trail Blazers. It marked his 45th career game with 40 or more points after turning 30, surpassing Michael Jordan (44) for the most such games in NBA history. On December 25, Curry scored 23 points and hit a key late three-pointer to lead the Warriors to a 126–116 win over the
Dallas Mavericks, becoming the 22nd player in NBA history to reach 26,000 career points. ==National team career==