Rocksolid Light

Welcome to Rocksolid Light

mail  files  register  newsreader  groups  login

Message-ID:  

A gambler's biggest thrill is winning a bet. His next biggest thrill is losing a bet.


sport / alt.sports.basketball.nba.gs-warriors / NBCSBA (Poole): Why Steph was obvious choice for NBA Clutch Player of the Year award

SubjectAuthor
o NBCSBA (Poole): Why Steph was obvious choice for NBA Clutch Player of the Year aRobin Miller

1
NBCSBA (Poole): Why Steph was obvious choice for NBA Clutch Player of the Year award

<l92b08Fe8m8U1@mid.individual.net>

  copy mid

https://news.novabbs.org/sport/article-flat.php?id=7783&group=alt.sports.basketball.nba.gs-warriors#7783

  copy link   Newsgroups: alt.sports.basketball.nba.gs-warriors
Path: i2pn2.org!i2pn.org!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail
From: robin.miller@invalid.invalid (Robin Miller)
Newsgroups: alt.sports.basketball.nba.gs-warriors
Subject: NBCSBA (Poole): Why Steph was obvious choice for NBA Clutch Player of
the Year award
Date: Fri, 26 Apr 2024 14:44:17 -0400
Lines: 88
Message-ID: <l92b08Fe8m8U1@mid.individual.net>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
X-Trace: individual.net pOx3OhI8ZsZzVsMl6AUP8Ql+Uevejj/dzDPQsEuJGuNo/yUmVy
Cancel-Lock: sha1:lh4aTje+ztojZ1EVcPfdzKncMqM= sha256:e24tjjw1RTERInB4QWbMgES3ZzNnpsnxGd+2/DWbzEA=
X-Mozilla-News-Host: news://news.individual.net:119
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:91.0) Gecko/20100101
Firefox/91.0 SeaMonkey/2.53.18.2
 by: Robin Miller - Fri, 26 Apr 2024 18:44 UTC

https://www.nbcsportsbayarea.com/nba/golden-state-warriors/steph-curry-nba-clutch-player-of-the-year/1728680/

Why Steph was obvious choice for NBA Clutch Player of the Year award

By Monte Poole

• Published April 25, 2024

Still echoing in my mind is the breathless praise uttered a few years
ago by a Hall of Famer for whom an NBA award has since been named:

"I’ve seen a lot of great players in the NBA, but I’ve never, ever seen
one who could shoot like that. He’s incredible. The best part about it
is that he might not look like much but he’s not afraid of anything.
He’s confident, and he should be."

Those were the words I recall from a casual conversation with Jerry
West, the legend, the logo, and, in 2016, an executive board member with
the Warriors moonlighting as an adviser to the front office.

West was talking about Stephen Curry, who was in the middle of a season
after which he claimed the first unanimous NBA Most Valuable Player award.

In the eight years since, Curry has collected many more awards, the
latest coming Thursday when he was named the league’s Clutch Player of
the Year.

Curry beat out fellow finalists DeMar DeRozan of the Chicago Bulls and
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of the Oklahoma City Thunder.

The award, instituted last season, is named after West, who now serves
the Los Angeles Clippers in a role much like that which he held with the
Warriors. He was known as “Mr. Clutch” during a 14-year NBA career with
the Los Angeles Lakers. He retired in 1974.

That description applied to Curry this season with the Warriors.

The Warriors led the NBA with 48 “clutch” games – within five points
inside the final five minutes of the fourth quarter or overtime – and
Curry was their unquestioned ace. They were 23-20 in such games with him
in the lineup, 1-4 when he was not.

More pointedly, Curry led the league in clutch points with 189, field
goals with 59 and 3-pointers with 32. He shot 49.6 percent from the
field in the clutch, including 45.7 percent beyond the arc, and wrapped
the season having shot 95.1 percent from the line in 43 games.

For the sake of comparison, Gilgeous-Alexander’s shooting-percentage
splits were 58.1/35.7/89.7 in 34 games and DeRozan’s splits were
48.7/46.7/87.8.

Curry’s 1.32 points per clutch minute dwarfed the production from the
rest of the field. DeRozan finished with .949 points per clutch minute
and Gilgeous-Alexander was at 1.04.

The impressive resumé submitted by Curry, along with the award, might
not be enough to silence, once and for all, those who fight the facts
that convey he is a reliable clutch performer.

Might this do the trick: Curry’s 10 game-winning shots – within five
seconds of the fourth-quarter or overtime buzzer – over the last 10
years are tops in the NBA.

Or maybe the video from Curry’s game-winner against the Phoenix Suns on
Feb. 10 at Chase Center. Barely had the ball reached his hand before he
spun and launched a 3-ball jumper over the outstretched arm of Devin
Booker. ABC/ESPN announcer Mike Breen gave it a robust “BANG!”

Or check out the box score from Golden State’s 132-126 overtime win over
the Boston Celtics on Dec. 19. Curry scored 20 points – including 4-of-5
from deep – in the final 10 minutes of the fourth quarter and OT to
complete the comeback.

Voters don’t always get it right. The announcement Wednesday that
Minnesota Timberwolves forward Naz Reid edged Sacramento Kings guard
Malik Monk in the NBA Sixth Man of the Year voting was a classic example
of voters getting it wrong.

The Timberwolves had a much better season than the Kings, but there is
no world in which Minnesota would miss Reid as much as Sacramento would
miss Monk.

One day later, with Curry, the voters got it right. Jerry West would agree.


sport / alt.sports.basketball.nba.gs-warriors / NBCSBA (Poole): Why Steph was obvious choice for NBA Clutch Player of the Year award

1
server_pubkey.txt

rocksolid light 0.9.81
clearnet tor