Stephen Curry, a four-time NBA winner with Golden State Warriors, has told Sky Sports he “failed the eye test” as a young kid trying to make it in the sport before becoming one of the greats.
The 35-year-old has flourished as one of the most recognisable figures in professional basketball over the last decade or so, holding the highest career free-throw percentage in NBA history (91.0%) and the NBA record for three-pointers made in a regular season with 402 in 2016, beating his own previous record of 286.
He picked up NBA titles in 2015, 2017, 2018 and 2022, and was named the NBA’s MVP in 2015 and 2016. He is a 10-time NBA All-Star.
Yet his was not a straightforward journey to the top. In fact, Curry has told Sky Sports, but for his spirit in the face of criticism, he would not have made it.
“It’s really cool to talk about the origins of my basketball career,” he said. “Basketball is in my blood. My dad [Dell Curry] played in the NBA for 16 years, and so there was a little internal conflict on having basketball be a part of the family business.
“When I was coming up through the ranks playing organised basketball when I was nine years old, I was undersized and didn’t really pass the eye test.
“Every gym I walked into or team I played on, I was always the smallest kid on the team.
“I always had this underrated mindset from the beginning. If I ever got the opportunity to compete against the best, I knew I could hold my own, but there were a lot of criticisms about my game coming up.
“There was a lot of people who told me what I couldn’t do or couldn’t be.
“I had to kind of embrace all of that, and pretty much at every level from nine years old to middle school basketball, to high school basketball, there were a lot of barriers in the sense of who I thought I was as a basketball player, and what people thought of me.
“I kind of carried that underrated spirit all the way through, didn’t get many college recruiting letters or scholarship offers from many of the big schools in Division One college basketball, and I was really a late bloomer.
“It got to the point where I did get one offer from Davidson College, which is a small liberal arts school in North Carolina which had about 1900 students at the time, and all I needed was a little opportunity and a coach that believed in me.
“The rest is history from there on. Walking in my purpose as a basketball player, developing a great work ethic that I still rely on to this day.