Even as the Golden State Warriors flounder, NBA trade rumors and predictions point to them being able to land a marquee player either before the Feb. 6 trade deadline or during the offseason.
Former NBA player Blake Griffin still recognizes the greatness of LeBron James, Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant and James Harden, but he sees a “shift” in power in the league. The youths have arrived and taking over.
Don't blame the player and the team that did it right. Blame the less-efficient copycats, who surely will find a new thing to copy soon.
The players announced to start for the Western Conference are Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of the Oklahoma City Thunder, Kevin Durant of the Phoenix Suns, LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers, and Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets.
The Celtics appear at No. 1 on the Team Merchandise list for the first time in 17 years, while Curry sits atop the Top-Selling Jerseys rankings for the third consecutive list. The NBA's top-selling jerseys
Stephen Curry will represent the Golden State Warriors as a 2025 NBA All-Star starter. Curry was awarded with the honor after final fan votes came back and were announced by the Inside the NBA crew on Thursday evening.
Sneakers of the week: Stephen Curry, Jamal Murray, LaMelo Ball, more
Nuggets star center Nikola Jokic pulled another rabbit out of his hat on Thursday night against the Sacramento Kings.
The starters for the 2025 NBA All-Star Game have been announced, and some familiar faces lead the way. The announcement came on TNT’s Inside the NBA on Thursday night, before tipoff between the Milwaukee Bucks and Miami Heat.
My league sources confirm these hesitations, revealing that Curry himself has reservations about Butler's fit in the Warriors' locker room — a sentiment shared by head coach Steve Kerr. Their worries stem from Butler's tumultuous history with previous teams:
LeBron James and Stephen Curry cap off NBA Rivals Week on Saturday with their 54th head-to-head career matchup.
The NBA is churning out a compelling on-court product in 2024-25, but there's no denying that the league has lost live eyeball during its game broadcasts. During a conversation on "The Dan Patrick Show" Wednesday,