NEW ORLEANS – Steph Curry is still one of the NBA’s greatest players. The 37-year-old is averaging 27.2 points per game and paces the NBA in made 3-pointers per game (4.5) and free throw percentage (93%).
He has scored at least 40 points in four games this season, breaking a tie with Michael Jordan for the most 40-point games by a player after turning 30. Still the model of consistency, Curry has been in the single digits for points only twice this season.
For his stellar play, the fans voted Curry in as a starter for the recent All-Star game in Inglewood, the 12th time he has participated in the hallowed exhibition. Curry is undoubtedly still one of the 10 best players in the league at 37 years old.
And yet, he is barred from earning any postseason honor – All-NBA, MVP, etc.
Though it may sound ridiculous on the surface, the league is not being arbitrary in its ruling.
When Curry sat out of Sunday’s win over the Nuggets with runner’s knee, that was his 18th missed game of the season. The league mandates that any candidate for seasonal awards must play a minimum of 65 games.
Curry will miss at least 10 games with a sore knee that has been hampering him since Jan. 30, and previously sat out games this season due to injury and a bruise to his right knee.
It will be the first season since 2019-20, when he played just six games before a broken hand sidelined him for the rest of the year, that Curry will not make an All-NBA team.
The 65-game rule, which was instituted during the 2023-24 season, was aimed at curbing tanking and disincentivizing teams from sitting their stars during the long 82-game season.
This season, the effects of that rule will be on full display. Curry is far from the only icon who will be missing from the postseason awards.
LeBron James will see his 21-year streak of landing on the All-NBA team snapped. Giannis Antetokounmpo, if he plays again this season, will also miss out on All-NBA honors for the first time in 10 years.
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As injuries to stars continue to plague the NBA, the limit appears to have done little to actually increase the number of games the league’s best players participate in.
When asked about the games played limit, all the way back in December, Warriors coach Steve Kerr could not even feign interest in the pros and cons of the rule.
Fast forward a few months, and Kerr said the team’s only priority is making sure Curry gets back to full health. Curry will be re-evaluated by the team’s doctors at the beginning of March.
“It’s a little tricky, but we’re going to keep plugging away at it, and Steph will take the right steps,” Kerr said last week.
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