At a news conference following Thursdayâs practice, Seth Curry explained why he decided to join the Warriors after resisting the idea of teaming up with older brother Stephen Curry throughout his career, writes Sam Gordon of The San Francisco Chronicle. Seth told reporters that he was trying to âcreate my own pathâ in the NBA, and playing in his brotherâs shadow would have interfered with that.
Coach Steve Kerr agreed with that reasoning, saying it would have been awkward to have both brothers on the team earlier in their careers.
âI donât know if the timing was right (for Seth to join us) over recent years,â Kerr said. âWe probably didnât have playing time for him. He was in a place where he was going to teams and playing a lot, making money. It just feels like (Stephen and Seth are) both at a point in their careers where this makes a ton of sense. Iâm thrilled to have Seth.â
While Steph became a legend in the Bay Area, the younger Curry faced a different journey, working his way up through the G League and playing for nine teams over the past 11 years. He has been a deadly outside shooter wherever he has gone, and Gordon notes that his career percentage of 43.3% from beyond the arc is slightly better than his brother, who is considered possibly the greatest three-point shooter in NBA history.
Seth holds a non-guaranteed Exhibit 9 deal, and heâs expected to be waived before the start of the regular season. The plan is for him to rejoin the team at some point early in the season on a pro-rated veteranâs minimum deal once the Warriors determine how much cap room theyâll have available.
âEverybodyâs excited about it,â he said. âInstead of watching more games, it should be just easier to watch my game, which is easier on everybody. Everybody is excited about it, except maybe my dad (Dell Curry). He didnât want me to leave Charlotte.â
Thereâs more on the Warriors:
- Golden State will likely become the first team in NBA history with four starters who are at least 35 years old, so Kerr will have to be cognizant of playing time to minimize injuries, Gordon states in a separate story. Thirty-nine-year-old Al Horford joins Stephen Curry (37), Jimmy Butler (36) and Draymond Green (35), and the team has reserves Gary Payton II and Buddy Hield who will both turn 33 during the season. âWe donât want to be in a position where youâre chasing (a playoff berth) down the stretch of the season,â Curry said. âIt felt like every game was a playoff game for two straight months and then you transition into a very tough seven-game series and then youâre 48 hours from a round two, Game 1. It was a very condensed high level of basketball.â
- Butler missed practice Friday and Saturday while recovering from a rolled ankle and Kerr considers him a âquestion markâ for Sundayâs preseason opener, according to Dalton Johnson of NBC Sports Bay Area (Twitter link). Trayce Jackson-Davis has a taped right thumb and is also considered questionable.
- Brandin Podziemski was used as a starter at Thursdayâs practice, but Kerr said nothing has been decided yet, per Anthony Slater of ESPN (Twitter link).