DBC10 wrote:Manocad wrote:No it isn't. Steve Nash has the same career 3PT % as Curry at 42.8% (and Nash's 2PT % is actually higher at 49.0% vs 47.3%),
Nash was the precursor to Curry's era but he still isn't touching Curry in terms of difficulty and overall volume he's doing this at. When comparing elite shooters, the percentages are a given, it's at that point you look at the raw volume, how contested they are, and how often they're doubled. And so far, Curry is doing everything Nash, Reggie, Allen, Korver can do but on practically the same exact efficiency and far better volume. That's not to even mention that he's doing this while being double teamed on every possession and still making shots despite it. IE, those others shooter aren't shooting 47% from step back jumpers from the 3 point line among other high degree of difficulty shots (source: https://www.nba.com/stats/player/201939/shooting/)he was much more of a pass first PG than Curry (double the assists Curry has in 50% more career games).
If you're putting up shooting percentages like Curry on high volume and the ability to make shots anywhere on the court, you're going to pass less. That's a givenjust a lot fewer attempts because It's become a 3PT shooter's game now so younger players are going to be focusing on that a lot more moving forward rather than the slashing/dunking that was prevalent in the previous generation.
He still played in the era when Nash and Kidd were still stars in the league so it's not like he hasn't had that experience of the slower, less dynamic offense that is opposite of the present. He played for old ass Don Nelson in his rookie years. It's not like he started off as this 3 point phenom looking to shatter records right away. It only really happened back starting in 2015
Curry has consistently been one of the most doubled players in the league from 30 feet on out which he's been the face of. This is partly the reason why he takes such shots from 30+ feet on out since that's really the only day light he's given. The fact that he's regularly taking long balls like this while maintaining Nash, Miller, Allen like TS% efficiency is in another level of its own. He's clearly an outlier and Curry's career TS% (.62) vs Nash (.605) is superior while maintaining high volumes and beating defensive coverage
We will see other shooters that can replicate his volume and high percentages, but it'll likely take a while before we can see it happening to the degree of difficult it's happening. The guy has 36 games to his belt already with making more than 9 three-pointers in a game with the next closest second being at 9 games from James Harden and Lillard. That's just one factoid, he's clearly an anomaly in this league, hell any era of the leagueBut he's not far ahead of other great shooters in percentages, like Bonds, Aaron and Ruth are above other home run hitters or Nolan Ryan's strikeouts. Curry happens to be the best shooter in the first generation that focused on 3 point shooting as being an offensive strategy so he shoots a lot of them. Kyle Korver actually has a higher career 3PT % than Curry at 42.9%.
Percentages are fine, but once you're an established elite shooter, percentages are just the baseline (40%+) and the discussion more towards overall volume and difficulty. Korver is a great shooter, but he still isn't at to the volume and difficulty Curry's been doing this. He's only made 2450 while Curry is currently at 3083 in 400 less games than Korver ever played. If Curry was only relegated the same role Korver had ie spot up and off ball shooting, then Curry would likely have the same career 3pt% or perhaps better than Korver either way considering they're already close as is with Curry playing a far more nuanced role than Korver ever had. Really, if you took away what would it considered a "bad" shot for Korver (ie a step back 25 footer, pull up from 35 feet) and applied it to Curry, he gets to Korver percentages quite easily
Really, their differences in shot charts is noticeable:
https://www.statmuse.com/nba/ask/stephen-curry-career-shot-chart
https://www.statmuse.com/nba/ask/kyle-korver-career-shot-chart
https://www.statmuse.com/nba/ask/steve-nash-career-shot-chart
Ok, so you see it as difficult that another shooter like Curry could come along "in a while" and I don't. If he was shooting 50+% while all the other guys in NBA history were topping out at 43% it would be a different story. Like Babe Ruth hitting 60 home runs which was more than every entire team in MLB other than three the first year he hit 60. That's the kind of stuff that qualifies as "he's in a league by himself and it's not even close" to me and makes me say "It's going to be long time before another person comes along doing this, if ever."