While Steph Curry looks for his shot, US glides past South Sudan in Olympics
VILLENEUVE-D'ASCQ, France — Has anyone seen Steph Curry’s shot?
The greatest shooter in NBA history has been looking all over France for it, but it seems to still be missing. Doesn’t Curry know when you go overseas you’re supposed to attach air tags to your valuable possessions?
Wednesday in the Paris Olympics, when Team USA thumped South Sudan 103-86, Curry couldn’t find his stroke again, shooting just 1-of-9 from the field, including 0-for-6 from 3. That brings his Olympic total to 3-for-13 from long-distance, a paltry 23%. Include the last two tune-up games before the Olympics, and it’s 7-of-29 (24%).
Keep in mind, this is the same guy who set an NBA record when he made a 3 in 268 consecutive NBA games, a streak that ended in December. (His quippy response, when asked how he would respond to that ending was, “Start a new streak.”)
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So this is unusual. Frustrating, too.
“You’re always annoyed, for sure, you always want to make shots but you can’t let that rob you of all that other stuff that you do to help win a game,” said Curry, who finished with three points but also had four assists.
“It’s interesting dynamic with this team because first half I only had four (attempts) and like three of them came in a minute-and-a-half stretch, so you’ve gotta be ready for your shots, I’m not even worried about it, just a matter of taking the ones I know I can make and that the game calls for.
“I obviously want to shoot the ball well.”
Not that the Americans have needed that from him in either pool play win.
On Wednesday, Bam Adebayo came off the bench to score 18 points, including 14 in the first half, when he shot 6-of-6 from the field (he finished 8-of-10). Kevin Durant, also a member of the second unit, chipped in with 14.
Was Adebayo’s play in response to those who thought he might be the next one benched in coach Steve Kerr’s short rotation? He said no.
“I had open shots and I made them,” Adebayo said, adding that Team USA’s second unit has been calling itself “the bench mob” since the start of training camp in Las Vegas. “I just think Steve trusts us. He looks at the bench as a spark, a boost and we did that tonight.”
But Adebayo was also quick to make sure everyone knew that he’d seen the doubters and people predicting he might be the next to enjoy a long stretch on the bench.
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On Wednesday that role instead fell to Joel Embiid, as Anthony Davis and Jayson Tatum got starting nods over Embiid and Jrue Holiday, respectively. Holiday finished with five points and two rebounds in 15 minutes of play. All said, the U.S. bench outscored South Sudan 66-14.
“That’s a pretty potent group when you come off the bench with Bam, Kevin and Derrick White,” Kerr said.
This was a markedly different game against South Sudan just 11 days after that group pushed Team USA, which needed some late-game heroics from LeBron James to pull out a 101-100 win. Kerr said he was particularly happy with the Americans’ defense Wednesday, as they held South Sudan to 42% shooting from the field and just 38% from 3. In their previous meeting, South Sudan hit 47.5% of its attempts, including 42.4% from 3.
But back to Curry, who shot … considerably less than that from 3.
The thinking is that in order to win their fifth gold medal in a row, the Americans needed a reliable 3-point shooter. Germany beat the U.S. last year on its way to the FIBA World Cup. France, playing at home and featuring 2023 No. 1 draft pick Victor Wembanyama, could push theAmericans. Maybe Canada, too.
So if you need a shooter, who better than Curry, who is a career 42.6% from beyond the arc? He’s playing in his first Olympics at 36 precisely because of his precision and depth from deep … even if those two qualities haven't been evident the past week. Early in the second half he missed a gimme layup.
But no one is panicking. Team USA next plays Puerto Rico on Saturday.
“He just had a tough night,” Kerr said. “Steph is Steph. I’ve seen him have tough nights before and then he’ll get 40. FIBA’s a little different … it’s not the NBA, it’s (a) 40-minute game, you’re playing fewer minutes, getting fewer shots.”
Curry isn’t worried, either.
“The way we play, making good cuts, setting good screens, moving the ball, shots come your way — the floodgates could open at any time,” Curry said. “You don’t ever want to get down on yourself. You just want to shoot shots you think you can make.”
For Curry, that’s pretty much every shot. And that could be bad news for all future U.S. opponents.
Follow Lindsay Schnell on social media @Lindsay_Schnell
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