‘Chef’ Stephen Curry’s journey from boy who didn’t pass an eye test to NBA GREATEST SHOOTER OF ALL TIME

Stephen Curry, a four-time NBA champion with the Golden State Warriors, has shared that he failed an eye test as a kid trying to get into the sport before becoming one of the greats.

A young Steph Curry before his NBA Draft  : r/warriors

Stephen Curry has always been a familiar name to orange ball lovers. He plays as a point guard and is known as one of the best PG of all time. Many pundits and players have considered Curry the greatest shooter in NBA history. Curry is also credited with having a role in revolutionizing basketball play by inspiring the tactic of using more three-point throws.

Stephen Curry exclusive: NBA superstar on the 'underrated' mindset that  still drives him despite four NBA championships | NBA News | Sky Sports

The 36-year-old has flourished as one of professional basketball’s most popular figures over the past decade, holding the highest career free throw percentage in NBA history (91.0%) and the NBA record for three-point throws made in five regular seasons with 402 in 2016, beating his own previous record of 286.

Stephen Curry's revolutionary impact felt in Warriors' NBA title win - Los  Angeles Times

The “3pts shooter” won NBA honors in 2015, 2017, 2018 and 2022, was named NBA MVP in 2015 and 2016 and participated in the NBA All-Star 10 times. ” It’s great to talk about the origins of my basketball career. Basketball was in my blood. My dad, Dell Curry, played in the NBA for 16 years, and so there was a bit of an internal conflict about making basketball part of the family business,” Curry said.

WATCH: Stephen Curry reads unflattering 2009 NBA Draft report -  CBSSports.com

However, his journey to the top was not an easy one. Stephen Curry once shared: ” When I started playing organized basketball when I was 9 years old, I wasn’t weight enough and didn’t really pass the eye test. I’ve always had this underrated mindset from the beginning. There are a lot of people who tell me I can’t or can’t do it. At that time, I almost had to accept all of that, and at almost every level from basketball at 9 years old to junior high school, to high school basketball, there were a lot of barriers to who I thought I was as a basketball player. And I don’t know what people think of me.

LeBron James Recognized Young Stephen Curry Amid Career Scarring Public  Slanders: “Never Going to End Up Being a Star… Huge Defensive Liability” -  EssentiallySports

I carried that underrated spirit with me along the way, not getting many college admissions letters or scholarship offers from many of the big schools in college basketball, until I officially got an offer from Davidson University, a small liberal arts school in North Carolina that had about 1900 students at the time, And all I needed was a little chance and a coach who believed in me.

The night young Stephen Curry became a star – East Bay Times

The rest is history since then as I followed my purpose as a basketball player, developing a great work ethic that I still rely on to this day. Now I’ve played 15 years in the NBA and will try to last as long as possible, but that underrated mindset persists and stays with me to this day.”

Photos: Adorable pix of Golden State Warriors stars as kid athletes – East  Bay TimesYou were watching greatness': How a young Steph Curry became a Toronto  middle-school legend - The Athletic

The son of former NBA player Dell Curry and brother of current NBA player Seth Curry, Stephen Curry played football for the Davidson Wildcats. He set all-time scoring records for both Davidson and the Southern League, twice being named League Player of the Year. 

Steph Curry reflects on what draft experts said about him in 2009

In his sophomore year, Curry also set the NCAA’s record for the most three-point throws in a season, and was later picked by the Warriors with his seventh overall pick in the 2009 NBA Draft