Stephen Curry outscores Pelicans 28-26 in 3rd; Warriors improve to 3-0
NEW ORLEANS -- Stephen Curry couldn't get the smile off of his face as he trotted back on defense.
He had just buried a 31-foot rainbow over Anthony Davis, who is 6-foot-10, on a play he later referred to as "a dumb shot that went in."
"Everybody's having fun," Curry said. "I'm laughing at myself for taking the shot."
That's what it's like for a player who can't seem to do anything wrong.
Curry scored 53 points, breaking open a tight game with a 28-point third quarter, and the unbeaten Golden State Warriors defeated the winless Pelicans 134-120 in New Orleans' home opener Saturday night.
Curry outscored the Pelicans by two points in the third period, giving him a career-high for scoring in a quarter. It also gave the Warriors a 105-91 lead, allowing Curry to rest for much of the fourth quarter.
"I've always had confidence," said Curry, the reigning NBA MVP. "You just get better as a player and try to take it to another level. So that's what I'm trying to do this year. I'm blessed to be healthy. I'm feeling pretty energetic, pretty strong out there on the floor, playing free, just having fun, so usually good things happen when all that comes together."
If he had played more than 36 minutes, he might have shattered his career high of 54 points. As it is, he's now the first player since Michael Jordan in 1989-90 to score 118 points in his team's first three games. That total included 25 in a victory in Houston on Friday.
"He completely took the game over," Warriors forward Draymond Green said. "The second night of a back-to-back, it's easy to say, `Ah, we ain't got it. We're tired.' Not the way he took the game over."
Curry was 17-of-27 from the field, including 8-of-14 from 3-point range, to go with nine assists and four steals. Five of his 3s were from between 27 and 31 feet. He also caused New Orleans problems with creative, weaving dribbles into the heart of the defense for driving layups.
"He's getting to the hole a lot better, picking and choosing his spots when to go. He's turning the corner like crazy," Green said of Curry. "Most importantly, I said it on the court to him, I said, `Man, you're acting like this is your league.'"
He had just buried a 31-foot rainbow over Anthony Davis, who is 6-foot-10, on a play he later referred to as "a dumb shot that went in."
"Everybody's having fun," Curry said. "I'm laughing at myself for taking the shot."
That's what it's like for a player who can't seem to do anything wrong.
Curry scored 53 points, breaking open a tight game with a 28-point third quarter, and the unbeaten Golden State Warriors defeated the winless Pelicans 134-120 in New Orleans' home opener Saturday night.
Curry outscored the Pelicans by two points in the third period, giving him a career-high for scoring in a quarter. It also gave the Warriors a 105-91 lead, allowing Curry to rest for much of the fourth quarter.
"I've always had confidence," said Curry, the reigning NBA MVP. "You just get better as a player and try to take it to another level. So that's what I'm trying to do this year. I'm blessed to be healthy. I'm feeling pretty energetic, pretty strong out there on the floor, playing free, just having fun, so usually good things happen when all that comes together."
If he had played more than 36 minutes, he might have shattered his career high of 54 points. As it is, he's now the first player since Michael Jordan in 1989-90 to score 118 points in his team's first three games. That total included 25 in a victory in Houston on Friday.
"He completely took the game over," Warriors forward Draymond Green said. "The second night of a back-to-back, it's easy to say, `Ah, we ain't got it. We're tired.' Not the way he took the game over."
Curry was 17-of-27 from the field, including 8-of-14 from 3-point range, to go with nine assists and four steals. Five of his 3s were from between 27 and 31 feet. He also caused New Orleans problems with creative, weaving dribbles into the heart of the defense for driving layups.
"He's getting to the hole a lot better, picking and choosing his spots when to go. He's turning the corner like crazy," Green said of Curry. "Most importantly, I said it on the court to him, I said, `Man, you're acting like this is your league.'"