The Golden State Warriors expect to have Stephen Curry available on Wednesday when they play a second game in two days, facing a rested Oklahoma City Thunder squad in San Francisco.
The Golden State Warriors eased some worries ahead of the NBA trade deadline with their emphatic win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday.
The Oklahoma City Thunder wrap up the month of January on the road Wednesday night in San Francisco with a contest against Steph Curry and the Golden State Warriors.
Oklahoma City visits Golden State for a Western Conference matchup Wednesday. The teams play Wednesday for the first time this season.
After a campaign that has been disjointed in concept and execution, the Warriors can make the case with wins on Tuesday and particularly Wednesday that they are, in fact, “figuring it out,” as Steph Curry implored fans (specifically “Twitter fingers”) to do two weeks back.
After an extensive break and time to rest, the OKC Thunder are back in action as they look to play the 2022 NBA champs.
Steph Curry dropped 17 points in the second half and made key plays down the stretch. Andrew Wiggins dropped a team-high 27 points, including five 3-pointers. Kevon Looney matched his regular season career-high with 18 points and Gary Payton II (15 points, nine rebounds) stamped the game with a vicious slam dunk with under a minute left.
With his All-Star nod in 2025, Steph Curry made history, earning his 11th All-Star appearance, passing Paul Arizin (10) for the most in franchise history. 2025 will be the 10th time Curry has been named a starter in the All-Star game.
The NBA All-Star Game is set to happen in San Francisco next month, and the city’s biggest star was named one of the game’s 10 starters. The NBA revealed the starters on Thursday, and Stephen Curry was among them.
More than half of the Thunder’s losses this season have come against two teams OKC fans are none too fond of: Dallas and Golden State.
Golden State’s latest wrinkle is inserting two-way center Quinten Post into the starting-five, taking the place of Trayce Jackson-Davis. Post, who has impressed in his first four games in an NBA rotation, gives the Warriors a new look as a floor-spacing center.