Stephen Curry has nothing left to prove in the NBA. But the Golden State Warriors star may have just revealed the clearest sign yet that he understands the next phase of his career could look very different.
Curry is reportedly open to coming off the bench later in his career if that’s what it takes to keep contributing to the Warriors. The revelation, shared by NBA insider Howard Beck, offers a rare glimpse into the long-term mindset of the franchise’s most important player as Golden State navigates the uncertain final stretch of its dynasty.
The timing of the conversation is notable. Curry is currently sidelined with patellofemoral pain syndrome, commonly known as runner’s knee, an injury that has forced the Warriors to operate without their offensive engine for more than a dozen games.
For a team that has defined an era of basketball around Curry’s shooting brilliance, even a temporary absence raises larger questions about the future.
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Curry Open to Role Adjustment Late in Career
Curry’s perspective surfaced during a recent appearance by Beck on FanDuel TV’s Run It Back, where the veteran reporter discussed a previous conversation he had with the Warriors star.
“There are some guys, that if they can’t be themselves, if they can’t be dominant, it’s time to go,” Beck said. “Or if they still can’t contend, it’s time to go. Steph and I talked about this for the story I did back in January, and his thing was ‘Yeah, I could be a role-player. I could come off the bench.’”
That kind of self-awareness is rare for a superstar who has spent nearly two decades redefining the sport. Curry remains the face of the Warriors and the defining player of the modern three-point era.
Yet his willingness to consider a smaller role suggests he understands the reality every NBA legend eventually faces. Beck explained that Curry’s mindset mirrors several Hall of Fame players who embraced reduced roles near the end of their careers.
“You think about guys like Vince Carter, his last several years where he was like part role-player, part mentor/seventh assistant coach or whatever,” Beck added. “Paul Pierce toward the end, Grant Hill toward the end. There’s a lot of different ways you can go out as an NBA legend in this league, and Steph, when we talked about it, seemed to put everything on the table.
“Like he wouldn’t mind, if he’s diminished, or lost a step, two steps, can’t be a starter anymore. He basically said ‘I don’t want to be a traffic cone out there defensively,’ but he’s always going to be able to shoot.”
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Warriors Future Still Tied to Curry
Even with that openness to change, one thing appears non-negotiable: Curry wants his career to end in Golden State.
“So there are various ways he could decided to carry out his last two, three, four however many years he wants,” Beck continued. “The one thing that was very very clear though, was that he wants that to end in Golden State.”
For now, that future remains theoretical. Curry is still producing at an elite level in his 17th season, averaging 27.2 points, 4.8 assists, and shooting 39.1 percent from three. However, Golden State’s recent struggles without him offer a glimpse into what life after the dynasty might eventually look like.
Father Time eventually catches every superstar. The difference for Curry may be that he’s already preparing for the moment when the Warriors need him in a different way.
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