logo
Andre Iguodala, the 2015 NBA Finals MVP and 4 time champion, has number retired by Warriors

Andre Iguodala, the 2015 NBA Finals MVP and 4 time champion, has number retired by Warriors

CBS News24-02-2025

When Andre Iguodala signed with the Golden Warriors in 2013, there was no guarantee that he'd be part of a dynasty. Stephen Curry was not yet an All-Star, and Klay Thompson and Draymond Green were just starting their careers.
As it turned out, Iguodala's sacrifices and foresight contributed to four championships, highlighted by an NBA Finals MVP win in 2015, when he led the Warriors to their first title in four decades.
On Sunday, they honored Iguodala by retiring his No. 9 and raising his jersey to the rafters at Chase Center.
"It's been a wild journey, but it's been a beautiful blessing," Iguodala said in his speech.
Iguodala became the seventh player to have his number retired by the franchise. He joined Rick Barry (24), Wilt Chamberlain (13), Nate Thurmond (42), Al Attles (16), Chris Mullin (17) and Tom Meschery (14).
Iguodala already had an accomplished career before joining the Warriors. He had established himself as a defensive stalwart and everyday starter over nine seasons. In Golden State, he assumed the role of providing veteran leadership, recognizing the talent he had around him.
"You sacrificed ego for excellence," Curry said during Sunday's ceremony.
Curry said Iguodala unlocked confidence, intelligence and maturity for an up-and-coming team, adding that he went from being the face of the franchise with the Philadelphia 76ers to the "glue" with the Warriors that "made it all work."
"He wanted to join what was happening, because he saw how special it was," Warriors coach Steve Kerr said before Sunday's 126-102 win over the Dallas Mavericks. "That was a coup. I mean, the Warriors weren't exactly getting a lot of free agents. So to sign Andre was obviously one of the key moves to this whole thing."
Iguodala was 30 in his first season with the Warriors and had never come off the bench in 10 seasons. When Kerr took over the team the following year, Iguodala agreed to take a bench role. He called it a "great, unique situation" and said that Curry, Thompson and Green made it easy on him.
"It's rare in professional sports to see a guy that's kind of still in his prime kind of take a back seat, or actually willingly move out the way for the up-and-coming guys," The 41-year-old Iguodala said before the game.
That resulted in a championship run in 2015, with Iguodala becoming the first player to win NBA Finals MVP after not starting every game in the series. It was Kerr who trusted Iguodala to perform on the big stage and moved him into the starting lineup trailing 2-1 to the Cavaliers in the 2015 Finals and gave him the assignment of guarding then-Cleveland star LeBron James.
He averaged 16.3 points, 4.0 assists and 5.8 rebounds as the Warriors beat the Cavaliers in six games.
"That was the ultimate validation of everything I've always believed in the game, and I do think other people recognize that," Kerr said. "It wasn't lost on anyone, the sacrifice and the success and everything that kind of happened together."
Iguodala was the No. 9 pick in the 2004 NBA draft out of Arizona and played in 1,231 career games. He spent eight seasons with the Philadelphia 76ers, one in Denver, six with the Warriors, two in Miami and returned to Golden State for his last two seasons. He was part of NBA championships in 2015, '17, '18 and 2022.
Iguodala said the Warriors' core had a drive to keep going, especially after winning the first championship.
"When we won the first one, it was almost like we had to do it again to prove that it wasn't a fluke," Iguodala said. "And then, once you win the second one, you're like, 'Alright, we've got to do it again because nobody can touch us. And we've got to do it again because we're supposed to do it again.'"
He added: "That's just the unique characteristics of great athletes, the ones who are never satisfied. That was in the DNA of every individual, and it just bred into the fabric of the organization."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

With its season in balance, Thunder prove more clutch than Pacers to take Game 4 111-104, even series 2-2
With its season in balance, Thunder prove more clutch than Pacers to take Game 4 111-104, even series 2-2

NBC Sports

time26 minutes ago

  • NBC Sports

With its season in balance, Thunder prove more clutch than Pacers to take Game 4 111-104, even series 2-2

INDIANAPOLIS — Oklahoma City did to Indiana what the Pacers have done to everyone else all playoffs and season long. Indiana led by seven entering the fourth quarter in a game where it had largely been in control but it could never quite pull away. Then, with its season hanging in the balance, Oklahoma City played at its peak. The Thunder defense held the Pacers to one bucket from the floor in the final five minutes of the game, while Shai Gilgeous-Alexander took over and scored 15 points in the fourth quarter. Down 7, facing a 3-1 series deficit... OKC DELIVERED A MASTERCLASS IN THE 4TH QUARTER. 'We got stagnant, their second shots were a big problem,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said postgame, referencing the four offensive rebounds the Thunder had in the fourth quarter. The result was only the second clutch game the Pacers lost this postseason, a 111-104 Thunder win that ties the series up at 2-2. What has been a highly entertaining, well-played Finals will see Game 5 Monday night in Oklahoma City. It also feels like a series that is going to go seven games. The Pacers have focused their defense this series on denying Gilgeous-Alexander the ball, then when he does get the rock and drives they make it hard to get his teammates involved and get their offense flowing. They did that in Game 4. The problem was that SGA took on the challenge and scored 35 on the night. SGA COMES UP HUGE IN GAME 4 ⚡️🚨 35 points. 15 in the 4th. 3 steals. THE #KiaMVP DELIVERS IN A MASSIVE MOMENT FOR OKC! This is the loss Indiana will regret if it does not win the series, on the night the Thunder were just 3-of-17 from beyond the arc (Indiana was 11-of-36, just 30.6%, but they still outscored OKC by 24 from beyond the arc). While Pacers fans in the building (and online) want to complain about foul calls the Thunder shot just five more free throws than the Pacers, and that was bolstered by some intentional fouling at the end. Thunder coach Mark Daigneault made the first big adjustment of the series, returning to the double-big starting lineup of Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein, which had been effective throughout the Western Conference postseason. It didn't work — for the first time this series it was Indiana getting off to the fast start leading 20-12 behind fast starts from Pascal Siakam and Myles Turner (the Thunder starting five was -2 for the night). SIAKAM THROWDOWN! He's got 10 points and FOUR steals in the 1st quarter 😲 Indiana had the ball moving a step ahead of Oklahoma City's rotations and it was getting great looks. Indiana was also knocking down its jumpers (only six of their first 24 points came in the paint). Despite the hot start by the Pacers and some cold shooting from 3 by the OKC, the Thunder were hanging around, and at the end of a high-scoring first quarter, the Pacers were only up one, 35-34. Midway through the second quarter, Obi Toppin was hit with a flagrant foul on Alex Caruso for what was a non-basketball play (but might have been just a hard playoff foul in another era). Hartenstein had a few words for Toppin after that, but nothing came of it. Obi Toppin was charged with a Flagrant 1 foul on this play. Toppin and Isaiah Hartenstein received double technicals after review. Toppin drew a flagrant himself on Lu Dort later in the quarter. Lu Dort received a flagrant 1 for this foul on Obi Toppin (via @TSN_Sports) Indiana led 60-57 at the half and the difference was 3-point shooting: The Pacers were 7-of-19 from 3, while the Thunder were 1-of-10. The Thunder were 6-of-21 on shots outside the paint in the first half. In the third quarter, the Pacers played like sharks smelling blood in the water — the crowd could sense it, their defensive pressure seemed to ramp up and the shots kept falling. Indiana led by 7 after three and Pacers fans were ready to celebrate being closer to an NBA title than the franchise had ever been. Then came the Thunder's fourth quarter and everything is even again.

Ex Tampa Bay Buccaneers QB Tom Brady Offers Post-Draft Advice to Shedeur Sanders
Ex Tampa Bay Buccaneers QB Tom Brady Offers Post-Draft Advice to Shedeur Sanders

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Ex Tampa Bay Buccaneers QB Tom Brady Offers Post-Draft Advice to Shedeur Sanders

Ex Tampa Bay Buccaneers QB Tom Brady Offers Post-Draft Advice to Shedeur Sanders originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Cleveland Browns quarterback Shedeur Sanders just suffered a historic fall in this year's NFL Draft. Advertisement After he was projected to be a top-10 pick in the selection process earlier this month, Sanders fell all the way to the fifth round, where he was selected by the Cleveland Browns - the team that many thought would take him with the No. 2 overall pick. But when it comes to making the most out of a late-round selection, seven-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady can speak confidently. Brady appeared on the Impaulsive podcast with Logan Paul and Mike Majlak and offered Shedeur some advice. "So, nobody knows. I actually texted Shedeur because I know him very well," Brady said. "And I said, 'Dude, whatever happens, wherever you go, that's your first day. Day 2 matters more than the draft. I was 199. So, who could speak on it better than me – what that really means. Use it as motivation. You're gonna get your chances, go take advantage of it.'" Advertisement Sanders and Brady have had a relationship since Shedeur was at Jackson State and signed an NIL deal with the Brady Brand. That relationship carried over when he transferred to Colorado when his famous football father, Deion, was named head coach. Brady said he remembered another draft slide back in 2005 that might've motivated another pretty successful NFL signal caller. "I remember when they were talking about Aaron Rodgers sliding and Aaron slid to like 21 in the first round or whatever it was. I'm like, 'Dude, you're the 21st pick in the first round. I think they still think you're pretty good. You're still a great player. You're still a first-round pick in the NFL. There's only 32 of those guys every year.' So, use it as motivation," he said. "Wherever you end up going, it's still about your performance. Like, what do you do when you get there, because you're gonna get there. "He has to show up every day because, as a quarterback, you have to be a leader," Brady added. "And to me a leader is, do I care about my teammates and do I care about what we're trying to accomplish?" Advertisement Sanders has an opportunity to make a name for himself, this time away from his famous father and coach, if he can make the best of what looked like a bad situation during the NFL Draft. Related: Buccaneers Sign Small Quarterback With Big Dreams Related: Ex Bucs Coach Jon Gruden Awaits Major Lawsuit Ruling This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 12, 2025, where it first appeared.

LeBron James Admits Warriors Were The "Better Team" During Legendary 2016 Finals Comeback
LeBron James Admits Warriors Were The "Better Team" During Legendary 2016 Finals Comeback

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

LeBron James Admits Warriors Were The "Better Team" During Legendary 2016 Finals Comeback

LeBron James Admits Warriors Were The "Better Team" During Legendary 2016 Finals Comeback originally appeared on Fadeaway World. One of the greatest adversaries LeBron James ever faced in his career is the Golden State Warriors. The Warriors have bested James on numerous occasions, and the few times when LeBron won, he admitted they were the better team. According to LeBron, that was even the case during his iconic Finals comeback in 2016, when he led the Cavaliers to their first championship ever. Advertisement "Once what happened in Game 5 happened, my guys believed that what I was saying was f**king coming true," said James on Mind the Game. "Y'all get me back to Game 6, we'll get back here for Game 7. There are clips of me in the locker room saying that they're messed up. I just felt like they were the better team. We hit a momentum pop, and there was nothing they could do about it." The 2016 Finals still rank as LeBron's greatest basketball moment. In a matchup against the 73-9 Warriors, the Cavaliers were major underdogs to win, and nobody thought they had a chance against Klay Thompson, Draymond Green, and back-to-back MVP, Stephen Curry. So when the Cavaliers went down 1-3 in the series, fans were convinced that defeat was inevitable. Up to that point, only a handful of teams in NBA history had overcome such a deficit, and it had never been done in the Finals. Of course, James knew all along that the series was not yet over. He felt the momentum shift halfway through, but it wasn't until Game 5 that the rest of his team started to believe. In a 15-point blowout, they completely dominated Golden State thanks to 41 points each from LeBron James and Kyrie Irving. After the game, Cavs coach Tyronn Lue even allegedly hid $3,000 in the ceiling of the visitors' locker room in an act of confidence and faith that they would be back to retrieve it. Advertisement Back in the Oracle Arena for Game 6, fans were certain that the Cavaliers would face defeat, but they somehow managed to avoid it yet again. James scored 41 points again to lead the Cavs to a 14-point win. This time, after the win, he remembers telling his Cavs teammates that the Warriors were 'f**ked up" mentally. The series finally came to an epic conclusion in Game 7, where the Warriors fought with everything to take the win. In the end, however, they scored just 89 points as LeBron James and Kyrie Irving once again carried Cleveland to victory. After three straight wins, the series was finally over, and it set off a chain reaction that changed NBA history forever. Looking back, LeBron knows the impossible odds that he and his team were facing. No team had done it before, and yet they were able to pull it off against one of the greatest regular-season squads ever assembled. On paper, the Warriors were better in just about every way than the Cavaliers, and it showed the difference in their win-loss record. When it mattered, however, the Cavaliers came together in a way the Warriors never did. With other backs against the wall, they refused to give up and kept fighting through their amazing Finals comeback. That series is proof that, sometimes, chemistry and momentum can determine a series just as much as talent or depth. What the Cavaliers lacked in roster power, they made up for with a style of play that brought out the best in everyone. Related: LeBron James Speaks On Legendary Four-Year Rivalry Between Warriors And Cavaliers This story was originally reported by Fadeaway World on May 28, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store