
Flailing young Orioles get unwanted lesson in how to fail
Flailing young Orioles get unwanted lesson in how to fail
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Gunnar Henderson talks all things Baltimore Orioles and the upcoming MLB season
Gunnar Henderson stops by to talk about the upcoming season with the Orioles and being on the cover of MLB The Show 25.
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WASHINGTON – The team that won 101 games two years ago and backed it up with another playoff berth last year is now lucky if it can win a three-game series.
A young core whose burgeoning talent was only exceeded by how much fun it looked like they were having between the white lines has more often looked dazed and desultory, usually undone by the worst rotation in the major leagues and sometimes by the enduring cruelty of the game.
Simply, these Baltimore Orioles have fallen into a hole nobody saw coming – and must learn to dig out of one far sooner in their careers than they expected.
They've now lost five of six series, splitting two others, and after losing for the second time in as many nights in their 'Battle of the Beltways' set are suddenly facing a sweep at the hands of the Washington Nationals, with an on-paper pitching mismatch in the finale.
Every MLB team's biggest 2025 surprise: Trevor Story playing like superstar for Red Sox
Yet that's the case most nights with this club. It's largely the injuries (Grayson Rodriguez will be fortunate to return by June, Zach Eflin perhaps next month) exacerbated by gross underperformance from Dean Kremer and Charlie Morton, the former hoping it's his traditionally cold April start and the latter aiming, at 41, to pin the first loss on the indomitable Father Time.
The Orioles are 9-14 and in the American League East cellar and here's the boilerplate qualifier: There are still five months and 139 games remaining in this slog (That's a game a month they need to make up on the Yankees, if you're into math).
But if the mound matchup tilts the field against you every night, playing uphill can get exhausting, even for a very talented and young core.
And yes, they're still very young.
Sure, it seems like they've been around forever now, their dugout Hydration Station and their cherub-cheeked prospects bubbling up from the minors seemingly every month. But aside from fourth-year catcher Adley Rutschman, now 27, it's still a bunch of kids, relatively speaking.
Franchise shortstop Gunnar Henderson? Still just 23, opposite double-play partner Jackson Holliday, 21.
All-Star infielder Jordan Westburg? Sure, he's 26, but after missing nearly half the 2024 season after getting struck by a pitch, he's never played more than 107 games in a season.
The group, collectively, has never known failure. Never been around the block enough to know that when things bottom out, sometimes a turnaround is around the corner.
It's the kind of thing you just don't know until you're going through it – and the Orioles are going through it.
'I'm figuring that out,' Westburg tells USA TODAY Sports. 'I'm still really young in this league. I'm still finding my feet in this game. I understand that this game is very temporary and could be taken away from me at any moment. I'm trying not to focus on anything other than today. I'm trying to lean on guys and coaches who have been in this game a lot longer than me.
'And I think those guys are trying to support and get behind a lot of us young guys who maybe don't have that experience under our belt.'
'They're hard on themselves'
It's a tricky spot. The Orioles' sudden rise from 110-game losers to contenders to World Series threats was experienced collectively, every talented piece promoted along the way just another bro showing up to the party.
At some point, the Rutschmans and Hendersons went from prodigies to cogs, All-Star talents on the field but perhaps not the natural-born leaders some hope to find in their greatest players.
Now, they're a mishmash of great young talent and vets who may or may not be here a while longer, such as center fielder Cedric Mullins, a pending free agent, and slugging outfielder Tyler O'Neill, who can opt out of the final two years of his contract after this season.
At the core are the youngsters, whose dugout frolicking and childlike penchant for Star Wars and Legos belies an intensity that's usually their finest asset on the field.
Yet there's no way to outslug a 6.08 rotation ERA, no matter how stubborn you are.
'They're hard on themselves,' says Orioles manager Brandon Hyde. 'They have such high expectations for themselves that sometimes you get in your own way a little bit with that. There's some frustration with how we've been playing, frustration with how certain guys are pitching and swinging the bat; they want to perform better.
'We were the first team to 80 wins last year, and then we struggled down the stretch. There's still a lot of baseball left to play. You have to stay positive and remind them things can turn quickly.'
Westburg was in a pretty big hole himself, an 0-for-30 stretch last week that he snapped with a home run against Cincinnati. He had two more hits the next day and on Wednesday night hit an eighth-inning triple and scored the game-tying run on a sacrifice fly.
In the bottom of the inning, he nearly started a 5-4-3 double play that the Nationals beat out. They scored the decisive run on a sacrifice fly one batter later.
In Process vs. Outcome, Process took another L. Yet the grind continues.
'The term grinder infers that no matter how things are going, we're going to work, and we're going to be purpose-driven and process-oriented and I think that's a perfect term to describe this group,' says Westburg, who had 15 homers and an .815 OPS through 101 games last year. 'We don't have the flash and the money signs that a lot of teams do, and so we have to win in other ways. It's not always going to look the best or the prettiest, and at times we're going to have stretches like this.
'But we're grinders and we're going to get through it, we trust in each other, we trust that the work and the professionalism that's brought to the field every day is going to carry us through a long season.'
Mid-market malaise
Certainly, the window is not closing on this year nor the Orioles' bigger-picture title chances. But every tick toward potential free agency for Rutschman (eligible after 2027) and Henderson (2028) feels like opportunity lost.
Despite the presence of new owner David Rubenstein, the Orioles were unable to pivot toward big spenders this past off-season, losing starter Corbin Burnes to Arizona after offering a four-year deal. General manager Mike Elias wagered $15 million that Morton had one more ride in him, but a 10.89 ERA in five starts means 'everything is on the table,' says Hyde, perhaps even a bullpen demotion.
Elias did pluck Tomoyuki Sagano from Japan for $13 million, and Sagano has pitched gamely and posted a 3.54 ERA.
It's probably no surprise, then, that the body language was much better Wednesday, when Sugano put up six zeroes after giving up three runs in the first, than it was Tuesday, when Kremer quickly pitched them out of the game, and Sunday, when Morton's latest horror show set the stage for a 24-2 loss to Cincinnati.
'If we play baseball like that, we're gonna win a lot of games,' a relatively chipper Hyde said Wednesday. 'I thought we competed really well offensively. I thought we played extremely hard. Everybody was into it.'
It would be easy to blame the core for not being into it some nights. As Westburg noted, this generation of players leans heavily toward process-oriented, and controlling the controllables.
Well, there's no controlling pitcher injuries and insufficient backfilling at the position, a must for an organization whose draft strategy is largely to load up on bats and pluck pitchers from other organizations whose profiles they fancy.
So it goes for a ballclub that was 36-19 at the end of May last year, and 35-21 two years ago. That will not happen this year.
But the Orioles have no choice but to figure out another path, even if they have no map to guide them.
'It's kind of my first beginning of the season up in the big leagues, but this team expects to win,' says Holliday. 'And it's obviously frustrating to not win and perform at the level we know we can.
'But we're going to keep pushing and keep being competitive and try to push through this. We have a really good team.'
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New York Times
39 minutes ago
- New York Times
MLB's robot umps are (probably) actually near. Plus: José Ramírez's best season yet?
The Windup Newsletter ⚾ | This is The Athletic's MLB newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Windup directly in your inbox. Robot Umps Now? Well, no. But next year? It's starting to look that way … Plus: The Red Sox are keeping Ceddanne Rafaela in center field (and he's proving them right), the Sacramento experiment isn't going well for the A's, and we appreciate the (somehow, still) underappreciated José Ramírez. I'm Levi Weaver, here with Ken Rosenthal. Welcome to The Windup! In big news that is not at all surprising, commissioner Rob Manfred said yesterday he does plan to make a proposal to MLB's competition committee to introduce the automated ball/strike system (ABS) into regular-season games next year. There could be some tweaks before next year, but tweaks might be all the anti-ABS folks will get. As Drellich reports: 'The league office has enough votes on the 11-person committee — which is also made up of player representatives and one umpire — to push through what it wants.' 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Advertisement The Dodgers' five-run eighth sent the A's into a 1-20 nosedive resulting almost entirely from the failures of their bullpen. That's the baseball explanation, at least. But for owner John Fisher's vagabond franchise, wandering from Oakland to West Sacramento to the supposed promised land of Las Vegas, it's not the entire story. Not when the A's are 9-22 at Sutter Health Park, the second-worst home record in the majors, ahead of only the Colorado Rockies' 6-22 mark. And not when they're stuck at their minor-league facility through at least 2027, unlike the Tampa Bay Rays, who are playing in a minor-league park only because of a natural disaster, and only this season. 'It's certainly daunting when you zoom out and look at it,' said the A's All-Star closer, Mason Miller. 'But a blessing of being a ballplayer is you get to show up today. Today is what matters. Nothing tomorrow is guaranteed. That, at least, is how I approach it.' It is the right and only way to approach it. But that doesn't make playing at Sutter Health Park easier. The clubhouses are located in the outfield, instead of being connected to the dugout. And even after approximately $11 million in renovations, the A's reality is undeniable — they are playing in a Triple-A facility, and sharing it with the San Francisco Giants' top affiliate, the Sacramento River Cats. The Rays, 20-19 at home after a 9-16 start, found a way to adjust to their own unusual conditions at Steinbrenner Field, the spring training home of the New York Yankees. The A's, for whatever reasons, have been less successful. Their $67 million free agent, right-hander Luis Severino, is the symbol of the team's difficult transition. Severino's ERA is 6.99 at home, 0.87 on the road. 'The circumstances are what they are. We can't change those,' said A's manager Mark Kotsay, a former major-league outfielder. 'We have to find a way to embrace and make this our home like we did in Oakland.' More here. It's almost a trope now: 'Why is José Ramírez so underrated?' OK, that might be true among casual fans, but among those who play and coach in the game … he's not. Take this small excerpt from Zack Meisel's excellent profile of Ramírez: 'The suggestion that Ramírez isn't appreciated makes (Yankees manager Aaron Boone) 'want to rip my arms off and throw (them) at the TV.'' Advertisement Not sure what appendage Boone wanted to disabuse himself of last night, but Ramírez and the Guardians beat the Yankees 4-0; Ramírez went 1-for-5 with a double and extended his on-base streak to 30 games. As Meisel points out, Ramírez — a six-time All-Star and seven-time top-10 MVP finisher — might be having his best season yet, hitting .327/.382/.550 (.932 OPS) with 11 home runs in 58 games. That would be a career high in batting average, and the last two times he had a higher OPS over a full 162-game season, he finished third in MVP voting (2017-2018). (Another contender: Last year, when he hit .279/.335/.537 (.872), he finished one homer short of a 40/40 season — and was denied a shot at that last homer when the Guardians' last game was rained out.) Whether you're one of those wondering why the 32-year-old Ramírez is so underrated, or if you're still not fully aware, I highly recommend Meisel's profile, which gives us the history of the rare Cleveland superstar the team has kept around (there are details in the story on how that happened, too). If you click one link today, it should be this one. More Guardians: With this latest wave of starters, the Guardians' 'pitching factory' might not be dead, after all. Good timing: Chad Jennings already had a story coming today about whether Ceddanne Rafaela could be the next Pete Crow-Armstrong. 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NBC Sports
an hour ago
- NBC Sports
Cubs at Nationals Prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, and stats for June 5
It's Thursday, June 5, and the Cubs (38-23) are in Washington to take on the Nationals (29-32). Drew Pomeranz is slated to take the mound for Chicago against Jake Irvin for Washington. The Washington Nationals leveled the series with a 2-0 win yesterday. MacKenzie Gore pitched a gem. He struck out seven batters in 7.0 scoreless innings. Let's dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two. We've got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch tipoff, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts. Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long. Game details & how to watch Cubs at Nationals Date: Thursday, June 5, 2025 Time: 6:45PM EST Site: Nationals Park City: Washington, DC Network/Streaming: MASN, Marquee Sports Network Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out. Odds for the Cubs at the Nationals The latest odds as of Thursday: Moneyline: Cubs (-132), Nationals (+112) Spread: Cubs -1.5 Total: 9.0 runs Probable starting pitchers for Cubs at Nationals Pitching matchup for June 5, 2025: Drew Pomeranz vs. Jake Irvin Cubs: Drew Pomeranz, (2-0, 0.00 ERA) Last outing (Cincinnati Reds, 5/31): 1 Innings Pitched, 0 Earned Runs Allowed, 0 Hits Allowed, 0 Walks, and 1 StrikeoutsNationals: Jake Irvin, (5-1, 3.93 ERA) Last outing (Arizona Diamondbacks, 5/30): 5.0 Innings Pitched, 6 Earned Runs Allowed, 10 Hits Allowed, 1 Walks, and 0 Strikeouts Cubs: Drew Pomeranz, (2-0, 0.00 ERA) Last outing (Cincinnati Reds, 5/31): 1 Innings Pitched, 0 Earned Runs Allowed, 0 Hits Allowed, 0 Walks, and 1 Strikeouts Nationals: Jake Irvin, (5-1, 3.93 ERA) Last outing (Arizona Diamondbacks, 5/30): 5.0 Innings Pitched, 6 Earned Runs Allowed, 10 Hits Allowed, 1 Walks, and 0 Strikeouts Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type! Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Cubs at Nationals The Cubs have won 4 of their last 5 road series The Over is 7-2-1 in the Cubs' last 10 road games If you're looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports! Expert picks & predictions for tonight's game between the Cubs and the Nationals Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700. Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts. Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager. Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Thursday's game between the Cubs and the Nationals: Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Chicago Cubs on the Moneyline. Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Washington Nationals at +1.5. Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 9.0. Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff: Jay Croucher (@croucherJD) Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper) Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports) Brad Thomas (@MrBradThomas)


CNBC
an hour ago
- CNBC
CNBC Sport: Behind the scenes with Stephen Curry
A version of this article first appeared in the CNBC Sport newsletter with Alex Sherman, which brings you the biggest news and exclusive interviews from the worlds of sports business and media. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox. Thank you to all who watched last night's premiere of "Curry Inc.: The Business of Stephen Curry," our first longform CNBC Sport TV production. If you missed it, the full-length special is available on demand through your cable provider and on CNBC+. You can also catch a re-airing of the special on CNBC today (Thursday) at 7 p.m. ET or Saturday at 6:30 p.m. ET. Or, if you're heading out to the club Saturday night, what better way to wind down upon your return home than catching a re-airing on Sunday at 3 a.m. ET. The phrase "time slot gold" gets thrown around a lot these days, but in this case … I'm dedicating this week's newsletter to a behind-the-scenes look at how we put the production together. I spoke with Curry, the Golden State Warriors superstar, on a boat going from Oakland to San Francisco during this year's All-Star weekend. It was a cool way to get an extended one-on-one with him – heading from practice at the old Oracle Arena to the Chase Center in San Francisco. Fun fact No. 1: It was Curry's first time back at the old Oracle — where he revolutionized basketball and led Golden State to three of his four career titles — since the Warriors left Oakland in 2019. Fun fact No. 2: The initial plan was to follow Curry at Chase as he prepared for the three-point contest, but he ended up not competing when a potential showcase with WNBA stars Caitlin Clark and Sabrina Ionescu and Curry's former Warriors teammate Klay Thompson fell apart. The meat of our feature is on Curry's Thirty Ink, the mini house-of-brands conglomerate he's built over the years consisting of his media company (Unanimous Media), bourbon brand (Gentleman's Cut), marketing consultancy (7k), golf and basketball leagues for kids (Underrated Basketball and Underrated Golf), and philanthropic foundation ( Curry is the CEO of Thirty Ink. The company says all of Curry's businesses are profitable – a message his its leaders were eager to share with me, given the history of athlete-led businesses that go belly up. Thirty Ink is also in business with Under Armour through Curry Brand, which dramatically helps both the top and bottom line. Thirty Ink incurs annual expenses for delivering on Curry's name, image and likeness to earn revenue through that relationship, and those sales aren't impacted by traditional operational costs. The end result is some gaudy revenue and EBITDA numbers: $174.5 million in revenue and $144 million in EBITDA for 2024. The first half of the special mostly focuses on Thirty Ink, while the second half features longer clips from my interview with Curry. While I was eager to spend some time with Curry, the journalist in me wanted to dig up some dirt on the "real" guy. His reputation is about as clean as any athlete in history. Sportico reported earlier this year he made $100 million in sponsorship and off-court deals in 2024, more than any other NBA player. "I think Steph Curry might be the only guy to ever go through this league that never receives hate," ex-teammate DeMarcus Cousins said earlier this year . "He's the golden child." I was determined to get his longtime head coach Steve Kerr to give me the real deal. What's Curry like when the cameras aren't all on? "He makes every day comfortable for the group," Kerr said. "When he's in the building, there's a sense of joy, there's a sense of calm, there's a sense of attention to the work that needs to be done. And it's kind of a wonderful compilation of all that, where there's just a really healthy vibe in the building when he's there leading. He doesn't have to say much. He just has to be himself, and the rest of the guys follow him." I tried another former teammate, Andre Iguodala . Give me something, man! "With Steph, it's about, 'how can you be a generational figure?' He's done it on the court, and now he's trying to do it off the court, and in his philanthropic ways that he's doing it, and then at the same time, the businesses that he's building – you look at some of the greatest athletes, you know, talk about Michael Jordan ," Iguodala told me. "You can put Greg Norman in there, in golf, his apparel line. And Steph is able to do it on the tech side of things, as well." Curry's Thirty Ink coworkers, including Chief Operating Officer Tiffany Williams , Secretary-Chairman Suresh Singh , Unanimous Media co-CEO Erick Peyton , and 7k Managing Partner Ariel Johnson Lin , were also no help. He's really the same down-to-earth guy when you're working with him? "That's probably the most asked question that I get," Williams said. "And he is definitely still that guy, that really extremely nice guy – when he's working with you on something that is his focus right then and there, and providing that attention and insight and making sure that he helps you and supports you with whatever it is that you need." Striking out repeatedly with his inner circle, I asked Curry directly: Do you have any flaws? "I appreciate the fact that people have good reports on when they have an interaction with me," said Curry. "But outside of that, we all like to be a better husband, a better father, more present at times just 'cause we're pulled, I'm pulled, in a lot of different areas and balancing all of that is a daily struggle, or challenge I should say. But yeah, I'm human like everybody. You have doubts about yourself." I asked him if the weight of being a walking brand – and now the CEO of a company with 65 people working for him – can at times be overwhelming. "I'm pretty authentic in how I approach every role in my life, whether it's on camera or not, whether I got the jersey on or not, or whether I'm at home or not," Curry said. "I try to be the same person kind of through. But the idea that you do know you're on stage, you have a spotlight on you – there's a lot at stake in terms of the opportunities that are created around my world, and how many people are relying on that. I appreciate the responsibility, even though I might be the one that carries that weight. And that weight becomes heavier and heavier, but I have great people around me. I have ways that I can have my own kind of release and in personal time where I can fill up my cup too." My takeaway is: I couldn't find a dark side to Curry because I don't think there is one. "His authenticity, his joy, his perspective, his humility, his audacity – the combination of all that is so unique," said Kerr. "I've never seen anybody like him." I followed Curry around for a few days for the project, going from place to place as he attended various sponsorship obligations and charitable events. Granted, it was All-Star weekend in his hometown, so I imagine his agenda was busier than normal, but it was eye-opening to see how comfortable Curry is around crowds and fans. He gravitates toward large groups of people – even cameras – rather than shy away. "Especially All-Star weekend, the fan interactions and energy that you get from people that just want a second to say hi or an autograph – I don't ever take those interactions or moments for granted," Curry told me. "If I'm talking about a packed schedule of meet and greets and fun stuff and activation and celebrating basketball, then life is good." One more moment that didn't make the final piece but was a fun story for my kids – CNBC Sport producer Jess Golden and I wound up as audience members in a Mr. Beast video. You can see us for a couple of seconds dopily trying to take a picture for our children at the 4:50 mark of this video , before the producers forced everyone to put away their phones. By the way, the notion of parents impressing their kids by hanging out with Mr. Beast doesn't just apply to us – Curry, himself, immediately called his own kids to show off he was standing next to him. Best NBA shooters of all time: they're just like us! Curry participated in the Mr. Beast stunt at a local Oakland high school, where he tried to make more three-pointers in 30 seconds than a student could in 60 seconds. Fun fact No. 3: **Spoiler alert**... In the video, just before you see us, the high schooler says he's more of a LeBron James fan than a Curry guy. I can confirm that Curry debated going easy on him until he heard that – "and then the drive kicked in," just as it did during his four Finals clashes with James. Curry won three of those. Refusing to let a local kid win $100,000 in front of his classmates – does that count as a dark side? That's as much as I've got. On the record With Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr ... We at CNBC Sport wanted to give you the full interviews from both Kerr and Curry, because there's a lot that didn't make the special. As it turns out, for legal reasons, we can't include any audio that actually aired in the CNBC piece. So, we're giving you the full interviews minus anything that made our production. I asked Curry if he thinks he's ruined NBA gameplay by shooting so many three-pointers so accurately. He has shot more than nine threes per game for his career, more than any player in league history, and has hit a remarkable 42% of those shots. From 1979 to 2009, the year Curry joined the NBA, teams averaged 10.7 three-pointers per game, according to data from research firm SportRadar. From 2009 to the present, NBA teams have shot 27.6 threes a game. While the league's focus on analytics that emphasize the value of three-point shots has helped to fuel that shift, Curry's success has undoubtedly played a massive role. (Another illustration of how the game has changed: Curry's coach Kerr, who is the NBA's all-time three-point percentage leader at 45%, shot about two three-pointers per game for his career from 1988 to 2003). Curry said the problem is nuanced. It's not that teams are shooting too many threes – it's that guys who shouldn't be shooting them are doing it. "Should everybody shoot it? No, because not everybody works at it the way they should. Not everybody is as skilled at it as they should be," Curry said. "That doesn't mean that it's ruining the game. Everything evolves. That's the nature of life. That's the nature of sports. Everything evolves. Every sport – every sport is played differently than it was 10, 20 years ago. So, the question, I guess the fear, is like, where does it go from here? Like, are you gonna see teams shooting 60, 70 threes a game? I don't think so." The overabundance of threes creates a stylistic problem for the NBA, said Curry. Too many game plans revolve around jacking up threes when some teams don't have the proper players to execute the strategy, he said. "The bigger problem is that there is this idea that every team plays a similar style versus maybe 10 years ago where you see the run-and- gun Warriors, and then you see the slow-it-down-and-grind-you Memphis Grizzlies, and the kind of ball movement – the beautiful game – San Antonio Spurs," said Curry. "Everybody played a little bit different. Now, there's kind of a more similar style." Curry also told me the three-point line should "potentially" be moved back to force teams to change strategies if they don't have players who can knock down longer threes with consistency. "It would favor me, so maybe," Curry noted. Watch more of my interview with Curry here . Listen to both extended cut interviews here and make sure to follow the CNBC Sport podcast. This week's audio-only version includes an introduction where my colleague Jess Golden and I talk about our impressions of Curry and putting the production together over the past few months. CNBC Sport highlight reel We put together a few different stories about Curry from all of our interviews: Thirty Ink's financials are impressive – $174 million in revenue and an astounding $144 million in EBITDA for 2024, due to an unusual agreement with Under Armour's Curry Brand. Curry told me he's open to pursuing a broadcasting career when he retires, but he's also thinking about team ownership and even playing on the PGA Tour Champions when he turns 50. One of the more interesting anecdotes from the piece is Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank 's story about using former Golden State Warriors teammate Kent Bazemore to convince Curry to leave Nike and come to UA. We highlighted that tale here. The thing Curry told me that most shocked me? That he still suffers from imposter syndrome at times. The big numbers: Keeping the focus on Curry this week, I've got three Big Numbers for you – all thanks to SportRadar, which collected the data. 4,058 That's how many three pointers Curry has made in his career, by far the most in league history. He's nearly 900 ahead of the next guy – Los Angeles Clippers guard James Harden , who has made 3,175. 19.6 feet That's the average shot distance for a Curry jumper since 2020-21 – nearly two feet further than any other player that has averaged 20 or more points in a season in the last five years. An NBA three pointer is 23 feet, 9 inches from top of the key, and 22 feet from the basket at the corners of the floor. .711 That's the Golden State Warriors' win percentage since 2015 with Curry in the lineup. That means the Warriors have won more than 70% of the time when Curry plays in that stretch. Needless to say, no team in the NBA has won more frequently in the last ten years. Quote of the week "It's a deep question, because you think about it all the time. I know I've been blessed with a God-given ability when I stepped foot on the floor when I was five years old. Figuring out a way to put the ball in a basket kind of came naturally. You add that with a work ethic that I know I've…I've poured my heart and soul into perfecting this craft and stretching my imagination on what I could actually do on a basketball court with the skill set of shooting. And even at 36 [now 37] and 16 years in the league, I still get lost in that pursuit of perfection. It's my happy place when I'm out there on the court. I truly enjoy it and have fun every time I'm out there. The job of the NBA and all that hasn't really threatened that at all. So, matching the God-given abilities and the work ethic and just being able to lose myself in the game, I think is a good formula." — Curry, answering my question of why, of every basketball player to ever step on a court, he's the best shooter of them all. Around the league A CNBC Sport exclusive - Sotheby's is auctioning off the jersey Curry wore when he made his first three-pointer in his first NBA season (2009-10). Curry made the shot in his second-ever NBA game. He went on to wear the jersey in 24 more games. To Sotheby's knowledge, the jersey "represents not only the first Stephen Curry rookie jersey ever offered at public auction, but also the most heavily worn Curry jersey—from any point in his career—known to have surfaced." The auction house estimates the jersey will sell for more than $1 million. The item will be offered as part of Sotheby's "Summer Sports Classics" auction, which begins later this month. Curry will once again participate in this summer's American Century Championship celebrity golf tournament, which he won in 2023, in South Lake Tahoe at the Edgewood Tahoe Golf Course. He didn't play last year because he was in Paris winning a gold medal for the U.S. Olympic basketball team. The tournament will air on NBC Sports, Golf Channel and Peacock over the course of three days. He'll compete against other athletes and celebrities including his dad Dell and brother Seth, Tony Romo , Steve Young , Jerry Rice , Aaron Rodgers, Colin Jost and Charles Barkley , though it's debatable if you can say Barkley really competes (he finished in 81st the year Curry won but did improve to a respectable 58th last year). The tournament runs from July 11 to July 13.