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"I'm probably never going to do it again" - Stephen Curry explains why he might never compete in the 3-point contest again

"I'm probably never going to do it again" - Stephen Curry explains why he might never compete in the 3-point contest again

Yahoo10-05-2025

There is perhaps no tighter connection in basketball than Stephen Curry and the 3-point line. He mastered it and rebuilt the league around it. The moment he crosses halfcourt, defenders tense up.
And when All-Star Weekend rolls in, the 3-point contest becomes a stage uniquely his. Curry made the long ball feel like a layup and when his name" in the lineup, opponents might as well start engraving the trophy. But now, that moment might have seen its last light.
Leaving the contest
At 37, the Golden State Warriors point guard is still launching daggers from way beyond the arc, still leading the league in deep-range attempts and accuracy. But the contest — the spectacle, the ritual, the repetition — is no longer calling his name the way it once did.
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"I love it so much I'm probably never going to do it again," Curry said of the 3-point contest.
Curry has turned the 3-point contest into something of a ceremony. He never needed to win to prove his dominance — his in-game resume speaks louder than any trophy — but every time he showed up, it became must-watch TV.
His rhythm in that setting was hypnotic. The way he moved from rack to rack, barely missing a beat, was just brilliance. But even the greatest know when to leave the stage.
The four-time NBA champion has already revolutionized the game and the new generation is now shooting from beyond the arc. It's only right he let them take center stage during the All-Star weekend.
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Related: Erik Spoelstra called out the rest of the NBA for being hypocrites: "If they had the opportunity to sign three players the way we were able to, they would have without any hesitation"
Curry's 3-point contest legacy
Steph has entered the 3-point contest seven times, walking away with the crown in 2015 and 2021. In both of those years, he took over.
"The two times I've won it, you feel, you hear the crowd and you know it's just you," Curry recalled. "And you just saying, 'How long can I keep this going? Get to the last rack, get to the last ball.' That's one of the best feelings in the world."
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That 2021 performance was unforgettable. He dropped 31 points in the final round, edging out Mike Conley in a buzzer-beating finish that had the arena shaking. It was vintage Curry — clutch, smooth, surgical. And the crowd fed off it like a wave.
The contest has evolved since his first entry in 2010. The rules changed, the racks changed and even the money balls shifted locations. But Curry stayed constant. Whether he walked away with the trophy or not, his presence elevated the event. In truth, his absence will echo louder than any loss.
He walks away with the second-most appearances in contest history — only behind Craig Hodges and holds one of the highest career averages per round. But that stat sheet isn't what defines his time there. It's the energy he created every time he walked on that floor. The way the other shooters measured themselves against him. The way fans expected magic and almost always got it.
There's nothing left to prove. Until he retires, Steph will still be making 3s when the lights are brightest — just not during All-Star Saturday night. For now, that part of his journey is closed, like a chapter that ended with a perfect final sentence. And fittingly, it ends with satisfaction.
Related: "It's like you went and watched Cirque Du Soleil" - Draymond Green says NBA is lucky to have Stephen Curry

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