BREAKING: Warriors Turn Heads with Steph Curry Post Amid Offseason
After closing the 2024‑25 season with a 48‑34 record and a run to the Western Conference semifinals, the Golden State Warriors have turned their attention to the offseason and the upcoming NBA draft.
Yet despite all the moving parts, Steph Curry remains the defining figure of Golden State’s modern era.
Amid the flurry of draft speculation and trade rumors, the Warriors took to X on Wednesday to remind fans just how unlikely Curry’s path to greatness appeared on day one.
Golden State shared a video featuring Curry reading his pre‑draft scouting report, in which evaluators warned that "at 6-foot-2, he's extremely small for the shooting guard position" and questioned his athleticism, defensive potential and ability to run an NBA offense.
In the clip, Curry reads aloud, "struggles defensively, getting around screens" and "needs to add some muscle, but appears as though he'll always be skinny," before shrugging and saying, "A for effort. I appreciate all the motivation and inspiration to do everything this paper said I couldn't do."
The post was accompanied by the caption, "Look at 30 now 😏."
Look at 30 now 😏 pic.twitter.com/Rwa8LgEean
— Golden State Warriors (@warriors) June 17, 2025
Fans online were quick to react to the post.
"That is why he is the GOAT," said one user.
"Wow 😭 who the heck wrote that??," another fan replied.
"Love you curry!" commented one other fan.
"my GOAT 🐐," wrote another user.
"But they were actually right, and as soon as he worked on all thise things, the success came. The scouts can't see the future the can only tell the present and at best make projections. So win win," one other commenter responded.
"GOAT 🐐," another fan commented.
Golden State Warriors guard Steph Curry (30).
David Gonzales-Imagn Images
Through 16 NBA seasons, Curry’s resume already includes four NBA championships, two NBA MVP awards (including the first unanimous selection in 2015‑16) and the all‑time record for career 3‑pointers made (4,058).
His career averages through 2024‑25 stand at 24.7 points, 6.4 assists and 4.7 rebounds per game, with a historic 91.1% free‑throw percentage, the highest in league history.