Stephen+curry+underrated+repack [UHD | 360p]
This packaging ignored everything that made him revolutionary: the handling in traffic, the finishing against length, the gravitational pull that warps defensive schemes. For the first five years of his career, Curry was treated as a luxury piece—a rich man’s J.J. Redick—rather than a franchise cornerstone.
This is the most durable undervaluation tool used against Curry. LeBron is the system. Luka is the system. Giannis is the system. But somehow, Curry—who makes the system work by sprinting off screens like a decathlete—is merely a beneficiary. stephen+curry+underrated+repack
Over the last three seasons, Curry leads the NBA in clutch field goal percentage (last two minutes, margin within 5 points) among players with over 50 attempts. He also leads in plus/minus in clutch situations. Yet every December, when a talking head lists “five players you want taking the last shot,” Curry is somehow fourth or fifth. This is the most durable undervaluation tool used
The term “repack” is borrowed from the world of finance and logistics—to take an existing asset, strip away the outdated packaging, and present it in a container that accurately reflects its current value. For over a decade, the NBA has consistently failed to package Stephen Curry correctly. He is simultaneously a four-time champion, a two-time MVP (one unanimous), a Finals MVP, and yet… perpetually misunderstood. Giannis is the system
This phenomenon has become so predictable that analysts have coined a new strategic framework for it:
Curry’s career true shooting percentage (.626) is higher than Larry Bird’s (.564), Magic’s (.610), and Durant’s (.616). He is the most efficient high-volume scorer in playoff history, not just regular season.
Most small guards decline at 32 (Isaiah Thomas, Kemba Walker). Curry won a Finals MVP at 34 and is still averaging 27 PPG at 36. That’s not normal. That’s Duncan/Kareem longevity.