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Meet Steph Curry: The Three-Point Specialist Who Rewired Basketball’s Value System

Prior to Stephen Curry, the three-point shot was a luxury. Now it's a necessary skill.

Testimony Okeyode
Testimony Okeyode
22/01/2026
5 min read

Basketball had an unwritten hierarchy that was followed over decades. Big men ruled the paint. The midrange scorers were artists. Three-point shooters were experts.

Curry did not simply upset that order, he demolished it and replaced it with a new value system according to which everything is determined by the spacing, gravity and shooting range.

It is not merely the tale of a high-profile shooter. It is how one player changed the way basketball is played, coached and assessed.

Steph Curry

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A Specialist Who Refused to Stay in His Lane

In the year 2009, when Steph Curry joined the NBA, he was followed by skepticism. He was small, weak, and an athlete in a mid-major program. Even his shooting was treated with suspicion. Pull-up threes were viewed as irresponsible. But Curry didn't conform, he expanded


He took the three-point line as a suggestion as opposed to considering it a boundary. He shot the ball in a different way, off movement, off balance, off screens, and even distances that were straining defensive reasoning.

It was not only accurate but audacious and efficient. He didn't just shoot better than everyone from the three point line, he made those shots matter more.

The Unseen Stat That Changed Everything.

Conventional statistics were unable to portray the real impact of Curry. The numbers, assists, and percentages told a half-story. His true worth existed in what guards had no choice but to do due to him.

The shooting range of Curry was a gravity, a force that could not be seen, but distorted the defensive shape. He was picked up by defenders close to the half-court. He made defenders hesitate, he pulled defenders to him so as to create space for other players

The dynasty of Golden State was not only successful due to the fact that Curry was always the one who had the ball in his hand, but because he could bend the floor. The baskets which teammates scored with ease were not because of the isolation brilliance, but because the defensive schemes became unsustainable because of one player.

Off-ball dominance had never been so highly appreciated in basketball. Curry made it unavoidable.

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Steph Curry

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Efficiency Over Aesthetics

Volume deep shooting used to be regarded as a form of inefficiency prior to Curry. Better attempts normally resulted in lower percentages. Curry turned the argument in reverse.

He took a high challenge with elite efficiency and made it clear that it is not the distance that makes a good shot, but skills. A Curry pull-up three even at 30 feet was often a superior shot to a challenged midrange jumper.

This compelled teams, analysts and front offices to reconsider the idea of shot selection altogether. The math started to match the eye test. Three, becoming efficient, was more comfortable than two old-fashioned points.

The league didn't just notice. It adapted.

How The League Followed The Blueprint

This is not all that Curry influenced. It redefined the construction of rosters. The big players needed to be stretched. Guards were now expected to shoot, not just manage. Wings which were not able to space the floor became liabilities

Young players now practice step-back threes instead of post moves. Entire offensive systems were redesigned around spacing, movement and shot selection.

Teams didn't just want shooters, they wanted a high level threat from anywhere on the floor like Steph Curry

The three-point line became the center of basketball strategy.

The New Value System

Today's basketball reflects Curry's legacy. Gravity is important. Shooting range is priceless.

Players are no longer judged only by how many points they score, but also by how they stretch opponent's defenses, create space for teammates and counter tactical boundaries.

At the center of this evolution stands Steph Curry. Not because he invented the three point shot but he changed how it was perceived.

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