Stephen

Steph Curry has to wait two more weeks for historic achievement with his brother

Steph Curry forced to wait as Seth Curry injury timeline is extended

The Golden State Warriors provided an update on Seth Curry’s status in a statement shared publicly by Warriors PR, outlining his current recovery progress.

“Golden State Warriors guard, Seth Curry, who has missed the last 18 games due to a Sciatic nerve-related injury, was recently re-evaluated,” the reporter revealed.

It added: “The re-evaluation indicated that Curry is making good progress. He has progressed to various on-court workouts—in addition to his daily rehab work—and will be re-evaluated again in two weeks.”

The update confirms that while Seth is moving in the right direction, he remains unavailable for game action in the immediate future.

As a result, Steph Curry’s wait to share the court with his brother must continue.

Steph and Seth Curry still chasing rare on-court milestone

The historic moment in question would see Steph and Seth Curry play together for the same NBA team in the same game.

Although Seth has appeared in two games for the Warriors this season, Steph was not active for either contest. That scheduling quirk has so far prevented the brothers from lining up side by side.

Playing together would mark a unique chapter in NBA history, given both brothers’ established careers and long-standing family ties to the league. For Steph, it would represent more than just another game, it would be a personal milestone.

Until Seth is fully cleared and both are available on the same night, the moment will remain just out of reach.

 have his number. Go check that up. He knows it too. That’s the one guy in the NBA, I have his number.”

“Everybody now is taking that blueprint of guarding him. You never guard him with a big. Or else, you’ll see how he’s gonna torch.”

How Brooks thinks Wembanyama should be defended

Dillon Brooks went further by outlining the techniques he believes are essential to slowing Victor Wembanyama down. His focus centered on pressure, spacing, and denying easy paths to the basket.

“You gotta put a guard on him, all up on his space – tight. Do not let him set dribbles. Then keep him away from the rim.

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