Stephen Curry Admits to “Mental Warfare” After Warriors Scrap Past Suns
If you thought the Golden State Warriors were finally ready to fade into the sunset and let the next generation take over, Curry has some bad news for you.
In a game that felt like a chaotic ranked match where half your teammates are AFK and the other half are trolling, the Warriors managed to squeeze out a 119-116 win over the Phoenix Suns on Saturday. It wasn’t pretty, it wasn’t clean, and it featured the mandatory Draymond Green ejection (because of course it did), but Golden State snapped their three-game losing streak.
And the reason? It wasn’t some complex new defensive schema or a sudden youth movement. It was the 37-year-old point guard deciding to play psychological horror games with the opposition.
The Smile That Tilts the Server
After the game, Curry dropped a quote that sounds less like an athlete and more like a comic book villain explaining his master plan. When asked about his demeanor at the free-throw lineโspecifically that unnerving grin he flashes while the game is on the lineโhe didn’t give the standard PR answer about “staying focused.”
“No, that’s more mental warfare for me to just enjoy the moment,” Curry told reporters. “If anybody tells you at any stage of the crowd… when you need two of them, you do get nervous. So the smile is more to kinda embrace the moment and enjoy it instead of overthinking.”
Letโs be real for a second. If you are an opposing player and you see the greatest shooter of all time smiling while the game hangs in the balance, that isn’t comforting. Thatโs terrifying. Itโs the equivalent of a boss in Elden Ring laughing before one-shotting your character. Curry basically admitted heโs playing mind games with himself to avoid the nerves, but the splash damage hits everyone else on the court.
He finished the night with 28 points, 10 boards, and six assists. He was flirting with a triple-double, but honestly, at this stage in his career, the fact that heโs still carrying a 32% usage rate is absolutely wild. The man is essentially solo-queueing in the NBA.
Jimmy Butler and the Chaos Factor
We have to talk about the supporting cast, because Curry didn’t do this entirely alone. In this bizarre 2025 timeline, Jimmy Butler is wearing a Warriors jersey (still weird to see, right?), and he actually pulled his weight. Butler dropped 25 points and converted a massive three-point play late in the game that kept the Warriors alive.
Itโs a good thing, too, because the “Draymond Green Experience” is still running on its usual loop. Green got himself ejected, leaving the squad to fend for themselves in a chippy, physical contest. It feels like the writers of this NBA season are reusing old scripts at this point. Green gets tossed, Curry has to go supernova to save the day, and Steve Kerr has to answer awkward questions post-game. Rinse and repeat.

A Bounce Back for the Ages
This performance was a massive pivot from his previous outing against Phoenix, where Curry looked mortal, scoring only 15 points on terrible shooting efficiency. That loss felt like the end of an era; this win felt like a refusal to die.
The Warriors are sitting at 14-15 right now. They aren’t the dynasty anymore. Theyโre a scrappy, inconsistent play-in team that relies way too heavily on an aging superstar to bail them out of bad situations. But when that superstar can simply decide to engage in “mental warfare” and drop 14 points in the fourth quarter alone, you can’t count them out.
Phoenix had Devin Booker dropping 38 points, and frankly, on paper, the Suns should have won this. They have the younger legs and the better roster depth. But they don’t have the guy who smiles when the pressure is highest.
As long as Curry is willing to play these mind gamesโand as long as his mechanics hold up better than a Bethesda game at launchโthe Warriors are going to be a headache for the rest of the league.
