The Home Team: Stephen Curry â10 on the Improbable Journey That Began at Davidson
December 1, 2022
- Author
- David Dennis Jr. â08

There was a moment after the Curry For 3 eventâin which Davidson celebrated Stephen Curryâs graduation, Hall of Fame induction and jersey retirement in Augustâwhere I was able to steal a few minutes to talk to my friend-turned-four-time-NBA-champion-turned-Davidson alum.
We were on the basketball teamsâ practice court for a friends and family reception. Children had been following Stephen around since he walked in and, naturally, he stopped to talk and play with every single one of them. So, I waited until Stephen made his rounds and then he walked over to me. And we said the same thing we say every time we see each other: âCan you believe this journey?â
I met Stephen Curry a few days before classes started my junior year, in the fall of 2006. I remember it vividly, not because most people in the world remember the time they met a future NBA Hall of Famer. I remember the moment because it was so awkward: the personâI donât remember exactly who it wasâwho introduced Stephen to me told me that he was about to be on the basketball team and that he was good. I nodded, dapped Stephen up and asked him which year he was coming to the school. See, I thought the scrawny kid with a bright smile and clothes that looked a couple of sizes too big was 12, and that Iâd be long gone before he got to campus. I felt my face turn beet red when he said he was a freshman. I figured Iâd insulted him, but I didnât know just how used to being underrated heâd already become; and how much heâd grow to relish proving people wrong.
It wouldnât take long for me to realize how special a basketball player Stephen Curry was, but it would take even less time for us to be friends. Weâd spend weekend nights listening to music and freestyle rapping in Stephenâs teammatesââLamar Hull and Boris Menoâdorm. Heâd come to my dorm to help package up CDs for me to sell for my short-lived rap career. It was in these moments that weâd dream about our futures: me wanting to be a journalist, him wanting to be in the NBA. Stephenâs dream had become more real seemingly overnight thanks to a Cinderella 2008 Elite 8, where he wowed America by beating powerhouse teams like Georgetown and Gonzaga as part of a legendary run that, if youâre reading this, youâve surely committed to memory by now.
As Stephen was making his improbable run, students at Davidson were coming together to speak out against discrimination and push for equity on campus, donning âDo I Make You Uncomfortable?â shirts. Even as his fame was ballooning Stephen was front and center wearing his shirt, making his voice heard alongside his fellow classmatesâa move that would help set the tone for the way heâd go on to speak out about global injustices as he became a household name.
Iâd graduate two months after that March Madness magic in 2008. A year later, Stephen would enter the NBA draft.
And weâd keep in touch. Iâd see him at Warriors games in New Orleans while struggling to make a living as a freelance journalist. Stephenâs team was a laughingstock in the league as questions about the kid from Davidsonâs ankles became the dominant narrative of his early career. I'd start covering All-Star games. Stephen would play in them. When he won a championship, I was writing articles about him.
And this summer when my first book came out, Stephen was in the middle of a playoff run that would net him his fourth NBA title and first finals MVP. After each Warriors playoff game, Iâd go on TV, scream at the top of my lungs about Davidson and tell the country how proud I was of my friend.
Through it allâthe years, the doubts, the joys and sadnessesâweâd text, send messages, encourage each other and celebrate one another. So, when we stood there at the moment that was the culmination of the last 13 years of Stephenâs athletic and academic journey, we could only shake our heads.
âCan you believe this journey?â Heâd repeat.
âNope, not at all,â Iâd reply.


A few weeks after the Curry for 3 celebration, Stephen and I were able to catch up and talk about what it means to be a graduate, our college memories and how being at Davidson prepared us to take on an ever-changing world around us.
The conversation between David Dennis Jr. (DD) and Stephen Curry (SC) has been edited for clarity and brevity.
DD: You had your graduation some weeks ago. Have you had a chance to process the moment and everything that happened?
SC: It was like a class reunion and homecoming built into one. I've been able to process a little bit, still it was overwhelming to have the one-man graduation. I appreciate the fact that there was a nice balance of honoring the accomplishment but also what it meant to celebrate what we accomplished on the court and the uniqueness of Davidson, and what it means to be a Wildcat. It was a dream come true, for sure.
DD: By the way, I just want to let you know that the current freshmen were two years old when you were a freshman at Davidson. I just wanted to make you feel as old as I do.
SC: Wow! You just changed my whole perspective on everything.
DD: I was sitting in front of these students at the ceremony and they were awestruck, asking each other if theyâd met you. That was so interesting to me because when you were on campus, nobody was starstruck by you.
SC: We had such a ânormalâ experience of being a student first and an athlete second. There was a slow, slow drip of the basketball teams doing something special before the national interest in what we were doing came along. So, we never got too ahead of ourselves.
DD: Exactly. You were just Stephen the whole time I was there.
SC: Right. The story I go back to is the time I was in your dorm and the doors open, and weâd just lost to UNC and one of the kids walked by the door and looked at me so dramatic and goes, âHeartbreaking,â and he just stood there. (Laughs) It was like it was normal, and that it wasnât too much hype around us.
Lemme ask you this: what was it like for you to watch the humble beginnings all the way to where we are now?
DD: People rewrite that history of you as if you were predetermined to go to the NBA. But you were still a fringe NBA prospect even after the tournament, so it was just like, âCool, one of my friends is on ESPN.â But that was sort of it.
I do remember once we were at the library studying and you were on Facebook, and where it said âfriend requestsâ it was just an infinity sign. (Laughs)
SC: Oh, yeah! (Laughs)
DD: It was just cool to see someone from Davidson doing something great. You are still as down to earth as everyone says. How did that normalcy you experienced at Davidson shape you?
SC: Itâs allowed me to establish a grounding and a perspective, because I never drank my own Kool-Aid. I never got too ahead of myself in terms of journey.
There was always an acknowledgment of the value everybody brought to the table to help me be successful. I know for a fact I'm not playing without every single person I got to rock with on the floor, so I carried that to the league. But you know, those lessons of how you build success and being in the moment came from Davidson.
DD: I remember we hung out in Houston for All-Star weekend in 2013 and it was the last All-Star team you werenât voted to be on. And you were able to walk to the game and only get stopped a couple of times for autographs. I canât imagine that happens anywhere anymore. Where do you go to feel that normalcy you felt at Davidson again?
SC: Honestly, it's home. First and foremost, I have my three kids, who are 10, seven, and four now, but this is a safe haven. Me being a dad and a husband, and you know, fulfilling those roles to the best of my ability.
But itâs different. There are a lot of sacrifices. I never thought Iâd be in the position that I am right now where those normal spaces are kind of hard to findâjust having to call my security to be able to go to dinner in San Francisco. So yeah, things have changed, but I know where I came from. Thatâs why that graduation ceremony was so special to meâbecause it's the grounding effect, and the foundation of what makes me who I am today.
DD: I want to talk a little bit about community building. That's something thatâs embedded in my family, and itâs important to me with social justice work. I look at the way youâve built community in Oakland in the Bay area, like when you first got drafted, I was like, âMan that's so far from home. How is he going to make it?â
SC: To be honest, I didnât even know where Golden State played (laughs). I had no clue.
DD: What does that mean to you, to build community?
SC: First, itâs discovering my new environment. Then itâs a lot of trial and error in terms of finding things that I was passionate about outside of basketball. And then connecting with the right people and community leaders that could help influence and educate me on certain issues.
And now Ayesha and I have the Eat. Learn. Play. Foundation thatâs doing a lot of amazing work, humbly speaking. I think a lot of it is being able to walk into a room and be human. I have a genuine curiosity about people, and where they come from, and try to ask the right questions. I try to be approachable, and I think that resonates with a lot of people.

DD: When I got to Davidson it was really my first time around a lot of white folks. Being there was one of my first times learning about Movement work and how to fight. I love Davidson, obviously, but it was not perfect. Youâre doing this on a large scale. What is your process, from seeing this thing that is wrong and figuring out how to make a difference?
SC: First and foremost, thereâs an influence from you and Clint Smith (â10) and that circle. You all took advantage of those moments where you could speak up to really galvanize around a pivotal issue that needed to be addressed and highlighted, even down to the âDo I Make You Uncomfortableâ t-shirts, and just the way that you know the subtle undertones around campus that we all experienced in some wayâŠmaking those shirts and having tough conversations, understanding that you might piss some people off in the process, but that what youâre trying to do is for the greater good.
DD: Right, thatâs exactly it.
SC: Thatâs what itâs all about. So just having the boldness to step into those arenas, I learned that from yâall, and that you can kind of take the spirit of what that Movement was.
Weâre here to be respectful, but weâre here to change things and have those tough conversations. I try to carry that through some of the spaces where Iâve shown up since Iâve left. Whether itâs the Trump issue, and the North Carolina bathroom issue. Thereâs been a lot of times where I can speak up.
DD: There are a lot of celebrities and athletes who are scared to speak up because they donât want to speak without learning enough, or they speak before learning and it turns out badly.
How do you continue the learning processâbecause it doesnât seem like youâre just flying off the cuff whenever you speak up, and you seem to have a plan.
SC: My whole job is to not feel like Iâm an expert on anything, but I do have the access to the right people and can amplify their work and their voice to levels that will hopefully move the needle. And again, like you say, one thing that athletes kind of get a bad rap for is when you get asked a question and you actually do have to do homework on that subject. Some people say thatâs a cop-out answer. But itâs okay to not talk out the side of your face if you really donât know, because that could do a lot of damage. It all goes back to being curious, but also being able to admit what you donât know and try to find the right people that do [know].
DD: So whatâs your process of figuring out how to act?
SC: I want to be educated on what Iâm talking about. Iâm not going to please everybody with what I say. But if you come at it from an aggressive, but respectful, standpoint, you can foster the right conversations that need to happen.
Before Davidson, I really hadnât had that experience. Like you said, it wasnât perfect. But it meant a lot to be around great leaders, and the same leaders like yâall, and follow suit.
DD: It was 15 or so years ago we were in the dorms dreaming about all this. And we still have this connection that feels like this uniquely Davidson thing.
SC: It all comes from humble beginnings. We all chose Davidson for a reason and there is such a unique vibe there where we could really explore and find ourselves. I wouldnât change anything about this journey.
David Dennis Jr. â08 is the author of The Movement Made Us and the recipient of the 2021 American Mosaic Journalism Prize.

Photo by Tim Cowie
This article was originally published in the Fall/Winter 2022 print issue of the Davidson Journal Magazine; for more, please see the Davidson Journal section of our website.