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    • Don’t Judge a Book by Its Cover - Curry is 6’3” and 190 pounds, which is small compared to the NBA average of 6’7” and 225 pounds. Because nearly every college coach underestimated his greatness, he ended up at Davidson College rather than a traditional basketball powerhouse, much in the same way Steve Nash ended up at Santa Clara University.
    • Never Stop Trying to Improve - As remarkable as it is for Curry to have won back-to-back MVPs and to be the first person in history to have been voted MVP unanimously, the more amazing fact is he may be the most improved player.
    • Good Guys Can and Do Finish First - Simply put, Curry is a really nice guy. I don’t know him personally, however, I have friends who know him very well and spend a lot of time with him in a variety of environments.
    • A Team-First Mentality Pays Off for Everyone - Curry is all about the team. His commitment and belief that a team’s success will lead to greater opportunities for the individual members is well documented.
    • Early battles with his brother Seth Curry. Stephen Curry has a younger brother named Seth, that joined the NBA in 2015. In their younger days they would play 1 on 1 pick up games and follow their father in NBA games across the country where they would sometimes shoot the ball in the pre-game warms ups.
    • Rise up to Expectations in High School? If you are a son of a former NBA star expectations are high as they can be, when people see you playing basketball they expect to see amazing things from you.
    • College Dreams - College Reality. He dreamed about going to Virginia Tech in his senior year like is father but sadly he got unrecruited by a college major program.
    • Still underrated at the NBA Draft? In 2009 Curry applied for the NBA and got drafted 7th overall. That's not really bad, but if you consider that the top players usually go in the top 5, and, that from the players drafted prior to Curry only 2 where named All Stars by 2015, you get the underrated picture.
    • Continuous Improvement
    • Tolerance For Variation
    • Just Finishing Equals Losing

    The Warriors’ point guard goes to extreme lengthsto improve the odds that any given basketball he shoots will swish through the net. This embraces the concept of continuous process improvement, said Darden School of Business professor Elliott Weiss. “I teach and write on continuous process improvement, the relentless pursuit of creating value,” Wei...

    The same concept applies to business products, Weiss explained. Whether you are manufacturing a bookcase for IKEA or a car door for Toyota, you only have a set amount of tolerance for variation in the process before a component is “out of spec” and the product fails. Only by continuously improving your operations can you create high enough degree o...

    Behind all this training, Weiss said, is a recognition that the standards of the game are changing; in basketball as in business, customer needs and expectations are changing. The same way cars have improved their gas mileage or computers have become more reliable, it’s no longer enough for a top NBA player to perfect a solid jump shot. In recent d...

  1. Oct 18, 2023 · Embracing setbacks as learning opportunities is the secret behind the success of elite athletes like Stephen Curry. Learn how adopting a similar mindset can redefine failure and fuel your...

  2. May 19, 2020 · Curry is now known as the greatest 3 point shooter ever. He found a way to stand out and succeed even though he was short. Stephen Curry exemplifies Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers: Stories of Success...

  3. Dec 9, 2021 · Art and science. The intangible made possible by the tangible. All the work, the grind and the technical expertise have produced a variety of ways to get Curry to his sweet spot in the air. As a...

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  5. Mar 30, 2022 · Sarah Ryan, Consultant, highlights what you can learn from British electrical retailer, Currys decision to closing its London HQ and moving to a more flexible working approach.

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