Stephen Curry offered a revealing diagnosis of what he sees as a deeper issue in American basketball development, arguing that the game needs a stronger foundation in basketball IQ and a healthier environment for young athletes.
During an appearance on the Athletic Show with Marcus Thompson, Curry said there is “an epidemic” when it comes to developing a baseline understanding of basketball IQ, while also stressing that kids should be allowed to play multiple sports before youth athletics turns into a business-driven system.
The heart of Curry’s point was development. He argued that too many young players are being pushed too early into a narrow, professionalized track, and that the sport loses something when children stop being children. Curry pointed to his own background, saying he played multiple sports until he was 13 and believes the hand-eye coordination, footwork, physical variety and broader experiences that came with that helped shape him as a basketball player.
That perspective carries weight because it comes from a player whose career has always been associated with skill, timing and feel as much as shooting. Curry is not talking about development only in terms of athletic tools. He is talking about reading the game, understanding space and learning how to think it. His comments suggest that, in his view, the American pipeline may be producing plenty of trained players, but not always enough instinctive, adaptable basketball minds.
Curry also framed the issue as bigger than one generation or one league. He said many people are trying to solve it because the United States needs as much homegrown talent as possible reaching the highest levels of the sport.
Steph Curry on what he thinks needs to happen to solve America’s basketball problem:
“The ability to develop a baseline for like basketball IQ and what does that mean. There’s an epidemic in that respect. I also feel like even just the ability to allow kids to play multiple… pic.twitter.com/cBx8W0zWOE
— aly ✶ (@jinthirty) March 15, 2026
That makes his comments sound less like casual criticism and more like a warning from one of the defining players of his era: if the culture keeps drifting toward early specialization and business-first youth basketball, the (American) game may keep losing some of the creativity and intelligence that once developed more naturally.
