Steph Curry voted as All-Star starter over Anthony Edwards

Stephen Curry just became the oldest point guard ever voted to start an All-Star Game at 37 years old. He did it by beating out a 23-year-old Anthony Edwards who by many accounts is having a better statistical season. He did it in the same announcement that ended LeBron James’ 22-year stranglehold on All-Star starter status. And he did it knowing full well that Father Time is undefeated, even if Curry keeps trying to break his ankles with every hesitation dribble.

This is the fascinating inflection point of Curry’s career. He’s caught in basketball purgatory: the space between “still elite” and “eventually mortal.” He’s not chasing the longevity records that define careers like Kareem’s or LeBron’s. His late start to superstardom, those ankle injuries that nearly derailed everything, the way he didn’t make his first All-Star team until age 25? All of it ensures that the volume stats will never tell his full story.

But right now, Curry occupies something even more interesting: he’s the bridge between eras, the standard that the next generation has to meet while simultaneously being the gatekeeper they have to overcome. There’s a relatively high level of shock radiating through basketball social media for Curry being selected over Anthony Edwards to start the exhibition.

Edwards is an absolute monster on the court, and many probably assumed he was the clear choice over Curry. But the fans (50% of the vote) and the players said no. Not yet.

Curry finished third in fan voting, second in player voting, which propelled him to his 12th All-Star Game. Even diminished, even on an struggling Warriors team, Curry remains the most compelling argument for why basketball transcends box scores.

Here’s what makes this moment deliciously complex: Curry knows he’s not winning this war against Father Time. But Curry’s is absolutely trying to win every individual battle with such style that when the war is finally lost, his legacy will burn throughout history. If you had told me back in 2011 that the skinny guard next to Monta Ellis would be an All-Star, I’d be like “I hope so but when??”. Now he’s tied with Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Bill Russell, and Hakeem Olajuwon at 12. Oh yeah and Warrior legend Rick Barry! Not bad for a guy who was supposedly too small, too fragile, and too one-dimensional.

But unlike LeBron, who’s defying age by rewriting the athletic longevity blueprint, Curry’s rebellion looks different. He moves with deliberateness now, a calculated dismantling with very cut, dribble, and screen. He’s methodically deadly from anywhere on the court, moving at his own pace.

Edwards will get his moment. The 24-year-old is everything the modern NBA demands: athletic, versatile, clutch. He’s is definitely a major part of the future of basketball.

But today? The old guard said: not yet, young king. Go head Steph, show em how it’s done!

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