Original/Oxygen is a metro

Curry was again selected to the Best Team by O'Neal on January 5, and together with James and other players, he was officially nominated by the NBA as the Player of the Month of december, and was also ranked first in the MVP list by the Forbes reporter using some high-level data. The Warriors record is the first in the league, so Curry is also considered the biggest favorite of MVP, ahead of Durant, Alphabet Brother, James and Jokic and other superstars in the league's first gear.
However, Curry himself did not perform well in December, when he was nominated for Player of the Month, and this situation continued into January. Reflected in the shooting percentage, even his best three-point shooting, has reached a new career height, and he only scored 9 points in the Warriors' game to beat the Heat. Curry's state of affairs also makes Curry fans can't help but worry. In addition, if Curry is so depressed, his MVP ranking will soon be surpassed by Durant and Alphabet Brother, and James will also join the competition after the Lakers' record improves.
Of course, Curry's background is still there, so even if he is not in good shape, he will be taken care of. So there's a question is Curry the hardest player for a manager to target? First of all, let's take a look at what peers say, just recently an NBA head coach was interviewed and asked this question. The NBA head coach is The Raptors head coach Nas, who played the Finals with Durant and Curry warriors in 2019. Nas restricted Curry, and his answer was: It's harder to have a few players like James and Durant!
According to a Jan. 5 report, Raptors head coach Nas attended the show and was asked "Is there a player in the league who has a harder time making game plans than Curry?" Nas put it this way: Yes, there are some players (it's harder to make a game plan than Curry). It's hard to make a game plan against Curry, yes, but there are other players. For example, James, you don't know how to defend James, he seems to know our tactics in advance and crack them, you don't know how to make James uncomfortable.
James is indeed the hardest player to defend in the active game, because he is the least equipped and systematic player in history, the most versatile player in history, and the first scoring champion in history. At the age of 37, James is still able to average more than 30 points in more than ten consecutive games. He can also lead the team to win as a starting center, and he shoots more accurately than Curry in three-point shots.
If you put James on a shot, he'll punish you. If you don't let James shoot, that's tantamount to surrender. This is just a veteran version of James, and if it is at its peak, the league has no time to play. So, James is really harder to make game plans than Curry, and apart from Nas, the league should have a bunch of head coaches who will admit the truth. In addition, Nas has said before that Jordan and James are the first superstars in history.
In addition, Nas nominated Alphabet Brother and Durant. While the league has players who have a harder time planning games than Curry, Nas boasts: Giannis Antetokounmpo is also difficult to defend, as well as Durant and Harden. There are a lot of players (it's hard to make a game plan more difficult than Curry), but Curry is really incredible. I can't imagine Curry running so fast with such a stature, running all over the world, and when I played the Finals with him, I was surprised and kept stressing to the players that the speed could not be behind the Warriors.