Top Stories
The Athletic: Steph Curry, Kevin Durant and the question of how it all ends
With another postseason here, Steph Curry and Kevin Durant aren't just chasing wins, they are also chasing the closing window of an era.
Nick Friedell, The Athletic | April 15, 2026 4:21 PM
Kevin Durantās and Steph Curryās windows arenāt closing just yet, but they are no longer infinite either.
Editorās Note: Read more NBA coverage from The AthleticĀ here. The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA or its teams.
***
LOS ANGELES ā As Stephen Curry gets set for another postseason run, one that starts Wednesday night against the LA Clippers in the Play-In Tournament, he does so with an appreciation for the journey that has brought him here.
The 38-year-old Golden State Warriors guard doesnāt know exactly how much longer he wants to play, but after 17 years in the league, he knows this much: the finish is much closer than the beginning.
Heās not alone.
More than 1,500 miles away in Houston, Kevin Durant is feeling it too. At 37 and in his 18th season, the Houston Rockets star is similarly unsure about how much longer heāll go. What he does know is that his appreciation ā for what he and the other stars of his era have accomplished ā is greater than ever before.
For Curry and Durant, the start of a new postseason isnāt just a new opportunity to play on the gameās biggest stage, itās a reminder of just how long theyāve been here ā and how rare it is to still be playing at all.
āI bet you everybody has a different take on that,ā Curry toldĀ The AthleticĀ when asked what itās been like to be in the rarefied air that he has occupied with Durant and LeBron James for so long. āMine is I played against KD in AAU when I was 9. I was in Charlotte and he was in the DMV (Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia metropolitan region). Thereās always that joke, he thought I was a little White kid because he didnāt know who I was, just a little shooter. Thatās his favorite joke.
āAnd that was, what, ā97, ā98? So think about how long that is. I donāt know how to wax poetic any more than that.ā
The shared history is why these moments matter more. Thereās an extra pull before tip-off to say hello, exchange a few words and embrace. Their window isnāt closing just yet, but itās no longer infinite either.
āIām just so grateful that I graced the league with these guys at the same time,ā Durant toldĀ The Athletic. āBecause weāve competed so hard against one another for so long, and then when you get older you start appreciating how hard it is to get up every day. You got aches and bruises sometimes, you donāt even know where they come from.ā
While the spotlight centers around Curry, Durant and James ā the figureheads of the league for close to two decades now ā Durant is quick to point out other stalwarts too. Players like Russell Westbrook, DeMar DeRozan, James Harden, DeAndre Jordan and Taj Gibson have carved out similar longevity.
Curry and Durant arenāt just motivated by the next generation of young players coming into the league, itās also each other.
āYou see guys get up with that much energy every day, you get inspired and want to do the same thing,ā Durant said. āLeBron has been pushing me since he turned 37, 38. And heās setting a new standard for older guys in the league. And so with Steph, heās (38), I feel like he got quicker and faster. James (Harden), after he left Brooklyn he turned it up a notch when he got to the Clippers. Russ, still look good coming off the bench.
āSo seeing these dudes makes me want to go to the gym and work on my game and keep going.ā
Curry understands that feeling well. What began as matchups between boys has developed into games between men who have become two of the greatest players to ever play the sport.
āOne hundred percent,ā Curry said. āYou know whether you played with them, or against them the whole time, obviously both with K, what it takes to maintain that level for as long as we have. Thereās just a brotherhood of respect, appreciation, that the animosity over the years, the competition has kind of allowed us to now experience, which is really amazing. I think we all know it in the back of our mind. Iāve said it for a long time.
āItās OK to acknowledge that itās gonna end at some point, but we all know that itās on the horizon. Weāre all trying to extend it as long as we can.ā
Itās one of the main reasons Curry pushed so hard to return from a lingering knee injury late in the season rather than shut it down. Thatās because games like these ā games that carry importance ā arenāt guaranteed anymore.
Itās the same force that motivates Durant and continues to push him to get out of bed each morning. In our conversation in March, it was clear he still loves the game as much as he ever did, but he pushes back on the notion that his love of the game is any different than any other player that has been at or near his level. Itās universal.
āOnce you reach a certain level of talent, longevity, we all love the game the same way,ā Durant said. āI really tell people I love it this way, you may see me outwardly loving the game, showing up, talking to young players, dudes when Iām on the court, but every great player Iāve been around loves the game like that.ā
What separates those who last, Durant notes, is mental toughness, and what happens when the novelty wears off.
āThe younger guys, itās a little easier to love the game when youāre fresh in,ā Durant said. āBut when youāve seen it all, when youāre 10, 12, 13, 14 years in and youāve taken a peek behind the curtain and see the politics of the game, you see all the other stuff that surrounds the game, itās not just about basketball, and you still love it? You know what Iām saying? You go through injuries, you go through tough times, losses, wins and you still want to come in and be the best player you can be, thatās true love.ā
As Curry left the visitorsā locker room at Golden 1 Center last week, he was trying to put into context what heās feeling as the group he grew up with gets closer to the finish line. He landed on an imperfect, but telling metaphor.
āItās a horrible reference,ā Curry said. āBut inĀ Coming to America 2, a horrible movie, there was a living funeral. Where people were celebrating the king before he had passed, and thatās what he wanted. I donāt think any of us want that, but itās kind of like our way, a small way, of giving each other flowers, because we know how hard it is to carry this weight that we have for our whole careers.ā
Thereās no secret handshake when the greats of the game see each other on the floor these days. There doesnāt need to be. They recognize the faces. They are the same ones theyāve been seeing on every floor for years. And they are the ones theyāll miss the most when their time on the gameās biggest stage finally runs out.
āItās appreciation,ā Curry said. āYour success, failures, experiences and all that are all lived in a silo. Itās because of other peopleās greatness that help you and motivate you and inspire you and frame all of your career. Thatās a big part of it. Because you have to compete deep, lose to said people for years and years and years to make what you have accomplished great. I think weāve all had our licks too.ā
***
Nick FriedellĀ is a Senior Writer for The Athletic covering the Golden State Warriors and the NBA. Nick spent 14 years at ESPN covering the NBA, most notably as a reporter as well as a TV and radio commentator. He is a graduate of The Newhouse School at Syracuse University. Follow Nick on X @NickFriedell.
Related
- The Athletic: Rocketsā late-season surge brings wins
- The Athletic: All-Perimeter Defense First Team
- The Athletic: Ingram has Raptors on verge of playoffs
- The Athletic: Inside the Hornetsā transformation