Stephen Curry could get more than one statue, says Lou Williams
Former NBA guard Lou Williams believes Stephen Curry can in the end became the first player in league history be honored with two statues outside the arena.
Williams shared that idea during the last broadcast of FanDuel’s Run It Back series when he discussed whether Curry and Klay Thompson deserved statues after head coach Steve Kerr suggested that Draymond Green should also get statues.
“Absolutely. And I think Steph Curry will be the first person in NBA history to have two statues outside the arena, because I think you put a statue with three of those guys because they made a ton of history as a collective, and Steph Curry is a global superstar that he deserves as an individual.”
Williams doubled down on that idea as the discussion continued.
“I understand him right here, right now. I think he’s the first person in NBA history to get two separate statues outside the arena.”
The former Sixth Man of the Year explained his reasoning behind a single, shared statue for the longtime core Golden State Warriorsand not more individual monuments.
“I don’t see them doing three individual statues for those guys. I think you should do one to commemorate all those guys and what they were able to do to make the Golden State Warriors four-time champions. They did it as a group. They did it as a unit and I think Steph Curry alone – what he could do, how he changed basketball in this league, even how he changed basketball in the world, even how he changed basketball. He deserves two and I could see that happening, for sure.”
“Steph Curry will be the first person in NBA history to have 2 statues outside the arena. … You put up a statue with three of those guys (him, Draymond & Klay) … (Steph) deserves one as an individual.”
— Lou Williams
(via @RunItBackFDTV)pic.twitter.com/KhlukDMNMz
— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) February 4, 2026
Lou Williams cites the Warriors’ dynasty as the foundation of Stephen Curry’s legacy

Curry, Thompson and Green formed the foundation of one of the most dominant runs in modern NBA history. The trio helped Golden State reach five straight NBA Finals from 2015-2019, winning four championships and setting the league record for single-season wins 73–9 campaign during the 2015–16 season.
Curry, 37, continues to build on a resume that already includes two MVP awards and a Finals MVP. He continues to be the centerpiece of Golden State’s offense this season, averaging 27.2 points, 4.8 assists, 3.5 rebounds and 1.1 steals per game while shooting 46.8 percent from the field and 39.1 percent from three-point range. He appeared in 39 games, logging 31.1 minutes per contest.
Despite Curry’s production, the Warriors have faced inconsistency. Golden State enters the next part of the schedule with a record of 27–24, which puts them in eighth place in the Western Conference standings after 113–94 loss to the Philadelphia 76ers on Tuesday.
Golden State will now embark on a short two-game road trip, starting Thursday night against the Phoenix Suns, who are 31-20. Tipoff is set for 7:00 PM PT on Prime Video as the Warriors look to regain momentum in a tight playoff race.
While any discussion of the statue remains hypothetical, Williams’ comments underscore how Curry’s legacy extends beyond championships and accolades, shaped by a historic era that redefined the way the game is played.
2026-02-04 19:00:00







