On May the Fourth, the Jedi Master Returned 🧙♂️💫
It was more than just a Game 7. It was a cosmic event.
May the Fourth, and the Warriors needed a miracle in hostile territory. Enter: Stephen Curry, the Steph Curry Jedi, draped in invisible Jedi robes, clutching the moment like he’s been doing for over a decade.

Houston came with pressure, packed the paint, and tried to turn the Oracle into a black hole. But Steph, embodying the spirit of a Jedi named Steph Curry, floated above it all—moving without the ball like a phantom, hitting dagger shots, and unlocking his late-game bag right when it mattered most.
🧊 Clutch Core Activated
Curry finished with 22 points, 10 rebounds, and 7 assists.
But the numbers don’t tell the full story. What he did in the fourth quarter was pure art: crossovers, floaters, dimes to cutters, and threes that kissed the ceiling before falling like prophecy.
When the Rockets started breathing down Golden State’s neck, it was Steph who slowed the tempo, called the plays, and took control. Like a Jedi reading the game two moves ahead, he bent the flow of time, embodying the essence of a Steph Curry Jedi.
🏆 Vintage Steph, Future Implications
This wasn’t a 40-point blowtorch night. It was something more elite: leadership, control, and timing. He didn’t force. He finessed. And that fourth-quarter takeover? That’s what separates the greats from the galaxy-makers. Truly, the victorious Steph, embodying Jedi masterhood, emerged triumphant.
With Minnesota up next, one thing is clear: Steph Curry isn’t done writing playoff mythology.