In 2009, Curry decided to leave Davidson College a year early, without graduating, to pursue professional basketball. But he made a promise his mother, Sonya, that he’d go back and finish at some point.
Curry and Davidson, like most healthy athlete-school agreements, seemed to choose one another at exactly the right time. When he got in, feeling good about himself, he went to tell his friends: They’d never even heard of the small liberal arts college in North Carolina. That was a bit disappointing but what would have been even worse is if he’d accidentally sabotaged the whole thing by not responding to coach Bob McKillop, who started to worry whether his recruit was being pursued by other schools when Curry went dark.
From high school to college on into the pros, something that struck many about Curry is how he makes a lot of mistakes but never seems to wallow in them. When he goes up against Michigan for the first time in college, he describes how everything that could go wrong went wrong. Later, his coach said he was going to start the next game. McKillop saw in his perseverance a toughness that was rare in players.
His parents, Dell and Sonya, helped shepherd that discipline but always because he wanted it — not some horrifying reversal in which the parents are the drivers of something.