It was the first day of basketball tryouts at North Carolina’s Hopewell High School. Head coach Eric Davis was observing the varsity tryout in the school’s main gym when one of his assistants interrupted him.
“My assistant coach said, ‘Coach, you need to get back in the back gym. There’s a short little chubby left-handed kid that can really play. You need to come take a look at him,’” Davis recalls.
Davis walked to the back gym to take a look. He had never laid eyes on the boy before, but he liked what he saw.
Brandyn Curry wasn’t happy to be in the back gym of some North Carolina high school on that day in 2005.
Just a few months prior, Curry thought he had it all made. He was living with his family in Matawan, N.J., and was known throughout his hometown as the local star. He was a standout in football, basketball, and baseball, and was expected to start at both quarterback and point guard at his local high school as a freshman
But things changed quickly. Curry’s parents divorced, and just weeks before the start of his freshman year, he and his siblings moved with their mother down south to Huntersville, N.C.
“I’m this chubby dude who nobody knows—quiet, had no friends,” Curry remembers of his first weeks at Hopewell High. “I was miserable and wanted to go home.”
While Davis was impressed with the new kid’s play on the first day of tryouts, Curry still needed to prove he belonged in the new environment. So when the season tipped off, Curry found himself in an unfamiliar position: riding the bench on the junior varsity (JV) squad.
But it didn’t take long for Curry to convince the varsity coach that he belonged in the main gym. After paying his dues as a freshman, Curry made the varsity team the following year and kicked off his sophomore campaign with a bang, leading Hopewell in scoring through four games.
“It really motivated him that he wasn’t getting to play as a freshman,” Davis says. “He came back a totally different player. He grew probably three to four inches. He turned into a young man as a sophomore.”
But just when Curry was starting to come into his own, the guard suffered a pulled hamstring that hampered him for the rest of the season.
One year later, Curry blew up. The guard averaged 17 points and four assists per game, and college scouts noticed. By the end of his junior summer, Curry had received 25 to 30 Division I scholarship offers, and—to the chagrin of his mother—was so busy talking to coaches that he racked up a $300 phone bill.
“My mom had to tell all [the coaches], ‘Do not call Brandyn before seven [when minutes aren’t free],” he recalls. “It was crazy.”
Four years later, Curry is hoping he can have another transformative junior season. Fully healthy for the first time since he arrived at Harvard back in 2009, the point guard has lofty goals for the coming season.
“I just want to be one of the best point guards in the nation—point blank.” Curry says. “I want to lead the nation in assists.”
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