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What is Stephen Curry’s Logo?

What is Stephen Curry’s Logo? There are a couple of hundreds of players every season in the NBA, there are a dozen superstars and only a few of them can be considered more than just basketball players but a real brand.

One of those players in the past decade has been Steph Curry.

Entering the league as an undersized point guard, labeled as a skinny player who doesn’t have an NBA ready body, Curry managed not only to become an All-Star, an MVP, and an NBA champion but to become one of the most influential players in NBA history who literally changed the way the game is played.

After Curry and the Warriors took over the league in the mid-2010s and become a real dynasty having the best regular-season ever with 73 wins and 9 losses, Curry as a leader of that group become the face of the league.

Every kid around the globe could identify himself with the baby-faced sharpshooter, whose appearance and game became a powerful brand.

Curry quickly became the highest-paid player in the NBA in order of contract values but he also became the first major NBA name signing Under Armour.

His show deal was on another level and the Under Armour brand quickly found itself standing shoulder to shoulder next to giants that were already owning the league as Nike or Adidas.

In November 2020, the Golden State Warriors point guard and Under Armour officially launched “The Curry Brand,” a separate apparel company led by Curry himself.

The two parties started to work together back in 2013 but this was the move that put Curry on a similar level like Michael Jordan and his Air Jordan brand.

The Curry Brand features an array of sports-centric apparel, including workout clothing, golf attire, and basketball gear. Instead of the classic Under Armour logo, all Curry Brand products are featuring a logo to the two-time MVP.

The cooperation between the company and Curry proved to be a real deal for both parties and they have taken their action to an even higher level.

It has been just over a year Curry launched his own subset company within Under Armour, the Curry Brand. Ever since Curry has both reasserted his dominance over the league after missing nearly all of the truncated 2019-20 regular season and made major steps in building the company he hopes can extend well past his playing career.

In only a year, Curry Brand has launched a new logo, inspired by Curry’s family legacy and impact on the sport, debuted “Flow” technology, a foam compound bridging lighter-weight cushioning and court feel, expanded beyond basketball into golf footwear and apparel, along with running and lifestyle sneakers. The brand also funded the relaunch of Howard University’s Division I men’s and women’s golf programs, contributed to upgrading and refurbishing the famed Rucker Park basketball court in Harlem, New York, with quarterly skills camps and activations for young athletes planned, pledged to refurbish at least 20 basketball courts by 2025 and committed resources to more than 125 programs for young athletes around the country, with ongoing training for 15,000 coaches and 100,000 youths.

The success Curry has since entering the league in 2009 is enormous and the question is what fuels Curry to keep going.

“I have a lot to accomplish,” Curry said firmly. “I don’t have anything to prove. There’s a little subtle difference there,” said Curry.

Last season, Curry had a career-high 62-point outburst and at the beginning of this season, he became the player with the most made three-pointers in NBA history surpassing Ray Allen on top of the list. With this accomplishment, Curry crowned himself as the best shooter ever.

His talent and work ethic have brought Curry among the best players in NBA history and the Point guard is aware that the equipment has made its part in his success.

Curry likes to credit the Flow technology that all of his Curry Brand footwear has incorporated since it was launched.

“I know a big part of leveling up my play is coming correct with my footwear,” he said. “I’ve never had anything like it on my feet — no one has.”

While the Curry 8 and Curry 9 are the most recent models in his signature series with Under Armour, the story of their crafting and how it came to go much deeper.

Just after Curry won his first NBA championship in 2015, he and Under Armour ripped up his initial five-year endorsement deal from 2013, added an extra six years to the original length and made him the face of the company’s basketball business.

Locked in until 2024, the new agreement was set to make Curry the headliner of a 20-year-old company.

“Steph’s impact changed how the game of basketball will be played forever, and his association with Under Armour immediately changed the trajectory of our basketball business,” said Ryan Drew, general manager of Curry Brand. “His impact on our product could be felt immediately.”

In 2018, after Curry added the league’s first unanimous MVP season and another two titles to his accolades, amid a string of four straight NBA Finals appearances, the two sides began discussing something even grander: his own brand.

Defining a new logo

Besides the launch of new technology, Curry was also looking to unveil a new logo and brand mark during those first few 2018 conversations with Under Armour executives. That process started to pick up steam after the Charlotte, North Carolina, All-Star Game in 2019, with the final design decided later that summer.

Gone is the “SC30” logo with his initials and jersey number that was first seen on Curry’s product in 2014, and will continue to live on in retro footwear.

The new brand mark layers a series of elements and inspirations.

“We call the logo the ‘Splash,’ ” said Drew. “The design started by using the stroke of Stephen’s signature as the foundation for the logo. The ‘S’ clearly stands for Stephen, while the ‘C’ for Curry is his family legacy and was very important for him to include in the design. The ‘High Wing’ at the top of the logo is a reminder to always lead life and the game to fulfill his higher purpose.”

It visually comes together to represent Curry’s favorite on-court gesture, the 3-point sign after makes from deep.

“That is a huge part of my game and something that I hope I transformed on the court in terms of what it means to shoot the 3 with volume and efficiency,” Curry said.

Even the “CURRY” font used on shoeboxes, clothes and sneakers has a specific inspiration.

“All of the curves and lines of the lettering is the 3-point arc,” Curry said.

Beyond an annual signature shoe and a collection of hoop gear, the sublabel distinction under the Under Armour umbrella makes Curry the second active NBA player to launch his own brand with a stateside company. Michael Jordan is the other, launching Jordan Brand with Nike at the start of his “last dance” season with the Chicago Bulls in September 1997.

Jordan, then 34, has carried his namesake company for more than two decades after retiring from the NBA, generating more than $4 billion annually as a full-fledged brand. The financial success earned each year through the partnership was pivotal to Jordan purchasing the Charlotte Hornets in 2010.

Jordan Brand now competes head-to-head with top athletic brands globally, setting the bar for every signature shoe business that followed.

As with Jordan Brand, there are hopes to sign athletes to “Team Curry,” with plans to include women’s and men’s basketball players and golfers, along with creative influencers, while also continuing to expand the product assortment of Curry Brand.

“He gave them encouragement to keep doing what I’m doing, and make sure it’s authentic to me,” said Curry. “I feel like that’s easier said than done, but it’s also one of those motivating factors to know that we are just getting started. The 2020-21 version of what Curry Brand is is amazing right now, but it’s just scratching the surface of what it can be, and he’s obviously proof of that.”

Curry Brand’s tagline is “Change the Game for Good.”

“When we started this conversation two-plus years ago, we saw an opportunity to push forward our vision for a better world, especially for young athletes facing challenges with access and opportunity for sport,” said Patrik Frisk, CEO of Under Armour. “We’re excited to create something new, with a legacy brand that has impact built into its bottom line, and combining purpose with the product to make a real impact on young athletes.”

From donating backboards and refurbishing courts at the Manzanita Rec Center in Oakland, California, to hosting a boys and girls showcase game on an upgraded court at Rucker Park in October, philanthropy will be a key focus. In all, there are 20 planned court donations by 2025.

Most of Curry Brand’s efforts will be centered on providing kids with access to sports, developing programming, and working with local organizations to engage boys and girls. Curry calls it “unlocking play.”

The brand is partnering with the Positive Coaching Alliance to provide training and resources to all coaches in the Oakland Unified School District and Oakland’s Parks and Recreation Department. Parents, athletes, and community leaders will also be integrated into the program’s training.

By 2025, Curry Brand is looking to support 125 programs for young athletes, with ongoing training for a web of 15,000 coaches and resources reaching 100,000 youths.

Developing Flow technology

Early on, an absolute must for Curry was to launch his new brand with new technology. He had typically worn foam cushioning setups in his previous signature shoes, with slight updates from year to year. The line was admittedly not known for cushioning innovation.

Enter “Flow,” which debuted in the Curry 8 and continues to be the platform that the current Curry 9 sits on.

“We call it a unicorn foam,” said Tom Luedecke, creative director of footwear innovation at Under Armour.

While the standard timeline for designing a signature shoe is 14 to 18 months, Flow had been in the works for more than three years in partnership with Dow Chemical Co. to get to the right formulation.

“When we saw how sticky this material was on hardwood, we knew this was going to be groundbreaking,” said Fred Dojan, Under Armour vice president of footwear development innovation.

Originally termed “Unisole” internally during the exploration phase, the foam is one solid piece for the outsole. Unlike all other basketball shoes, the one-piece construction means there’s no rubber on the bottom, which saves considerable weight. With a wavy pattern engineered into the foam slab, the material is shaped and carved to provide softness for cushioning and achieves top-tier stickiness and hold for grip.

Former Curry Brand general manager David Bond, an industry veteran who helmed the development of the technology alongside Luedecke and Dojan, coined it “Flow” to highlight the smooth ride, but also the concept of “flow state,” or being in the flow during a game.

The Curry 9, carries over much of the same elements of Flow from last season’s sneaker.

“We wanted to bring the best of what that UA Flow technology was and that innovative platform of obsoleting rubber, getting rid of some weight and keeping the traction and the cushioning there,” said Curry. “The 9 is kind of dialing in the ride that Flow is, and it’s a different evolution of what that feels like.”

Expanding the brand ahead

Though the brand will be rooted in hoops, there’s a plan to extend the label beyond the hardwood.

“Curry Brand will feature footwear, apparel, and accessories across multiple categories, including basketball and golf, with continued category expansion in future seasons such as running and women’s,” Frisk said.

The brand launched its first running shoe, the Curry Flow Go. The knit upper features four dots along the side of the shoe, a nod to his wife Ayesha and their three children. Future seasons of Curry Golf will incorporate hybrid course-geared turf footwear drafting off of his on-court sneaker.

For Curry, incorporating Flow technology into nearly all of his products will be emphasized, with the cushioning and traction dual-platform beginning to appear in altered visual executions in future designs. Long term, the brand hopes that “Curry” and “Flow” can share an association, just as other athletes have long held with their key technologies.

Besides further establishing the logo, the new technology, and the “do good” mantra, the Curry Brand has two collegiate partnerships lined up. Davidson College, outside of Charlotte, is wearing uniforms featuring the new Splash logo and is often first to wear upcoming new colorways.

As part of an ongoing six-year sponsorship pledge for the Howard University golf team, Curry also helped to launch the first Division I men’s and women’s golf teams in the historically Black college’s history. The Bison had fielded a Division II team that was disbanded in the late 1970s.

The reported seven-figure donation will help fund scholarships, provide equipment and, of course, outfit the team with Curry Brand golf apparel and shoes. Both the men’s and women’s teams wore “Splash” logo Howard polos throughout their fall season.

“It’s amazing, man,” said Curry. “They’re just getting their feet wet in competition, playing against some really good golf programs across the country. We want to be able to make Howard a marquee golf destination and a marquee golf university — to know that they’re rocking Curry Brand and they’re basically walking examples of the impact that we’re able to have.”

With specific impact targets already in place as benchmarks by 2025, Curry Brand hopes to extend its good even further into the decade.

“Ultimately our measure of impact is to ensure that we are breaking down barriers for young athletes to have access to sports — starting in Oakland and growing from there,” said Frisk. “With the expansion of product — while Stephen is playing basketball professionally or after his NBA career ends — we will expand the focus of the giveback appropriately to improve access to all sports over time.”

I fell in love with the game of basketball at 15 years old. I am an avid fan of the Chicago Bulls as I am from the windy city! This blog was created as a side hobby during my sophomore year in college and I have stuck with it ever since. I do hope you enjoy the content and please be sure to follow us on Facebook and never miss a post!

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