Stephen Curry tried to keep his daughter Riley under control at the podium on Wednesday night after leading the Golden State Warriors to the NBA Finals for the first time in 40 years. Curry moved her from one side of his lap to the other, holding her tightly by the waist, but Riley, 2, continued to fidget, yawn, wave and shout. Finally, she spotted the microphone and started to sing the hook of a popular song by rappers Big Sean, Drake and Kanye West, “Blessings.”
“Waaaaay up, I feel blessed,” Riley shouted.
“You wanted to say that,” Stephen Curry said, looking down at her, with a laugh.
Riley continued to lunge toward the microphone to repeat the words as her father held back laughter and attempted to listen to questions: “Way up, I feel blessed.”
Based on Riley’s knowledge of the song, there’s a decent chance that it has been played many times in the household or in the car rides to the arena. And it probably is reflective of the mood as Stephen Curry gets ready to take on LeBron James and tries to end the lengthy championship drought for the dedicated Warriors fans.
[James, back in the Finals with Cleveland, has ‘unfinished business’]
Curry and the Warriors are way up — Western Conference champions after their series-clinching 104-90 win over the Houston Rockets on Wednesday — but not in a place that they didn’t expect.
Before the start of a season that ended with him winning the most valuable player award, Curry said Golden State planned to prove that it is the best in the Western Conference. The statement that was largely ignored since so much was expected of Oklahoma City, the defending champion San Antonio Spurs and even the Los Angeles Clippers, the team that beat the Warriors in seven games in the first round last postseason.
But the Warriors not only ran away with the NBA’s superior conference with 67 wins in the regular season, they needed just 15 games to breeze through New Orleans, Memphis and Houston in the West playoffs. Now Curry has a chance to become the first player to defeat all four other members of the all-NBA first team in the postseason, having already knocked off Anthony Davis, Marc Gasol and James Harden. James — a four-time regular season MVP and two-time Finals MVP — is different from those other three, because he already has what Curry wants.

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