‘Superdad’ Steph Curry Does Hair, Gives Sharing Lesson To Daughters

Is Steph Curry a superdad? Of course he is. Curry missed the chance to win another title, and that’s not even an issue when you see his fatherly side.

In an episode of Curry’s Facebook show “Stephen vs. The Game,” the Warrior is pretty busy fixing Ryan’s hair and making Riley share her chips with her sister. How did Curry solve the situation? With a few words and a side-look.

You can watch the cute video here.

Curry is a proud father, and Riley stole the show in 2015 at the podium after the Warriors won the Finals. But, Curry says he shouldn’t have put his daughter in the spotlight at such a young age.

“One thing I do technically regret in terms of how fast this all came is when I brought Riley on the podium,” Curry said at the time. “I’ve always wanted to … share what I get to do, and all the experiences I have, with my family. I didn’t know how much that would blow up and how much of a splash she [would make] on the scene.

“If I could take that one back, I probably would, just because my goal is just to … give my kids the best chance at success and at seeing the world in the proper way. Trying to give our kids the best chance to be successful and have a normal life in terms of treating people the right way, having respect, not getting too bigheaded and feeling like everything’s about them.”

The Warrior shared his thoughts and feelings on gender equality and his daughters in an essay for The Players’ Tribune.

“I want our girls to grow up knowing that there are no boundaries that can be placed on their futures, period,” he writes. “I want them to grow up in a world where their gender does not feel like a rulebook for what they should think, or be, or do. And I want them to grow up believing that they can dream big, and strive for careers where they’ll be treated fairly. And of course: paid equally.”

“Not just as ‘fathers of daughters,’ or for those sorts of reasons. And not just on Women’s Equality Day. Every daythat’s when we need to be working to close the pay gap in this country,” he writes. “Because every day is when the pay gap is affecting women. And every day is when the pay gap is sending the wrong message to women about who they are, and how they’re valued, and what they can or cannot become.”

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