Stephen Curry closed out May with a two-line Instagram post: “May in the books ✍️. #More summer ahead 🙏🏽” No announcement came with it. No context either.
For most people, that would come and go. For Curry, it drew over 348,000 likes. That says something about the kind of attention he commands, even in the quiet months.
The post landed during a calm stretch for the Golden State Warriors. The NBA offseason tends to be a slow crawl. Free agency and summer league don’t kick in for a while. For Golden State, the offseason questions have been piling up in recent years. The franchise spent the early part of the decade at the top of the sport. Now it’s in a different chapter.
Summers for NBA veterans look different. It all depends on a player’s situation and their team’s place in the cycle. For teams in rebuild mode, it’s draft picks and free agency targets. For contenders, it’s retooling. For Curry and the Warriors, summer 2026 is a chance to figure out their direction.
Golden State won its last championship in 2022. The years since have been a mix of competitive runs and early exits. The franchise’s championship core has thinned out. Klay Thompson departed in 2024. Draymond Green has stayed. Curry has been the constant through all of it.
He turned 38 in March. He’s the all-time leader in three-pointers made in NBA history and a four-time champion. He holds two MVP awards. His resume doesn’t need defending. But he’s deep into his career. The offseasons carry more weight now than they used to.
The hashtag “#More summer ahead” doesn’t appear to carry any hidden meaning. It reads like a guy who got through a long month and is glad to have some open space ahead.
What stands out is how little Curry needed to say to get that kind of response. He’s built a reputation for keeping his social feed clean. He stays measured. Post something specific and people treat it as news. A low-key seasonal check-in is the other side of that.
His conditioning has been a topic for years. He’s defied the usual aging curve better than most guards his age. The shooting hasn’t dropped off. The footwork is still there. But 38 is 38. The offseasons matter more now. Rest and preparation carry weight even in quiet stretches.
For now, he’s marking the calendar. May’s done. Summer’s here. The bigger questions will come soon enough.
