The Three-Point Revolution, Worn
Stephen Curry didn't just win championships — he changed how basketball is played. Before Curry, shooting 8+ three-pointers per game was reckless. After Curry, it became standard. Every team in the NBA restructured their offense around the three-point line because one player in a blue Warriors jersey proved it was the optimal strategy.
The royal blue Golden State road jersey — #30, "WARRIORS" across the chest in gold — is the uniform of basketball's Copernican revolution. When historians look back at the moment the sport's geometry fundamentally shifted, they'll see Curry in blue, pulling up from 30 feet.
Four championships. Two MVPs. The first unanimous MVP in history. The all-time three-point record (3,747 and counting). All in blue and gold.
The Dynasty Seasons (Ranked for Collectors)
Not all Curry championship jerseys are equal. The market stratifies by narrative:
2021-22 (Finals MVP vs. Boston): The crown jewel. Curry finally won Finals MVP in his fourth championship — silencing the last criticism of his legacy. He averaged 31.2 PPG in the Finals. This is the Curry championship jersey because it represents personal validation, not just team success.
2014-15 (First Championship vs. Cleveland): The beginning. Curry's first ring, the Warriors' return to relevance after 40 years of mediocrity. Nostalgic value as the dynasty's origin story. LeBron without Kyrie and Love — some discount the opponent, but a ring is a ring.
2016-17 (Kevin Durant's first year, vs. Cleveland): The 16-1 playoff run. Dominant but narratively complicated by Durant's arrival. Some collectors view this as "KD's championship" rather than Curry's, suppressing demand slightly for Curry-specific pieces.
2017-18 (Sweep vs. Cleveland): Another sweep, another ring. But dynasty fatigue had set in. The public was bored. Jerseys from this season trade at the lowest premium of the four championships.
In 2015-16, Curry became the first player in NBA history to win MVP unanimously — all 131 first-place votes. He averaged 30.1 PPG, shot 45% from three, and the Warriors won 73 games (the most in history). The jersey from this season carries regular-season significance unmatched by any other modern player — even though the Warriors lost the Finals.
The Adidas vs. Nike Split
Curry's Warriors tenure spans two manufacturers, creating a clear market divide:
Adidas era (2013-2017):
- Includes: First two championships (2015, 2017), unanimous MVP (2016), 73-win season
- Template: Revolution 30, climacool mesh, Adidas wordmark on right chest
- Status: Era-locked. Adidas stopped making NBA jerseys in 2017. Supply is fixed.
- Market: Appreciating 15-20% annually as supply tightens
Nike era (2017-present):
- Includes: Last two championships (2018, 2022), Finals MVP, 3-point record
- Template: Nike Authentic/Swingman, VaporKnit or Dri-FIT
- Status: Still in production for current-season retail
- Market: Active player discount applies. Will appreciate post-retirement.
The strategic play: Adidas-era championship season pieces (2014-15, 2016-17) are the strongest long-term holds because they combine championship narrative with closed-set scarcity. Nike-era pieces are currently underpriced relative to their eventual post-retirement value.
Blue Road vs. White Home vs. Gold Alternate
Blue (road): The dynasty's signature look. Worn in all road Finals games — Oracle Arena's roar notwithstanding, the Warriors' defining championship moments happened on the road in Cleveland (2015 Game 6, 2017 Game 5, 2018 Game 4). Blue is the championship-clinching colorway. Premium: standard.
White (home): Clean, traditional, and associated with Oracle Arena's regular-season dominance. Less Finals-specific since home-court advantage alternated. No premium over blue.
Gold ("The Town"): See the dedicated article. The alternate carries its own distinct market and collector base.
Active Player Discount — The Opportunity
Curry jerseys today suffer the same dynamic as LeBron Lakers: Nike makes new ones every season. City Editions, Classic Editions, Statement Editions — supply is functionally unlimited for current designs.
What to buy now:
- 2014-15 Adidas authentic (first ring, era-locked)
- 2015-16 Adidas authentic (73 wins, unanimous MVP)
- 2021-22 Nike authentic with Finals patch (Finals MVP)
- Any Adidas-era swingman (production ceased 2017)
What to avoid:
- Current-season Nike retail (unlimited supply)
- City Edition alternates (hype-driven, poor holds)
- Unsigned swingman without season-specific markers
Authentication
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Adidas template (2013-2017): Revolution 30 mesh, Adidas wordmark on right chest, NBA logoman on left shoulder. Gold "The Finals" patch for championship-series pieces.
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Nike template (2017-present): Nike Swoosh on right chest, NBA logoman on left. VaporKnit mesh for Authentic tier; Dri-FIT for Swingman. Gold "NBA Finals" patch for 2022 Finals pieces.
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Number construction: #30 in gold on blue base. Multi-layer tackle twill with blue outline visible at edges.
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Color accuracy: Warriors blue is a true royal blue — not navy, not cobalt. Gold is a warm yellow-gold, not metallic. Compare against team photos for exact match.
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Rakuten patch (2017-present): The Warriors were the first NBA team with a jersey sponsorship patch. Rakuten logo on left chest. Absence of this patch on a post-2017 jersey indicates pre-sponsorship era or fake.
Where to Buy
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