“Steph may get to the point where he’s unplayable,” Thorpe said. “Because if he’s not getting the ball very much, and he’s not effective offensively, now we get to [Curry’s defensive concerns]. I’m telling you, there’s a scenario in this tournament where Curry gets played off the court.

“I’m going to err on the side of he’ll probably end up being fine,” Thorpe concluded. “But like I said, there’s a universe right there in front of us that he isn’t fine. He’s just not making shots, and [opposing] teams have the discipline to not [send two defenders] for Curry and then give up a layup or dunk for someone else, and then Kerr is gonna have to not play him. But he’s such a nuclear presence you have to at least let him try to shoot his way out of it if he can, and if he can’t, by the time he gets to the semifinals, he may play less.”

My thoughts exactly. Curry is going to get every opportunity to get going, and deservedly so. You look at a potential opponent like France — against which shooting could take on a heightened importance given the paint protection of Victor Wembanyama and Rudy Gobert — and the Americans could well end up needing at least one big Curry game to get this thing done.

But how long can Kerr keep waiting for that breakout to happen? If Kerr is going to be true to his word that NBA status doesn’t matter in this context and we’re really only going on who’s the absolute best player for every minute of every matchup in every single game, well, facts are facts. Curry has been the worst player on the team over the last four games, and there are only four games, at most, left in this tournament. Kerr doesn’t want to yank Curry. You can bet on that. But if Curry doesn’t start playing better, he may not have any choice.