Sabrina Ionescu talks about Steph Curry’s impact on Dan Patrick Show

Sabrina Ionescu and Dan Patrick agreed that the impact of Golden State Warriors point guard Steph Curry on the game of basketball cannot be overstated.

The relationship between Golden State Warriors point guard Steph Curry and Oregon guard Sabrina Ionescu is well-documented, and it tends to come up frequently in interviews Ionescu gives with national reporters.

On Wednesday, she and Dan Patrick discussed Curry’s impact on the game of basketball on Patrick’s show.

Patrick said Curry is one of the most influential basketball players of all time, and Ionescu had nothing but agreement for that sentiment. The difference Curry has made cannot be overstated.

Patrick: “Steph has had a bigger impact on the game than almost anyone in the history of the sport because he allowed everybody who is smaller to think that they can play. You don’t have to be physical.”

Ionescu: “I think people that don’t see that and don’t value that don’t really understand the impact that he’s had on the sport.”

It’s much easier for the average person to see themselves in Curry than some other stars. LeBron James, for instance, has unattainable athleticism that can’t just be learned. Monstrously large stars like Shaquille O’Neal are so big and tall, it’s hard for an average basketball fan to relate to, no matter how much they like him as a person or player.

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But for Curry, smaller and leaner by comparison than almost any other star, your everyday kid can look at him and see skills that can be learned: shooting, dribbling, quickness.

While he is obviously other-worldly talented, these skills are ones athletes can see themselves doing more realistically than flying over a rim. This can help them dream of playing for their high school, or college, or the pros.

“You walk into any gym and there’s little kids shooting from half court, they’re shooting shots like Steph,” Ionescu said. “It’s evolved the game. I mean, I wouldn’t be surprised if the 3-point line gets moved back.”

Sabrina Ionescu made NCAA history just hours after speaking at Kobe Bryant’s memorial

Sabrina Ionescu made NCAA history Monday night.

On Monday morning Oregon star basketball player Sabrina Ionescu stood in front of a packed Staples Center crowd and spoke beautifully about her friends. Kobe and Gianna Bryant.

Then hours later she made NCAA history during the Ducks’ road win over Stamford in what was a battle between two top-5 women’s teams.

Ionescu, who met Kobe last summer and then spent time learning from the NBA legend while also teaching Gianna some moves, became the first player, man or woman, to reach 2,000 points, 1,000 assists and 1,000 rebounds in NCAA Division I basketball history.

She also picked up her 26th career triple-double in the process.

What an awesome way to pay tribute Kobe and Gianna.

Here’s the historical moment:

What a day she had:

Now that is Mamba Mentality.

Kobe and Gianna would be very proud of their friend.

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Oregon’s Sabrina Ionescu now has twice as many triple-doubles as any other NCAA player

Sabrina Ionescu is on fire.

Sabrina Ionescu is unquestionably the best player in college basketball right now.

The No. 3 Oregon Ducks guard looks unstoppable as she leads one of the best teams in women’s basketball, averaging 17.2 points, 8.7 assists and 8.2 rebounds per game. And with 15 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists in her team’s 85-52 win over No. 12 Arizona on Friday, she recorded her 24th (!!!) career triple-double. It was also her 51st career double-double.

Last season, Ionescu set the NCAA record for most career triple-doubles in men’s and women’s basketball with 13, and the 5-foot-11 senior hasn’t slowed down in her final season with the Ducks, as she tries to lead them to their first national championship.

BYU’s Kyle Collinsworth has the next most NCAA career triple-doubles with 12 between the 2014-15 and 2015-16 seasons.

Continuing to break her own NCAA record, Friday’s win over the Wildcats marked Ionescu’s sixth triple-double this season. She had eight as a junior last season, and six and four in her sophomore and freshman seasons, respectively.

As ESPN noted, Ionescu scored 20 or more points in eight triple-double performances and notched 29 points twice. In her career, she is now just eight assists and 41 rebounds from being the first men’s or women’s Division I player with 2,000 points, 1,000 assists and 1,000 rebounds. She hit the 2,000-point mark in November.

On Monday, Oregon dealt No. 4 UConn its worst home loss since 2005 with a 74-56 win. Ionescu finished with 10 points, nine assists and nine boards.

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LeBron James gives shoutout to Oregon’s ‘Queen’ Sabrina Ionescu

LeBron James gave a shoutout to the All-Time triple-double leader in women’s college basketball, Oregon’s Sabrina Ionescu.

Game recognizes game and when it comes to triple-doubles, LeBron James is one of the experts in basketball history. But of all of the greats, James may be the biggest basketball fan of them all. So it should be no surprise he’s taken note of another player striving for greatness in all aspects of the game.

During Sunday night’s football festivities, LeBron gave a shoutout to Oregon’s Sabrina Ionescu on another triple-double on Sunday afternoon. Ionescu added to her NCAA record, notching her 22nd career triple-double in a win at Arizona. In her postgame interview, she didn’t even believe she had enough assists and the astonishment caught the King’s eye, who gave the star guard a shoutout.

The Ducks went 1-1 over the weekend and probably will fall out of the No. 2 spot in the Women’s AP poll, but Ionescu and the Ducks will be heard from plenty more before the season ends. But even though the Ducks dropped one this week, they can always count on the support of LeBron.

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