Stephen Curry bows his head and leaves his jersey on the court, a silent farewell that shatters Warriors fans’ hearts.

The Golden State Warriors suffered a crushing 2-1 series deficit in the Western Conference semifinals on Saturday night, but all eyes were on a heartbroken Stephen Curry.

Stephen Curry's heartbreaking gesture after latest loss leaves Warriors  fans devastated | Marca

After their 106-101 loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves at Chase Center, the pain wasn’t just physical for Curry, who missed the contest due to a hamstring injury. It was emotional.

Curry’s potential retirement, make fans resurface a video complaining complains about a Lamar song

Reports surfaced after Game 1 suggesting Curry had cried after injuring his hamstring, leaving fans puzzled.

Warriors miss all five 3-point tries in first half before Buddy Hield  connects early in third | AP News

As the Warriors fell apart in the second half – unable to generate offense and with their trademark three-point attack evaporating – the cameras cut to Curry in the front row. He wasn’t clapping, coaching, or even reacting. Instead, he sat motionless, his head bowed low, staring at the hardwood. For Dub Nation, it was a gut punch, as Curry was watching a golden opportunity slip through Golden State‘s fingers.

Filho do Stephen Curry (@criadocurry) / X

Kerr’s tactical misfire sank the Warriors’ offense before it started

In what many fans and analysts are calling a baffling coaching decision, Steve Kerr rolled out a game plan that defied everything the Warriors have built their dynasty on: three-point shooting.

Golden State attempted only one three-pointer in the entire first quarter. By halftime, they still hadn’t made a single shot from behind the arc – something that hasn’t happened in the NBA since 2006. In a league where perimeter scoring reigns supreme – and with the greatest shooter in history sidelined – the Dubs abandoned their identity.

The result was a sluggish offense that could barely keep pace with the Wolves, even as Minnesota wasn’t playing their best basketball. What made the loss even more painful was its margin – just five points. Five points, one or two threes – exactly the shots Curry would have created or made himself.