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Why people love Steph Curry but not Cam Newton

WASHINGTON 鈥 Steph Curry and Cam Newton have plenty in common. Besides being friends, Curry is the reigning NBA MVP, while Newton is on the precipice of winning the same award in the NFL. Both guided the best team in their respective sport last year to a title game, with Curry winning his and Newton one win away from doing the same. Both are confident to the point of cockiness, with skillsets that are redefining their position.

But everyone loves Curry, while Newton is, as one columnist put it this week, the .

There has already been much written about Newton this past week-and-a-half 鈥 about his , as , as a .

鈥淚鈥檓 an African-American quarterback that may scare a lot of people because they haven鈥檛 seen nothing that they can compare me to,鈥 .

But if Curry, also African-American, is so beloved while opinion about Newton remains split, is there something else going on?

You could argue that Newton has had a more checkered past than the seemingly immaculate Curry, like when he was caught stealing a laptop at the University of Florida, eventually precipitating his transfer to junior college, and, eventually, Auburn. But most of you probably only just remembered that incident upon reading the previous sentence, if you even knew about it at all.

That鈥檚 because it was a fairly minor indiscretion by most reasonable standards, even compared with what the quarterback on the other side of the ball in Super Bowl 50 .

Sure, Curry鈥檚 popularity extends beyond himself, to , and especially to , who captured even the most casual basketball fans鈥 hearts during last season鈥檚 playoff run. Newton’s personal life is much more private, his girlfriend having just given birth to the couple’s first child. But he’s arguably the most kid-friendly player in the league, having started the tradition of handing out footballs to kids in the crowd after touchdowns, something his teammates have joined in on.

But in a sport of giants, Curry feels like a giant-slayer at only 6-foot-3, often the shortest player on the floor. Despite a brilliant college career, he was deemed too small by many NBA teams, and was the third point guard taken in the 2009 Draft. In a league of Goliaths that puts such a premium on height, it was poetic that he attended Davidson College.

Newton is the opposite. At 6-foot-5 and nearly 250 pounds, he is a giant, even for the position he plays. He doesn鈥檛 succeed with Curry鈥檚 grace, but rather brute force, a momentum that seems to grow as the game progresses. He inspires the same sense of dread from opponents, but achieves it through a more physical dominance.

But Newton鈥檚 hardly a scary figure. His smile might be even more photogenic than Curry鈥檚. And he always seems to be smiling, especially these days.

Curry brings his sharpshooting traveling circus to town Wednesday to take on the Wizards. If the trend of exponentially growing gold and blue jerseys and hats over the past few seasons are any indication, the cheers will be nearly as loud when he sinks a shot as when any of the home squad does. His seemingly unlimited range has captivated fans young and old, his , even more than LeBron James鈥.

Newton has begun to catch up on that front, . But where Curry draws only effusive praise away from his home market in the Bay Area, some NFL fans have criticized Newton, .

In case you had the fortune of missing the news story above, the author of the open letter to Newton accused his 鈥渃hest puffs 鈥 pelvic thrusts 鈥 arrogant struts and 鈥 taunting鈥 as a corrupting influence on her nine-year old daughter, who had just watched oversized grown men smash into each other for three-and-a-half hours while scantily clad women danced around them. But never mind the hypocrisy 鈥 what of the celebration itself? Was it any more disrespectful than this?

Don鈥檛 be distracted by the obscene ball movement. Watch Curry at the end of the play, after he releases the shot. He turns around fully to face the Kings鈥 bench, to stare them down as the ball goes through the hoop. Even Newton doesn鈥檛 show up opponents like that.

And lest you think this is new, here鈥檚 a highlight from last season against the Bucks.

Still not sold? Cool. Here鈥檚 a playoff game from 2013.

The point is that Curry has been pulling that move, flaunting his transcendent greatness, for a quite a while now. Yet, Newton鈥檚 detractors find malice in his celebration where they do not in Curry鈥檚.

Perhaps it鈥檚 fitting, then, that Curry himself, raised in Charlotte, is one of Newton and the Panthers鈥 biggest fans, and will be in the stands in Santa Clara on Sunday to cheer him on toward the same championship success Curry enjoyed last season. Maybe if both of them are on the field celebrating together afterward we鈥檒l finally be able to bring this silly conversation to a close.

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