
The Golden State Warriors finally got the kind of Steph Curry news that changes the mood of the entire week.
According to NBA insiders Sam Amick and Nick Friedell of The Athletic, Curry is targeting Sunday’s home game against the Houston Rockets for a possible return after missing time with a right knee injury. That does not make a comeback official yet, but it is the clearest sign to this point that Golden State may get its franchise star back before the regular season ends.
That matters for obvious reasons, but not just because Curry is Curry. The Warriors are still trying to improve their Play-In position, and a return now would give him at least a handful of games to find rhythm before the postseason pressure fully arrives.
Warriors coach Steve Kerr told reporters that Curry went through a full practice Tuesday, even if the session itself was light, and then took another meaningful step by participating in five-on-five scrimmage work. That is the kind of checkpoint that turns a vague rehab timeline into something far more tangible.
Kerr still sounded careful, which is exactly what you would expect this late in the season.
He said Curry would be out Wednesday against San Antonio and “doubtful” for Thursday’s game against Cleveland, but the encouraging part for Golden State is that the team appears to be trending toward a real basketball decision rather than a medical shutdown. The next phase is about response, recovery and whether Curry can keep stacking healthy days.
Why Sunday makes sense for Curry and the Warriors
The timing lines up cleanly.
If Curry is able to return against Houston, Golden State would be getting him back in a game with immediate postseason implications while also leaving some runway before the Play-In. That is important. A return in the final days of the season is not only about whether he can play, but whether he can re-enter the flow of an offense, handle game conditioning and re-establish late-game chemistry.
Golden State’s stretch run also made the target date logical. The Warriors hosted Houston on April 6 before facing Phoenix on April 8, San Antonio on April 9 and Portland on April 11. That gave Curry a meaningful cluster of games, though the back-to-back sequence still figured to require caution.
So even if he returned Sunday, it never felt likely Golden State would immediately throw him into a full workload on consecutive nights.
Steph Curry, Warriors Get Great News With Return Date, According to NBA Insiders