Steph Curry & Andre Iguodala playing for another title — on the golf course
RENO, Nev. — Leave it to Charles Barkley to capsulize the challenges he and others will face atop the Sierra this weekend trying to keep their golf balls in the fairway, away from the galleries and out of the water during the 27th annual American Century Celebrity Golf Championship at Lake Tahoe.
"Golf is fun, until you hit somebody in the head," said Barkley, the Hall of Fame basketball player who's a 6,000-to-1 long shot to win but still draws some of the biggest crowds at Edgewood-Tahoe Golf Course in Stateline.
Two-time NBA MVP Steph Curry, NFL quarterback Aaron Rodgers, singer Justin Timberlake and comedian Ray Romano are among the 90 athletes and entertainers who tee off Friday in the 54-hole tournament running through Sunday near the California border, about 60 miles south of Reno.
Curry, who finished fourth three years ago in the tournament with a $600,000 purse, will be paired with his father, Dell, who played 16 years in the NBA, and fellow Golden State Warriors teammate Andre Iguodala. He said it will be special to be the tourney's first father-son duo.
"It will probably get really competitive between us two, which is how it always is," Steph Curry said Thursday.
Tourney regulars and Hall of Famers Jerry Rice, Emmitt Smith and Marcus Allen are back, along with more than a dozen past and present quarterbacks, including University of Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh, Carson Palmer, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Alex Smith, Doug Flutie, Jim McMahon, Joe Theismann and Steve Young. Others include former vice president Dan Quayle, NASCAR driver Brian Vickers, Larry the Cable Guy, former "Saturday Night Live" star Kevin Nealon and Willie Robertson of "Duck Dynasty."
The Harrah's and Harveys Race & Sports Book across the street has made ex-pitcher and defending champ Mark Mulder the co-favorite with recently-retired tennis champ Mardy Fish at 3-1 odds, followed by ex-quarterback Mark Rypien (9-2), ex-Cy Young closer Eric Gagne (5-1) and Curry (6-1).
A month after losing the NBA championship to Cleveland, Curry said he feels good about his golf game but confided he has "much less confidence on the greens than I do on the court."
"Everybody asks if putting is like shooting free throws," he said after Thursday's pro-am. "It has a very similar kind of mindset. And it's just you, the ball and the target."
But there's "a lot more variables in golf," Curry said. "The biggest thing is just routine. I think that's the biggest correlation between golfers and basketball players."
Barkley said he tries to help newcomers understand it's quite different than playing a round at their local country club.
"It ain't like regular golf, because there are people everywhere," he said during a recent conference call promoting the event. "And like I say, most of the guys will tell you they're pretty good until they hit somebody. And then they get really nervous, because nobody wants to hit anybody."
This year marks the 10th anniversary of one of the most infamous shots at the tourney where yachts and speed boats anchor along Tahoe's south shore next to the par-3 17th and par-5 finishing hole.
Actor Matthew Settle's slicing 5-iron on the 169-yard 17th broke a boat windshield in July 2006 — a shot playing partner John O'Hurley called a "flaming whoopsie."
"I've seen broken windows on golf courses before but never on a boat," O'Hurley said.
It wasn't that strange to former NBA star Chris Webber, who once won a $50,000 charity bet with Barkley on who would finish last.
"I hit somebody in a boat a couple of years ago and they threw the ball back out like it was a home run at a baseball game," Webber said at the time.
Barkley said, "I just hit people, I don't hit boats."