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Woll’s Shutout Leads Leafs Past Devils in Toronto

  Photo: Andrew MacLean On Tuesday in Toronto, the Maple Leafs hosted the Devils, handing New Jersey their fourth straight loss when the Leafs and Joseph Woll shutout the Devils 4-0. Woll put on an incredible performance, making a total of 33 saves for Toronto. Bobby McMann, Nicolas Roy, Calle Jarnkrok, and Matthew Knies each found the back of the net for the Leafs, while Jacob Markstrom made 26 saves in a difficult losing effort. It was a good win for the Leafs after they lost to the Detroit Red Wings in overtime on Sunday. The Devils head to Columbus on Wednesday to take on the Blue Jackets in hopes of snapping this four-game skid. New Jersey Devils Lineup: Meier - Hischier - Mercer Palat - Hughes - Bratt Gristsyuk - Glass - Brown Cotter - Glendening - Noesen Siegenthaler - Hamilton Hughes - Pesce Dillon - White Markstrom Allen Toronto Maple Leafs Lineup: Knies - Tavares - Domi Maccelli - Laughton - McMann Robertson - Roy - Cowan Lorentz - Quillan - Jarnkrok Rielly - Myers McCabe...

The New Benchmark: Why Stephen Curry Has No Business Being This Good at 37

 







While the hockey world was reeling from the Quinn Hughes/Tristan Jarry trades and the Connor Bedard injury, the NBA delivered a history-making performance that has huge implications for the definition of "peak career." Last night, Stephen Curry returned from a five-game absence and dropped 39 points, passing Michael Jordan for the most 35-point games after turning 30. For a league where players typically begin to decline in their thirties, Curry isn't just defying age - he's setting a new, impossibly high standard for sustained greatness.



Stephen Curry’s latest milestone doesn't just add a line to his resume; it shreds the old narrative on athletic decline. By surpassing Michael Jordan for the most 35-point scoring nights after turning 30, Curry has challenged a benchmark once thought sacred, especially for a guard. This is not merely an achievement in points, a monument to his all-time great skill. While most players see their quickness and explosiveness fade in their early 30s, leading to a rapid decline in efficiency and usage, Curry’s game relies on an ageless foundation of peerless shooting, elite stamina, and unparalleled basketball intelligence. The fact that he missed nearly his entire age-31 season only makes this defiant late-career surge more potent, proving that his career peak has simply lengthened into a run of dominance that has no business happening.



This achievement isn't just a record; it’s a legacy-defining statement that resets the career clock for a superstar. Curry is not only winning games, but he is fundamentally changing the standard for what sustained greatness looks like in the NBA. For most players, a career peak is a short, explosive, and finite window, but Curry has decided he doesn't have an expiry date. He has attained a skill set that age can't touch, proving that if your foundation is based on untouchable mastery of your craft rather than sheer athleticism, you can completely rewrite the narrative of decline. He is currently forcing the league to adjust to a new reality where a mid-thirties guard is still the gravitational center of the league.

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