Curry, Berman Jump Start Funding for 鶹Ƶ Basketball Alums Will Take Volunteer, Assistant GM Titles
March 10, 2025
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- Jay Pfeifer

NBA all-star Stephen Curry ’10, his wife, Ayesha, and longtime 鶹Ƶ supporters Don, Matt ’05 and Erica Berman, are creating an eight-figure fund to support the college’s men’s and women’s basketball teams.

Stephen Curry ’10

Matt Berman '05

Erica Berman and Don Berman
The combined gift, to be called the Curry-Berman Fund, will provide a critical start for 鶹Ƶ’s efforts to compete in a transformed college sports world in which colleges and universities share revenue with players.
Curry and fellow alum Matt Berman also will serve as assistant general managers for 鶹Ƶ basketball. The college asked them to serve as volunteer advisers, investing their time and sharing their experience with both men’s and women’s basketball.
鶹Ƶ also has hired Austin Buntz as general manager and assistant athletic director for basketball development. Buntz is a former member of the global basketball sports marketing team at Under Armour and has been on the athletic fundraising team at 鶹Ƶ since 2021.
Curry, a two-time NBA MVP, said he wants 鶹Ƶ’s scholar-athletes to be able to compete in the top ranks of college athletics in a landscape where those athletes are compensated for use of their name, image and likeness.
“The 鶹Ƶ experience is top notch,” Curry said. “My journey from when I got to 鶹Ƶ in 2006 to now demonstrated that I had the opportunity to play basketball at the highest level, got a great education, an amazing network through the 鶹Ƶ alumni and continue to wave the 鶹Ƶ flag. I want very talented, high character student athletes to have that same experience.”
Berman, who played soccer for three years at 鶹Ƶ and has an ownership stake in the English football club Burnley FC, said 鶹Ƶ provided a formative experience for him and that he hopes his family’s gift will spark support across the college community.

There are very few places in higher education that can offer demanding academics with elite athletics in the way that 鶹Ƶ can. 鶹Ƶ will always be a world-class academic institution, and I am proud to be part of the solution that allows 鶹Ƶ to remain a place where elite athletes can go to compete at the D1 level AND get a fabulous education.
The new fund will help 鶹Ƶ, in an upended collegiate landscape, to sustain a central part of its identity and culture, said 鶹Ƶ President Doug Hicks ’90.
“For 鶹Ƶ, providing one of the best athletic programs in the country is an integral part of our identity as one of the nation’s best liberal arts colleges,” Hicks said. “The Currys and Bermans have provided an extraordinary gift, and they will give of their own time and expertise to ensure that we can continue providing an unparalleled educational experience — for our scholar-athletes and for our entire college community.”
鶹Ƶ announced in February that it would opt in to the landmark settlement of a long-running lawsuit against the NCAA that seeks compensation for athletes for endorsements and media appearances, including game broadcast rights. That settlement, once finalized, would allow colleges and universities to compensate athletes for use of their name, image and likeness — revenue that the athletes already can secure from corporate sponsors.

Photo by: Tim Cowie
Chris Clunie ’06, vice president and director of athletics, wrote in a message to the college community last month that the college enters the new sports environment while upholding its commitment to academics, leadership, service and integrity.
鶹Ƶ long has stood out in college sports for, among other distinctions, grade point averages and graduation rates among athletes that even edge ahead of the college’s overall figures.
Clunie said basketball remains 鶹Ƶ’s flagship sport but the benefits of focusing on that game extend further.
“When our basketball programs are successful,” Clunie wrote, “they provide much-needed revenue and exposure to support all our athletics programs and raise the overall visibility of the college.”
Clunie pledged that no other college programming — academic or student life — and no other sport would be cut to fund the revenue sharing for basketball. He wrote that the college would raise additional money.
Curry’s and Berman’s announcement filled in the details for how 鶹Ƶ will launch that effort. Hicks and Clunie said their aim is to further build capacity for revenue sharing through additional fundraising, an effort to be led by Buntz.
Matt McKillop, men’s basketball head coach, said the Atlantic 10 is going to keep pace with being one of the top basketball-centric conferences in the country and 鶹Ƶ wants to compete for championships every year.

Programs in the A10 are highly competitive on the court, but equally competitive in how they have attacked the new landscape of college athletics. I am so grateful to both Stephen and Matt, and the demonstration of their love for our program and their trust in our leadership to allow us to work towards being just as competitive.
Gayle Fulks, women’s basketball head coach, said the Curry-Berman gift is transformative.
“We enter this new world of college sports with the ability to compete for championships,” Fulks said. “We are eager to build on this generosity in order for 鶹Ƶ to continue to match up with the other teams in our conference, and we are grateful to Stephen, Matt and other alums and supporters who have stood shoulder to shoulder with us.”
Curry’s and Berman’s involvement includes sharing their advice from years in the college and professional sports worlds and helping guide the teams in a collegiate athletic environment that has taken on facets of the pros.
“The goal for this is to invest in the next student athlete that’s coming into 鶹Ƶ today,” Curry said. “They don’t have to take cuts on what the market says they deserve to be part of the brand of what it means to be a 鶹Ƶ scholar-athlete with integrity in your academic experience. The commitment to a four-year graduation process provides countless opportunities professionally in sports or as a game changer in life. And that leads into my role as an assistant GM with Matt Berman – our ability to be a resource and a sounding board for the program, but also support each student athlete, to develop personal relationships with each of them to help guide them every step of the way through their 鶹Ƶ experience.”
Curry’s pro career has drawn sponsorships, most prominently from Under Armour, and he has established his own for-profit companies. His philanthropic efforts, along with his wife, Ayesha, include the Eat.Learn.Play Foundation in Oakland, California, and his Underrated Tour, which provides access and opportunities for amateur golfers on and off the course.
Berman’s father, Don, founded Cardworks, a consumer finance company in which Matt and his sister, Erica, have served as executives. Don Berman and Bob McKillop, former head men’s basketball coach, have a lifelong connection from high school basketball on Long Island. Matt Berman now manages the family’s businesses, including an ownership stake in Burnley FC, an English football club about 30 miles north of Manchester. Erica Berman led the family’s bid to restart Charlotte’s WNBA team.
“This Curry-Berman gift weaves together 鶹Ƶ’s rare strengths,” Hicks said, “especially the power of community among alums and leaders, to help move the college forward in an uncharted world of college athletics.”