Seth Curry is finally signing with the Golden State Warriors, six weeks into the regular season. He’ll provide an injection of three-pointing shooting to a Warriors team that shot 2-for-22 from three-point range in the first half of their win over the New Orleans Pelicans. Not only will join his brother Steph Curry and centers Al Horford and Trayce Jackson-Davis as sons of NBA players, he’ll also join the fraternity of “Other Brothers,” the legion of lesser siblings of stars that have worn Warriors jerseys over the years.

This is no knock on these siblings, who have been among the best basketball players in the entire world by making it to the NBA. It’s just that for every Brook Lopes, there’s a Robin Lopez — and the latter is easier to acquire. Here’s a look at some of the Other Brothers who have graced the Warriors roster.

Jon Barry/Drew Barry (1995-96; 1999-00): Come on, people! Show a little bit of class! While NBA/dunk contest champion Brent Barry’s little brother Drew Barry only spent eight of his 60 NBA games with the 1999-2000Warriors (they went 19-63), his older brother Jon Barry played 68 games for the 1995-96 Warriors, averaging 3.8 points in 10.3 minutes but shooting 47.3% from three-point range. The 36-46 Warriors let him go after the season, presumably to make room for Mark Price and Donald Royal. But Barry would reunite with his old Warriors coach, Rick Adelman, for three seasons during the Sacramento Kings’ resurgence from 1999-2001.

Both brothers shot their free throws overhand, much to their father’s consternation.

Al Guokas (1949-50): The Warriors employed both Guokas brothers in their Philadelphia days. Al Guokas played 16 games for the 1949-50 team, averaging 1.1 points and 0.6 assists (they didn’t count rebounds yet). Matt Guokas, Sr., whose son Matt Guokas, Jr. won a title with the 1966-67 Philadelphia 76ers and went on to coach the Sixers and the Orlando Magic, won a BAA title with the 1946-47 Warriors. At age 31, Guokas averaged 1.7 points for the Warriors in 47 games. In their Finals win over the Chicago Stags, Guokas scored one point. Suck it, Stags!

Matt Guokas, Sr. had a short BAA career, because he lost his right leg in an auto accident two months after the Finals. He went on to broadcast Philadelphia Eagles games for 32 years.

Justin Holiday (2014-15): Justin Holiday went undrafted out of Washington and started his professional career in Belgium. He made the All-D League third team and All-Defensive second team in 2012-13, then signed with his brother Jrue’s Philadelphia 76ers for the last nine games of the season. Then he spent the next season playing in the Hungarian League. One year later, he was an NBA champion.

Holiday joined the Warriors for Summer League in 2014, where he impressed all-around and hit a game-winner, at which point GSOM’s Andy Liu wrote that he was the “best player on both sides of the court” and had “some potential as an NBA player.” Holiday eventually beat out 2013 first-rounder Nemanja Nedovic for a roster spot and played 59 games for the NBA champions, providing solid defense off the bench and winning the hearts of fans. He’d eventually turn himself into a solid shooter and remain in the NBA for nine more seasons, playing alongside his own Other Brother, Aaron Holiday, with the Indiana Pacers.

Ed Mikan (1950-52): George Mikan was the NBA’s first superstar, winning seven titles with the Minneapolis Lakers in the National Basketball League, Basketball Association of America and the NBA from 1947-54, losing only in the 1951 playoffs where he played with a broken leg. He was so dominant he forced basketball to make the lane twice as wide, outlaw goaltending, and introduce the shot clock, because other teams would stall as long as possible to keep the ball away from him

Ed Mikan was no slouch. He had a solid basketball career at DePaul, where he won a title alongside his brother in 1945. He played for the Philadelphia Warriors in 1951-52, playing partial seasons the years before and after. He played every game and averaged 7.9 points and 7.5 rebounds, the latter good for 21st in the league. The next season, the Warriors sold his rights to the Indianapolis Olympians, who went out of business after the season, at which point the younger Mikan retired to focus on running his bowling alley, limousine service, and insurance business.

Jeremy Pargo (2019-20): Jeremy Pargo, the younger brother of 11-year veteran Jannero Pargo, was a standout member of the Santa Cruz Warriors who got a 10-day contract with the Dubs in February 2020. This was notable because Pargo hadn’t played in an NBA game since March 2013, nearly a seven-year gap. It was a reward for a solid organizational player and also, that team had nobody. In what would end up being his final NBA game, Pargo scored 15 points and made three three-pointers on February 12. The Warriors lost, of course.

Dorell Wright (2010-12): It pains us to write this about a player who had two very good years with the Warriors as they transitioned from NBA laughing stock to playoff team, but Delon Wright may have had a slightly better NBA career than his older brother, Dorell Wright. Dorell has played one more game than Delon (549 to 548) and averaged 8.4 points to his brother’s 6.7, and he was a better three-point shooter. Delon was a better defender ad has a few more win shares. The tiebreaker is me wanting to write about how cool Dorell Wright was.

He joined the Warriors in 2010 and started every game, primarily in a lineup of Steph Curry, Monta Ellis, Wright, David Lee, and Andris Biedrins. Wright was arguably the forerunner to the Splash Brothers, leading the NBA in three-pointers and three-point attempts that season, sinking 194 triples at a 37.6% clip. He set the Warriors team record for three-pointers in a game early that season, with a total of nine that seems quaint now — Curry has hit nine or more threes in a regular-season game 48 times since then.

Weirdly, Curry ranked only third behind Ellis in threes, and both Reggie Williams and Vladimir “Vlad Rad” Radmanovic bombed away more often. Despite being second in the NBA in three-point percentage, the team shot even fewer threes under Mark Jackson the next season, even with Klay Thompson joining the team and Curry shooting 45.5%. But Wright led the way in shooting often and well from behind the arc.

Wright was a seven-year veteran who represented a novel period in Warriors history where they acquired players that were…good. Not spectacular, not All-Stars, just guys who knew how to play basketball. He and David Lee arrived at the same time. The team was still messing around with guys like Lou Amundson, Al Thornton, and Acie Law IV, but this was a totally fine, not-embarrassing basketball team that was extremely fun to watch.

The Warriors eventually traded Wright for Jarrett Jack and Wright continued to drain threes for three more seasons. Now, he’s an excellent part of the Warriors NBA Bay Area team.

Note: Derek Fisher (brother of Duane Washington), Bernard King (brother of Albert), Carl Landry (brother of Marcus), Mark Price (brother of Brent), Brandon Rush (brother of Kareem), Purvis Short (brother of Gene), Klay Thompson (brother of Mychel), and Gus Williams (brother of Ray) were all once Warriors, but they are pretty clearly the dominant siblings — though Ray Williams was pretty good!