of the Pac-12 Conference (add "in NCAA Division I")
Early life
"of Stephen Curry, who is Brink's godbrother. Her mother was roommates with Curry's mother, Sonya," <<<=== Since "godmother" is more official, I would suggest "of Stephen Curry, whose mother Sonya is Brink's godmother. Her mother was roommates with Sonya". If you still want to include "godbrother", I would suggest making it sound unofficial like: Brink considers Stephen Curry to be her "godbrother".
High school
Okay.
College
I think per
MOS:NUMNOTES, it's better to either only use numerals or write out all the numbers in a specific list. e.g. "17 points and nine rebounds" should be "17 points and 9 rebounds", and "10 points, six rebounds and three blocks" should be "10 points, 6 rebounds and 3 blocks" or "ten points, six rebounds and three blocks". You could also break it up so it's not technically a list like "scored 10 points while also contributing six rebounds and three blocks". I prefer that in my own articles when it is sensible.
Suggest adding her number of double-doubles for her sophomore year.
National team
averaging two points <<<=== Since it's an average, I would write it out as "2.0" to keep the number of significant figures consistent.
of the Pac-12 Conference (add "in NCAA Division I")
Early life
"of Stephen Curry, who is Brink's godbrother. Her mother was roommates with Curry's mother, Sonya," <<<=== Since "godmother" is more official, I would suggest "of Stephen Curry, whose mother Sonya is Brink's godmother. Her mother was roommates with Sonya". If you still want to include "godbrother", I would suggest making it sound unofficial like: Brink considers Stephen Curry to be her "godbrother".
High school
Okay.
College
I think per
MOS:NUMNOTES, it's better to either only use numerals or write out all the numbers in a specific list. e.g. "17 points and nine rebounds" should be "17 points and 9 rebounds", and "10 points, six rebounds and three blocks" should be "10 points, 6 rebounds and 3 blocks" or "ten points, six rebounds and three blocks". You could also break it up so it's not technically a list like "scored 10 points while also contributing six rebounds and three blocks". I prefer that in my own articles when it is sensible.
Suggest adding her number of double-doubles for her sophomore year.
National team
averaging two points <<<=== Since it's an average, I would write it out as "2.0" to keep the number of significant figures consistent.