Stephen Curry became a household name seemingly overnight, becoming the hero for the everyday man who enjoys a little hoops action.

Perhaps it's his sleight frame - by NBA standards at least - at 6'3 and 190 lbs. The measurements are one thing, but he absolutely looks like the smallest player on the court most of the time he's splashing threes. He is the fans' David, armed with three-pointers to slay Goliath. 

In an expansive interview with GQ ahead of the playoffs, Curry delved into several off-the-court topics and shed more insight on his life. Perhaps one of the most bizarre but fitting things is what he claims helps him get in the zone when he's wired at night. 

"Oh, man, this is embarrassing. But one of my favorite pastimes is organizing the garage," Curry explains.

"That’s when I get in my zone. Just doing the shelves, putting shoe boxes here, moving athletic equipment over there, everything in its place. That’s my zone. That’s my arena.”

It's almost too perfect for a player lauded for keeping a low-profile despite being one of the highest profile athletes in North American sports. That's without mentioning the two NBA Most Valuable Player awards, championship ring and countless accolades along the way. 

How many other millionaire athletes find solace in organizing things in their garage? That's a chore people put on the backburner so they can watch someone like Steph hit some playoff basketball in the middle of the day on a Sunday. 

That someone as vaunted as Curry would rather spend his late nights tossing shoe boxes on the right shelf, brooming up dust and moving athletic equipment around than going out and enjoying his celebrity status is par the course for what we know of the sharpshooter.

One can imagine Curry using his long-range accuracy skills to quickly clean the garage. Shooting that spare shoe box from an old pair of Under Armour's onto the top shelf from the opposite corner may very well be his "from the tunnel" shot during warmups. 

20 lb. weight laying around somewhere it shouldn't? Curry grabs it, hits a few crossovers, steps back, then tosses it perfectly in the tiny gap between the 15 and 25's. 

Whenever his NBA career comes to an end, perhaps with the spare time he'll have he can find some garages that aren't his to clean up. What if Klay Thompson put in a call because his garage is a mess and he knows his fellow Smash Brother would love to change it?

Perfectly Steph, to say the least.