NASA is offering to show Stephen Curry evidence that moon landings happened, after the Golden State Warriors star voiced doubts that a man ever stepped foot on the lunar surface.

“We’d love for Mr. Curry to tour the lunar lab at our Johnson Space Center in Houston, perhaps the next time the Warriors are in town to play the Rockets,” Allard Beutel, a NASA spokesman, told The New York Times on Monday.

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“We have hundreds of pounds of moon rocks stored there, and the Apollo mission control. During his visit, he can see firsthand what we did 50 years ago, as well as what we’re doing now to go back to the moon in the coming years, but this time to stay.”

The comment came shortly after Curry claimed that a moon landing has yet to occur.

Curry expressed the view while appearing on the podcast "Winging It," hosted by NBA players Vince Carter and Kent Bazemore and Atlanta Hawks digital content coordinator Annie Finberg.

“We ever been to the moon?” Curry asked at one point during the show.

Others agreed that the answer was no.

“They’re going to come get us,” Curry went on to say. “Sorry, I don’t want to start conspiracies.”

But Finberg asked Curry to expand on his remarks, prompting Curry to say that he did not believe the U.S. had successfully landed a man on the moon.

The United States' Apollo 11 was the first manned mission to land on the moon in 1969. The Times notes that NASA landed men on the moon six times from 1969 to 1972.

The agency put 12 astronauts on the lunar surface as part of those missions.

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