Stephen Curry has not quite got to grips with the fact every three he hits will be a new record, having reached 3,000 triples on a night where the Golden State Warriors failed to handle the Denver Nuggets.
Curry broke Ray Allen’s all-time record this month and on Tuesday became the first man to 3,000, though he could not inspire the Warriors to victory.
Minus Draymond Green, the Warriors’ best defender and Curry’s chief facilitator, Golden State slumped to a 60-36 half-time deficit.
They clawed that back to trail by just three points in the closing stages of the fourth quarter, Curry getting to the 3,000 mark with a three-pointer in the third quarter.
But they could not avoid an 89-86 loss, falling to only their seventh defeat of the season.
Asked about his latest slice of NBA history, Curry told a post-game media conference: “It was cool to reach that milestone, it’s a pretty awesome accomplishment in terms of it hadn’t been done in NBA history.
“It’s kind of a weird thought to think that in the rest of my career I’m pretty sure every three I make will be a new record. I’m just going to enjoy it.”
Curry is not setting a target number he would like to reach at the end of his remarkable career.
“You don’t really put limits on what can happen,” he added. “You just hoop and enjoy yourself and see what happens when it’s all said and done.”
The Warriors still lead the Western Conference despite the defeat, with Curry encouraged by their second-half resilience.
“It all kind of went wrong during the first half, but I love the way we fought,” he said.
“Pretty sure we’re not a moral victory team but 29 other teams probably would have laid down and died with that type of first-half performance, but we gave ourselves a chance to tie the game with a minute and a half left. Pretty impressive.”