The Warriors' greatest player, the 33-year-old Han Curry, continues to set his own record, and in the game against the Kings, Curry once again set 2 records!

In the past, Arenas has commented on Curry: Stephen Curry should not be on any of the list of organizational defenders and shooting guards, he is not the traditional No. 1 position, nor is he the No. 2 position.
When he first entered the league, he was Monta Ellis's outside assistant, and when he led the team himself, he was also someone else's outside assistant, and his shooting was enough to make people forget his other abilities.
It's also easy to see why Curry can break the NBA's three-point record again and again, and let fans not be surprised at all.
Although the Warriors have slowed down in the past two seasons due to insufficient manpower, Curry is still moving forward. In the game against the Kings, Curry once again broke the record of his predecessor Korver's consecutive three-point shooting: 128 consecutive three-pointers were scored.
This is the second consecutive three-point record in NBA history, and the 157 consecutive games at the top of the list at the same time are also Curry himself!
Interestingly, in this game he not only broke the three-point record, but also set a new Record for the Warriors' individual team history — he gave the Warriors a full 5,000 assists!
After breaking the record, ESPN tweeted that Curry was known for his prolific three-pointers, and his passing ability was part of an underestimation.
Some people think that he is not a passing expert like LeBron James and Magic, who was the core point guard of the Warriors before Kerr arrived and delivered 6-7 assists in one game, and only managed to make the playoffs in those seasons.
But there are also those who believe that the purpose of passing organization is simply to help teammates gain space with a god's vision, but when a player has achieved creative space without the ball, then this phenomenon-level player can no longer measure his organizational ability with traditional data. What do you think?