Portland Trail Blazers guard Seth Curry is making something very clear: he wants to beat his older brother, Stephen, in the Three-Point Contest at NBA All-Star Weekend on Saturday night:

“I've got to make some shots. I've got to beat Steph,” said Seth, according to Diamond Leung of The Athletic. “I've got to beat all nine to win, but for that I've just got to beat Steph.”

So, basically, it seems like Seth has two contests going on in his mind: the one to beat the rest of the competitors to win the event, and the one to just beat his sibling.

No pressure there, Steph.

For Steph, the Three-Point Contest is nothing new, as he won the shootout back in 2015. However, for Seth, this is uncharted territory, as he has never participated in the event before.

This season, however, Seth has earned it.

The 28-year-old is shooting 46.5 percent from three-point range this season, which is actually better than Steph's ratio of 44.4 percent. Of course, there is a caveat.

Seth is attempting just 2.8 triples per game, while Stephen is taking 11.5 treys a night, so, obviously, Steph has been better given the ridiculously high volume of his long-distance attempts.

The younger sibling, who played his collegiate basketball at Duke University, went undrafted but made his way into the NBA with the Memphis Grizzlies during the 2013-14 campaign. However, he did not last very long and ended up with the Cleveland Cavaliers to finish out the year.

Since then, Seth has played for the Phoenix Suns, Sacramento Kings and Dallas Mavericks before arriving in Portland.