Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors is a glass half full kind of guy.

This is what he proved in his recent write-up for The Players' Tribune, in which he shared his thoughts on why he believes that it is more important to look at a players' strengths as opposed to focusing on their weaknesses.

This is a personal issue for Curry, who himself was once overlooked by scouts due to his supposed shortcomings. Below is an excerpt from the three-time NBA champion's article:

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All this analysis that people would put out there, all these scouting reports and whatever, that kept the focus on what I supposedly couldn’t do. “Undersized.” “Not a finisher.” “Extremely limited.” I can still reel them off to this day. But what’s even crazier is how, also to this day — even with how I’ve ended up doing my thing, and even with all of these unique types of players coming into the league and showing what they can do — you’re still seeing these so-called experts scouting hoops that same old way: by focusing on the downside of what guys can’t do.

Instead of figuring out the upside of what they can.

It's hard to argue against Curry here. Especially when his case in point is a former back-to-back MVP winner.

Many scouts were obviously totally wrong about Curry, and what he is pointing out here is that perhaps it's time they took a different approach when it comes to the things they choose to focus on when looking at prospects.