It's only been 10 months since Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors let a chance to become back-to-back champions slip from their grasp. The team has done well to get back to their winning ways in 2016-17 by leading the league in wins for a third straight season and nabbing home court advantage for a third straight time — but the haunting images of an NBA Finals Game 7 are still closely felt by the back-to-back MVP.

What has bothered Curry the most about last year's NBA Finals has been the things he could've done differently to change the outcome of the game, admitting he's only watched Game 7 twice since it happened.

“I’ve only watched the game twice,” Curry told Marc J. Spears of The Undefeated. “I only think about things I could’ve done differently to help my team win, knowing I gave everything I had and obviously came up short. I want to try to redeem myself.”

The Warriors point guard had a couple of shaky possessions down the stretch, rushing a three-pointer to try and cut the lead down and the infamous behind the back pass that went out of bounds and was made into a meme following the end of the game.

Curry admits that very tiny things could affect the outcome of the game, and if a few of those hadn't happened, it could be a different story in the books.

“The last six minutes of Game 7,” said Curry when asked what bothered him the most about the team blowing a 3-1 lead. “You feel like you could go back and do a couple things differently to get your team over the hump. It’s crazy.”

“Honestly, Kyrie [Irving] made a key [late] shot. That helped seal the deal for them, win it and have a comeback. Had that shot not gone down for them or the ball bounced a different way a possession or two before… it’s just crazy how that defining moment changes the narrative of everything.”

Despite many bringing up various reasons for the Warriors' shortcomings when it counted the most, Curry won't put that on either of the two injuries he sustained during the postseason.

“It was at a point where I wasn’t really thinking about it when I was playing,” he said. “Coming off an injury, if you get to that point you’ve got to consider that a win regardless of what percentage I was.”

“I don’t ever use that as a crutch for what happened.”