San Francisco, CA – Wednesday night, the Golden State Warriors hosted the Portland Trail Blazers. It was a night fans showing up had hopes of seeing Stephen Curry make NBA history. He was only 16 three-pointers away from passing Ray Allen on the All-Time list for three-pointers made.

The superstar point guard came out firing but was cold. He started the game 0-of-4 from deep before making his first three. Then the chase inside the Chase Center began. Curry fired up 17 shots from beyond the arc but only made 6. His performance made those watching wonder if he was trying too hard to break the record in front of the home crowd, and Steve Kerr gave his thoughts.

“No, I thought Steph took a couple of quick ones early that maybe he was trying to get himself going,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr continued. “I thought we actually played a great first half. The ball just wasn’t going in, but it was moving, we were getting really good looks, but when the ball doesn’t go in, it’s hard to get momentum and hard to get the crowd into it.”

If Curry had passed Ray Allen Wednesday night, he would have also broken his Warriors teammate Klay Thompson's three-pointers made (14) in a single game record. It would have made the night an extraordinary one, and the crowd would have gone insane. Since they didn't get the show they wanted, the fans had to settle for another Dubs victory.

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The Golden State Warriors won 104-94 and now have an NBA best 21-4 record. Saturday Curry and company will face his younger brother Seth Curry and the Philadelphia 76ers. It will be another opportunity to make history, and now he only needs ten more to do it.