The Golden State Warriors traveled to the east coast to face Joel Embiid and the Philadelphia 76ers. It was a night where many expected Stephen Curry to have a gigantic game. Fans all over believed this would be the game he makes NBA history. Curry was only ten threes away from breaking Ray Allen's record.

Curry fell short on reaching that milestone shooting a horrid 3-14 from deep. He also failed to lead his team to victory. It was the second game where Curry struggled while shooting a lot of threes. Making people wonder if he was trying too hard for the record.

“If you take away the context of these last couple of games, I'm playing the exact same way. Just got to make shots and understand the opposition is not going to want that to happen on their own floor,” Warriors superstar Stephen Curry told ClutchPoints.

There is truth to what Curry said because he is shooting a career-high 13.4 attempts per game this season. But being that he's human, it's natural to think about breaking this record that a few years ago people thought was unbreakable. That has to play some part in him missing more than he usually does.

Hear more on Steph Curry breaking Ray Allen's record on the Warriors' Multiverse podcast by ClutchPoints 

In the next few games, the anxiousness to break this record will vanish. Curry will soon be the official leader for three-pointers made in NBA history. Then things will go back to normal, and a bad game will only be a bad game.

Next, the Warriors will take on the Indiana Pacers. Curry may rest that game, but if he plays, he's only seven away from breaking the record.