Against the Indiana Pacers on Tuesday, Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry casually shook off his defender en route to a pull-up three-pointer that swished the net.

Curry started cooking late in the third quarter after a relatively cold start, victimizing Justin Holiday who tried to cover the sweet-shooting guard.

Curry is coming off a mediocre 11-point performance in a 106-105 win over the Toronto Raptors on Sunday. It was the worst shooting game of his entire career as he finished 2-of-16 from the field, including a terrible 1-of-10 from downtown.

After his poor output, Curry remained confident, telling Connor Letourneau of the San Francisco ChronicleĀ that his shooting stroke will always be there.

ā€œI expect my offense to be there every single night. In terms of us just having confidence across the board, no matter whoā€™s out on the floor, I like where weā€™re at right now.ā€

The Warriors, however, couldn't pull off a second straight win, bowing to the Pacers, 104-95 to fall to 6-4. Curry tallied 20 points, four rebounds, and three assists, but he didn't shoot particularly well again, missing 10 of his 17 attempts.

But as he's proven in the past, a bad night or two isn't going to faze Stephen Curry. As long as he's open or he's feeling it, he will let it fly.