At this point in the season, there's no denying that Golden State Warriors superstar Stephen Curry is in the midst of the worst shooting slump of his career. The former back-to-back MVP may have recently shattered the all-time record for three-pointers made — a feat that cannot be downplayed in any way — but the harsh reality is that Curry is having the worst season of his 13-year career when it comes to shooting the trey.

Warriors head coach Steve Kerr recently tweaked Curry's rotation pattern and there are some who suspect that this could be one of the reasons behind Steph's poor form. Kerr is well aware of this notion but right now, the Dubs shot-caller revealed that he has no plans of making any changes anytime soon:

“I think we're in a pretty good pattern now where we play him the first nine minutes of the game,” Kerr told reporters Sunday night, via Taylor Wirth of NBC Sports. “Take him out, start the second quarter, take him out for a few minutes in the middle of the second and then hopefully repeat that in the second half. And that puts him around 35-36 (minutes) for the game.”

Prior to Curry's recent shift in rotation pattern, the seven-time All-Star's minutes have always taken a similar pattern for many years now. Steph played the entire first quarter, returned for the latter half of the second quarter, played the entire third period, and finally, the last six minutes of the fourth.

Right now, Steph is shooting a career-low 37.6 percent from distance (not including the five games he played during the 2019-20 season) while also making the most attempts throughout his career (12.8). Over his last five games, Curry is shooting just 30.0 percent from three-point territory.

Steve Kerr is standing pat, though, and he provided some insight as to how the current make-up of the Warriors squad has resulted in Steph's unusual rotation pattern:

“Yeah not right now,” Kerr said. “I think we're comfortable where we are at this stage. With Klay [Thompson] only playing limited minutes and sometimes taking the night off like tonight and Draymond [Green] being out, it's hard to know where this is going to be say a month from now.

“That's an interesting theory, I wouldn't dwell on it. He doesn't dwell on it. I've brought it up with him … but Steph is Steph, he's got no excuses anytime. He just plays, he gets mad at himself when he misses shots and has a tough night, then he hits the game-winning walk-off. He's Steph Curry, so we don't worry about him too much. He understands right now that we're in a strange spot physically as a team and we just have to rely on him however we can to win the game.”

Kerr and Curry do not seem too concerned with Steph's recent slump and it doesn't seem like they're going to make any drastic changes anytime soon. After all, this is the greatest shooter of all time we're talking about here and there's just no way he does not get out of this slump sooner rather than later.