The Golden State Warriors‘ dynasty during the 2010s undoubtedly changed the landscape of the NBA in multiple facets. Head coach Steve Kerr helped spearhead that paradigm shift, which would make his opinion on the current state of the league all the more intriguing.

Prior to Tuesday's loss to the San Antonio Spurs, Kerr chimed in on what he thinks of other teams and the “copycat” pattern that exists.

“I think ‘homogenized’ might be the word that comes to mind. There is sort of a pattern that everybody is going to. It’s for a reason. It’s very difficult to guard, and you have got a whole generation of young players who were learning to shoot threes at a young age. A lot of floor spacing, a lot of downhill pick-and-rolls. It’s a lot of people playing the same way,” Kerr said, via Mike Monroe of The Athletic.

“This league has always been kind of a copycat league, so this is the current trend. It doesn’t mean it’s going to continue.”

Even with the high-octane 3-point shooting duo of Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson out of the mix, the Warriors have continued to fire up threes in 2019-20. At an average of 34.9 threes per game, Golden State ranks sixth in the league on a nightly basis in shots from behind the arc.

This season, long range shooting hasn't exactly equaled success for Steve Kerr and his Warriors, who have gotten off to a 9-26 start after a swarm of injuries. How the team adjusts in the future (and how many threes they fire up) remains to be seen, as Golden State will now be the team doing some adapting.

The Warriors are the worst team in the Western Conference after the injuries to Curry and Thompson and the departure of Kevin Durant in the summer.