

The Golden State Warriors fell 124-111 to the Atlanta Hawks on Sunday, snapping their two-game win streak.
Warriors star Steph Curry had 31 points in the loss, going 11-21 from the field, but 3-11 from three.
Golden State shot 47% from the field, slightly worse than the Hawks at 49%, but went just 24% from beyond the arc.
Speaking after the game, Curry gave his thoughts on the Warriors poor form from three.
“I can't diagnose every shot, but I feel like early in each half, if the ball doesn't have as much energy as it usually does. You got to credit their defense, they have a lot of athleticism, length. They like to switch a lot so a lot of our off-ball actions weren't necessarily timing up right."
Only two Warriors players finished the game shooting 50% or better from three, but both players attempted only two shots from beyond the arc.
"So you know certain games you can feel like you're pressing if the ball’s not hopping around. You know clearly on each possession that that was a good shot. We can obviously correct that but they had a really good defensive effort to try and take away some pet actions and stuff like that."
"I thought we could probably get downhill a bit more when they were hugged up on shooters, but Monday-morning quarterbacking right now," he added.
For the season, Golden State shoots 35.9% from three, good enough for 12th in the league, while the Hawks' defense allows teams to shoot 35.1% from deep, which is ninth best.
Launching 45 threes from deep, the Warriors were right around their average in threes taken, a league high 43.9 per game.
Suffice to say, the Hawks' defense did its job, but the Warriors just missed shots they are comfortable with.
Against the Sacramento Kings on January 9, the team shot 42% from deep. Regression reared its head in an ugly way on Sunday. The Warriors' 24% from three against the Hawks was their worst shooting night of the season.
It should come as no surprise that when Steph has a tough night from three, the team struggles. In ten games where Steph has shot 30% or worse from three, the Warriors are 4-6.
It doesn't happen often for the most prolific three-point shooter in NBA history, but when it does, it can be tough for an offense designed around his elite shooting to overcome.
The good news for Steph and Warriors fans is that one bad night doesn't typically bleed over. In the nine previous games where he's shot 30% or worse from three, he's bounced back by shooting 36% or better five times in the next game.