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At 28 years old, Stephen Curry is in the prime of his career. Through the first seven seasons of his career, the Warriors superstar has already racked up two MVP awards, an NBA championship, obliterated the 3-point record and racked up other shooting records along the way. Mastering the ability to take over games offensively in the blink of an eye, Curry will likely keep being a dominant force for the next several years.

Curry is also coming off one of the best individual seasons of all time, shooting 50 percent, 45 percent from three and 90.8 percent from the free-throw line. He also averaged 30.1 points, 6.7 assists, 5.4 rebounds and 2.1 steals. Could Curry somehow improve on his production and overall game? Curry doesn't doubt it.

"They say you are what in your prime in the NBA, from 28 to 34, 32 ... maybe somewhere in there. So I'm just reaching it." Curry said in an interview with ESPN. "So I like the prognosis for these next four or five years. I don't know when honestly I can say I [will] hit my ceiling. I don't think I'm there yet. So the mission stays the same."

It seems unimaginable that Curry can somehow get better, especially since he is coming off such a one-of-a-kind season. Also Curry's overall production numbers wise may take a slight dip this season due to Kevin Durant likely taking away some of his touches on offense.

But Curry is also right. His game shows no signs of plateauing and should have several more seasons left in his prime. Curry's game may not grow by leaps and bounds any more, but overall, he likely will keep playing at an elite level for the next several years. And even when Curry gets a little more older, his lethal shooting should still allow him to be a more than formidable player.

What Curry's ceiling will look like remains to be seen, but he's just entering the peak of his career right now and Curry seems confident that he will only keep getting better -- a scary thought for the rest of the league.