By Mo MoonceyAs the Golden State Warriors close in on the record set by Michael Jordan’s 1996 Chicago Bulls, league scoring leader Stephen Curry is dominating the headlines. Prior to the 2015/16 NBA season, Curry set the record for most three-pointers scored in a season during his MVP campaign of 2014/15, when he knocked down 286 triples to topple the record he set in 2012/13. Naturally, Steph has already smashed his record by hitting 378 threes already. The last time someone not named Steph set the record was Ray Allen in 2005/06.Though Curry has been giving defenders nightmares all season long, the scariest part for the rest of the league is that he’s not the only Golden State Warrior who can break the record this year.Klay Thompson, the current all-star three-point shootout champion, has scored 262 three-pointers already this season through 75 games. The former Washington State Cougar istaking 8.1 threes per game, and knocking down an impressive 3.5 of them every night, a cut above the rest of the league (barring Steph of course). With seven games remaining before the playoffs start, Klay needs to bag 25 threes -- a doable 3.57 per game.With the regular season winding down, playoff teams tend to rest their key players so they don’t get injured prior to post-season, but not the Warriors. The Dubs arethe aforementioned Bulls record of 72 regular season wins so their best players may get more playing time than you’d expect.Add this to the fact that Klay is capable of heating up quickly, as he demonstrated by scoring nine of nine three-pointers during a record-setting 37-point quarter last January, and you realize both members of Golden State’s prolific shooting backcourt will most likely break the record.The Warriors are the first team to score 1,000 threes in a season, thanks to their dynamic duo. Thompson and Curry are the first teammates to hit a combined 600 three-pointers in a season, yet again shattering the previous record that they set themselves (as they have done every season since 2012/13). This March, the 26-year-old Thompson became the second-fastest NBA player to record 1,000 career three-pointers in just 372 games.Not only is Thompson a force offensively, but he’s also gained a reputation as one of the premier perimeter defenders in the league. He’s among the top guards inallowing opponents 99.5 points per 100 possessions, which is better than the league average of 103.7.The Warriors are lucky enough to boast two dominant forces in their backcourt and look set to make a run deep into the postseason. If Thompson can maintain his current shooting pace, he’s set to break the record of most three-pointers made in a season, only to be overshadowed once again by his teammate, Curry. But one thing is for certain: don’t sleep on Thompson, or you will regret it.