Article 64P06 Loved, loathed and everywhere: how the three-pointer came to dominate the NBA

Loved, loathed and everywhere: how the three-pointer came to dominate the NBA

by
Jacob Uitti
from US news | The Guardian on (#64P06)

As the new season approaches, it's worth examining how shots from beyond the arc became one of the most important parts of modern basketball

When the shot went up, so did the voice of ABC's legendary broadcaster, Mike Breen. Curry! Way downtown! BANG!" It all happened so fast. It was a regular season game in Oklahoma City on 27 February 2016. The Golden State Warriors were on a magical run that would see them break the single-season wins record, going 73-9, pre-playoffs. That year, Stephen Curry earned his second-straight MVP, unanimously. He achieved that feat because he'd turned the three-pointer into a weapon unlike anyone else in history.

The game-winner against the Thunder on that February night marked the beginning of a new chapter in the NBA. Not only did it clinch another win for the Warriors, but it cemented the three-pointer as a play en vogue in the NBA. A season later, after the Thunder's Kevin Durant defected from the team and joined Golden State, he hit an unprecedented, walk-up three-pointer over LeBron James to all but clinch the 2017 NBA finals. Durant later told GQ, That was the best moment I ever had." The modern game was unfolding before our eyes.

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