The stroke is a thing of beauty. Blake Hoffarber is practicing his shot in Williams Arena, and every release is a moveable sculpture that sends the ball arcing improbably high against the backdrop of ancient rafters.
Hoffarber says he's been shooting the same way since he was "3 years old," and he's honed his motion so it appears to run on pneumatics: catch, cock, release, hold the follow-through. Instead of watching the ball backspin through the net, though, he's become accustomed this season to seeing it carom wildly off iron.
In a strange and damaging coincidence, the two most prominent basketball teams in Minnesota have watched their most accomplished shooters slump.
Hoffarber, a sophomore for the Gophers, and Mike Miller, a veteran acquired in a trade by the Timberwolves, have not only missed more than their share of three-point shots, they've missed badly at times, as if betrayed by their own personal windstorms, or an unannounced change in the geometry of the game.
Hoffarber has made 35.5 percent of his shots from the three-point line, the fifth-best percentage on his own team. Last year, he shot 42.7 percent from that distance.
Wednesday night, Miller seemed to shake the basketball shanks, hitting three of six three-pointers, making two big ones down the stretch. For the season he's shooting 34.4 percent from the three-point line. Last year, he shot 43.2 percent, and his career average is 40 percent.
What's been more alarming than the numbers, though, has been the severity of some of his misses -- he's even come close to shooting air balls from the free-throw line.
"Whenever you go through a tough time, you hold on to the ball and you guide it," Wolves coach Kevin McHale said. "You don't shoot it. You see a guy who's struggling at the free-throw line, and they look like they're saying, 'Can I get closer?' There were times, man, when I'd almost fall over the line, trying to get closer.